Seller guide — stage 2 of 5

Preparing to sell

Buyers decide fast — often in the first minute of a viewing. Preparation is where you earn your result.

Presentation

Getting your property market-ready

Fix, declutter, refresh

Paperwork buyers will ask for

Remember your disclosure obligations. Known defects must be disclosed via your agent — hiding them risks the sale and legal action later. Present the home at its best; represent it honestly.

Choosing your method of sale

Auction

A no-price campaign building to a public auction. Bidding is unconditional, buyers arrive with finance and research done, and the reserve protects your bottom line. If it passes in, you negotiate with the highest bidder first.

Deadline sale

Marketed without a price, offers by a set date (you can usually accept a strong one earlier). Competitive tension with flexibility, since offers can be conditional. Very common in Canterbury.

Advertised price / by negotiation

A fixed price gives certainty and filters enquiry; "by negotiation" invites offers without anchoring a number. Both settle into the offer / counter-offer dance (see stage 4).

Which is right depends on your property, timeframe and the market — one of the first things we'll give you a view on at appraisal, with reasons.

Selling after a natural event

If your property has EQC/Natural Hazards Commission or insurance claim history, gather the documentation early — claim records, scope of works, sign-offs. Organised disclosure keeps buyers (and their insurers) confident and protects your price.

This guide is general information, not legal or financial advice — always get independent advice before signing anything. See also the Real Estate Authority's settled.govt.nz.

Want a second opinion on method of sale?

We'll tell you what we'd do with your property — and why.

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