Agents: Shovel Your Vacant Listings

Dear Owners & Listing Agents of vacant homes:

It’s that time of year again – and this year has been worse than most!  When I was out showing recently, several days after the last snow, about 1/2 the vacant houses (foreclosures and short sales) were unshoveled.  Not only does this make the home very unappealing, it is a safety hazard as well.  On one house the drift on the front door made it almost impossible to open the storm door to get to the lock box.  Even worse, when exiting the home I literally stepped right off the front stoop into waist-high snow, almost hurting myself in the process.

It is both good business sense as well as good manners to make at least a small effort to provide easy and safe access to properties for sale.  If the seller isn’t willing to do it, the agent should!

Agents Disrespecting Vacant Houses

I have a listing that is vacant.  The house is not a foreclosure and it is not a short sale.  The house is clean, freshly painted, and has all utilities on.  Apparently because it is vacant, agents/their buyers feel that they do not need to afford the same respect they would to an occupied home.

When I arrived for an open house this past weekend, I find:

  • All the blinds in the house pulled up (most were down & partially turned open)
  • The back sliding door left unlocked & without the security arm down (both of which were done before)
  • Carpets pulled up in corners in 3 different parts of the house (there was one corner pulled for demonstration & a description of the hardwood floor locations already)
  • Lights left on
  • Lamps unplugged
  • Concrete block wall kicked to knock paint off the block
  • Several windows not secured properly

There were 4-5 showings in the last week so we don’t know who did what when but the fact that all of this was done is simply unacceptable.  While buyers sometimes can get a little aggressive when they look at properties, it is the agent’s duty to verify that no damage is done to a property and that the property is left in the condition it is found.

Chances are good that these things were divided over several of the showings.  While the little things don’t seem a big deal at the time, they add up quickly with multiple showings.  I think that if the agent(s) that did these things experienced something similar themselves that they would be more conscientious of their actions.

Equal Housing Opportunity and REALTOR logo

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This website is a service of Aaron Dickinson of Edina Realty, a broker Participant of the Regional Multiple Listing Service of Minnesota, Inc.