Six Ways to Dress Your Home for a Successful Sale

Six Ways to Dress Your Home for a Successful Sale

In this three-minute read, we look at ways to present your property to achieve the best possible deal.

Presenting a home in its best light can significantly bump up the selling price and speed up the transaction. So why don’t all sellers dress their property for a successful sale?
 
Surprisingly, many people don’t change a thing before they put their home on the market (a decision that hits them in the back pocket). People who take this ‘warts and all’ approach to home-selling tend to fall into three categories.
 
  1. Sellers who have a strong emotional attachment to their home and can’t bear to change a thing.
  2. Sellers who think they have brilliant personal taste (often debatable) and can’t put themselves in the shoes of buyers.
  3. Sellers who just can’t be bothered.
 
Whatever the reason, take it from us: a little elbow grease and a small financial outlay can reap serious rewards.
 
We’re not suggesting that plush cushions and tasteful throws can make up for structural issues or a poor location. But most buyers are driven by emotion; they want to step inside a property and fall in love with it.
 
So woo them! Set your emotions aside and think about what will hit home with buyers.
 
Top tips for dressing your property.
 
Declutter
Bin old furniture or knick-knacks that have seen better days. Sell items that you no longer use (treadmills or exercise bikes often gather dust in the corner of spare rooms). Put bulky possessions that you just can’t part with into storage. It’s all about creating space.
 
Tidy
Ensure paperwork, photos, toiletries, and washing are out of sight. The same goes for shoes, coats, phone chargers, dog beds, and cat litter trays.
 
DIY blitz
Draw up a list of odd jobs that need doing and work through it. Fix broken cupboard doors and rickety fences and blitz carpet stains, mould, and damp. Give tired walls a lick of paint in a neutral tone.
 
Identify your target demographic
If you’re selling a four-bed home with a garden, it’s a fair bet families will be your target market, so make sure the outdoor spaces are welcoming and safe. If you’re marketing a sleek studio, target young professionals and dress the property accordingly.
 
Don’t send mixed messages
If you’re marketing a four-bed home, make sure each bedroom has a bed in it (even if that means borrowing or renting one). Similarly, if you’re trying to pass a small room off as a study, put a desk, chair, and lamp in it. Never load up rooms with odds and sods like gym equipment, fishing gear, or bikes. This only confuses buyers.
 
Don’t overlook outdoor spaces
Dress the garden just as you would any other room. That means taking any junk to the tip and installing garden furniture and a few colourful blooms.
 
For more advice about how to market your home or indeed to set up an advice meeting, please get in touch with us here at Millbanks on (01953) 453838 or drop us an email by clicking here
 
 



Get in touch with us

At first glance, the difference between Attleborough and the national housing picture may seem small. Yet beneath the surface, it reveals something far more telling about the town’s homeowners, renters and overall market balance. To understand what these figures really say about Attleborough, read on.

April is the final window for landlords in England to prepare for the first phase of the Renters’ Rights Act. With the new tenancy regime starting on 1 May 2026, now is the time to review paperwork, processes and whether self-management still feels realistic.

If you step back, a familiar pattern emerges. We rent when young, buy as life settles, and often own outright later on. Yet it’s not the same for everyone, with more people renting into later life. Property reflects life stages, choices and timing. To learn more, click the link and read on.

Welcome back to our weekly look at the Attleborough property market, where we track the trends shaping local homes. This month’s £ per square foot figure offers another snapshot of activity, revealing how the mix of properties for sale continues to influence the market’s rhythm. Please 'click the link' to read the article to learn more...