Seller Resources

Straight answers, before you decide anything.

Real questions from real homeowners in Manatee and Sarasota counties — on pricing, timing, taxes, and the details that actually affect your decision.

Getting Started

Common questions before listing a property.

How do you determine what my home is worth?

Pricing starts with current local sales data — comparable homes that have actually closed in your area, not asking prices. I also factor in your property's condition, any updates, and current buyer demand in your specific neighborhood. You'll see the data I'm using, not just a number.

Is this a good time to sell?

It depends on your goals more than the calendar. I'll walk you through current inventory levels, days-on-market trends, and buyer activity in your area so you can weigh it against your own timeline — without being pushed toward a decision that doesn't fit your circumstances.

What should I fix or update before listing?

Not everything needs to be renovated. We'll walk through what genuinely affects buyer perception and resale value versus what's a cost without a return, so you're not spending money where it won't matter.

How does property tax and insurance factor into my sale?

Florida's homestead exemption and portability rules can affect your net proceeds and your next purchase. Insurance costs — especially in flood-prone or coastal areas — are also a factor buyers weigh heavily right now. We'll go through what's relevant to your specific property; for exact figures, your tax professional or the county property appraiser's office is the verified source.

What if my property is in a flood zone?

Flood zone designation affects insurance costs and buyer financing, but it doesn't automatically mean a harder sale — it means the marketing and pricing need to account for it honestly upfront. FEMA flood maps and your county's flood zone lookup are the sources of record; buyers and their lenders will verify independently regardless.

Specific Situations

Circumstances that change how a sale should be handled.

I own the property but live out of state. How does that work?

Most of the process can be handled remotely — disclosures, showings, inspections, and closing can all be coordinated without you needing to be physically present for each step. We'll set up a communication rhythm that works for your schedule and time zone.

I have a tenant in the property. Can I still sell it?

Yes, though the approach depends on your lease terms and whether you'd rather sell vacant or with the tenant in place (attractive to investor buyers). We'll go through the trade-offs and the notice requirements under Florida law.

The property is part of an estate or trust. What's different?

Probate and trust sales involve additional steps — confirming authority to sell, court approval in some probate cases, and coordinating with the estate's attorney. I work alongside whoever is handling the legal side; my part is the property and the market, not legal advice.

I'm downsizing. Should I sell first or buy first?

This depends on your equity position, the current inventory in what you're moving to, and your risk tolerance for a temporary move. We'll map out both sequences with real numbers so you can see which fits your situation.

I own vacant land. Is the process the same as selling a house?

No — land buyers ask different questions: zoning, utilities, flood elevation, buildability, and access. Land needs its own marketing approach and its own due diligence package rather than a standard home listing process.

What You Can Expect

A seller assessment isn't a sales pitch.

It's a straightforward look at your property against current market data — what it's likely worth, what affects that number, and what your realistic options are. There's no obligation attached to requesting one.

Request a Free Seller Assessment

Still deciding? That's a normal place to start.

A short conversation is usually more useful than trying to research every scenario on your own.

Talk It Through