Chris Morris - Your Trusted Real Estate Advisor
Join Sign In

Articles and Advice

Signs a Home Will Hold Its Value Over Time

A kitchen renovation can make a home sell faster, but it won't necessarily make it worth more 10 years from now. The factors that actually drive long-term value tend to be less photogenic than a renovated kitchen. Things like lot size, location, and the condition of systems behind the walls are what actually determine whether a property holds its ground over time, and most of them are readable before you ever submit an offer.

Location Still Does Most of the Heavy Lifting

This one's repeated so often it starts to sound like filler, but the reason it keeps coming up is that it keeps being true. Demand is what protects home values when markets soften, and demand is driven by schools, walkability, transit, and access to jobs. A neighborhood people consistently want to live in will weather inventory spikes and rising rates better than one that's merely convenient.

Worth paying attention to specifically: job proximity. Homes within a practical commute of a major employment center tend to attract buyers from a wider range of income levels and life stages, which means a deeper pool when you eventually go to sell. That depth matters a lot more in a slow market than in a hot one.

What the Lot Contributes

Land holds its value more reliably than the structure on top of it, which is why lot size and positioning tend to matter more than most buyers factor in during a search. A corner lot, a yard that backs to greenspace, or simply more square footage than the surrounding properties gives a home something that genuinely can't be retrofitted. Sellers know it, and so do buyers. Homes with meaningfully more usable outdoor space tend to draw more competitive offers, not just more interest.

The Maintenance History Tells You a Lot

The questions that actually matter at a showing aren't the exciting ones. How old is the roof? When was the electrical panel last updated? Has the HVAC been serviced recently? These aren't what sellers lead with, but they're what determines how a home holds up over the next decade, not how the primary suite photographs. Deferred maintenance doesn't stay contained. A small moisture issue ignored for two years becomes a much larger conversation during the next buyer's inspection.

The more useful thing to look for isn't any single repair but the overall pattern. A home that's had steady, unglamorous upkeep over the years is in a fundamentally different position than one that received a cosmetic refresh before listing. New countertops don't offset a roof with three years left on it.

Floor Plans Age Differently

Open-concept had a long run. Before that, something else was dominant, and something else will be after. What doesn't go out of style is a floor plan that functions: enough bedrooms for the likely buyer, real storage, and rooms that don't require a specific furniture arrangement to make sense. Heavily customized layouts tend to limit resale, not because buyers can't see past them, but because many simply won't bother when there are easier options on the market.

The homes that hold their value best are rarely the most elaborate ones in the neighborhood. More often, they are the homes that feel well cared for, make sense for the location, and give the next buyer confidence that they can move in without taking on a long list of immediate projects.

Thinking about buying
or selling a home?
I can help make the process easy, click here to get in touch today!
Share on social media

Share On Facebook Share On Twitter Share On Pinterest Share On LinkedIn

Login to My Homefinder

Pixel