A good sale starts before the sign goes up: why you're selling, what it costs, and where you're going next.
Planning to sell
Talk to your bank early — breaking a fixed-term loan can trigger break fees; porting it to your next home may avoid them. Buying before you sell? Ask about bridging finance.
Selling the family home is usually tax-free, but the bright-line rule can tax gains on a quick resale, and different rules apply to investment properties. If your situation isn't plain vanilla, an accountant is cheap certainty.
Involve your property lawyer before you sign anything — agency agreement included. They'll handle the title, any pre-emptive fixes (like an old un-consented carport), and settlement.
Choose real results in your area, a marketing plan they can justify, and an appraisal backed by comparable sales — not just the biggest number in the room. Check any agent's licence at rea.govt.nz; our reviews are public at what our clients say.
Tradies for pre-sale fixes, a gardener, maybe a stager. Your agent should have a trusted list — coordinating this is part of what we do.
One thing to do this week: get an appraisal. Even 12 months out, knowing the number — and what would lift it — lets you plan everything else.
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.
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