4 Reasons To Sell Your Charlotte Area Home


Is the time still right to sell your Charlotte NC area home? Wondering if you should put your house on the market today? Check out this video for the best reasons to list your house now!

Multiple offers has become the norm and you will do well selling your home. We can help in many ways, just contact us and we will have a no obligation discussion about the market and your home!

Northstone Homes For Sale

northstone homes for sale

Listings 1 - of


The data relating to real estate on this Web site derive in part from the Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc. IDX program. Brokers make an effort to deliver accurate information, but buyers should independently verify any information on which they will rely in a transaction. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither Savvy + Co. Real Estate nor any listing broker shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, or misprints, and they shall be held totally harmless from any damages arising from reliance upon this data. This data is provided exclusively for consumers -- personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties they may be interested in purchasing. © 2026 Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc.
Data updated June 17, 2026

Macaulay Homes For Sale

macaulay homes for sale

Listings 1 - of


The data relating to real estate on this Web site derive in part from the Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc. IDX program. Brokers make an effort to deliver accurate information, but buyers should independently verify any information on which they will rely in a transaction. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither Savvy + Co. Real Estate nor any listing broker shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, or misprints, and they shall be held totally harmless from any damages arising from reliance upon this data. This data is provided exclusively for consumers -- personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties they may be interested in purchasing. © 2026 Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc.
Data updated June 17, 2026

Birkdale and Birkdale Village Homes For Sale

Birkdale Village homes for sale

Listings 1 - of


The data relating to real estate on this Web site derive in part from the Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc. IDX program. Brokers make an effort to deliver accurate information, but buyers should independently verify any information on which they will rely in a transaction. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither Savvy + Co. Real Estate nor any listing broker shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, or misprints, and they shall be held totally harmless from any damages arising from reliance upon this data. This data is provided exclusively for consumers -- personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties they may be interested in purchasing. © 2026 Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc.
Data updated June 17, 2026

Birkdale homes for sale

Listings 1 - of


The data relating to real estate on this Web site derive in part from the Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc. IDX program. Brokers make an effort to deliver accurate information, but buyers should independently verify any information on which they will rely in a transaction. All properties are subject to prior sale, change or withdrawal. Neither Savvy + Co. Real Estate nor any listing broker shall be responsible for any typographical errors, misinformation, or misprints, and they shall be held totally harmless from any damages arising from reliance upon this data. This data is provided exclusively for consumers -- personal, non-commercial use and may not be used for any purpose other than to identify prospective properties they may be interested in purchasing. © 2026 Carolina Multiple Listing Services, Inc.
Data updated June 17, 2026

Sellers Start Your Engines: Charlotte Area Real Estate Needs Entries

Lets Go Racing! Sellers Buckle Up! No need to put off selling your home any longer, the housing market race in Charlotte has sellers in the driver’s seat again.

Charlotte and Lake Norman areas continue to have a shortage of homes available for sale ( and we have BUYERS ), median sales prices of homes are up 8% from a year ago. Multiple offers are becoming common again at all price points, especially in the $150,000 to $300,00 price range.

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The home in Mooresville above sold by Roby Robertson was sold in 2 days.  We had 6 showings in the 1st day and multiple offers.   The selling price was 195,000.

One things to keep in mind, this does not mean “anything goes”. While some homes are being snapped up immediately, others may still sit.  Professional pictures and smart marketing are determines the difference between homes with multiple offers and others that sits on the starting line.

Here are some important tips to keep in mind when selling your home:

  1.  Resist the urge to overprice.  Sellers market does not mean buyers will run to an overpriced home. Savvy buyers and agents will resist to even look at homes that are obviously out of touch.
  2. Make sure your agent hires a professional photographer.  Great pictures from the right angles mean everything online where buyers are looking.
  3.  Stage your home for the market according to the advice of your real estate agent or their staging partner.  Today’s buyers have expectations and requirements on a whole different level than buyers from previous years.  Put you buyers hat on and visualize from there.
  4. Make sure your home is accessible and easy to show.  Keep it ready to show at a moment’s notice and don’t decline showings. It’s a proven formula in real estate: the more showings a property receives, the higher the likelihood of an offer.

How To Be A Better Buyer

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Copyright 2015 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

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Home Selling Strategies

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Copyright 2015 NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®

Investors Looking For Short Sale Steals, Move Along!

Article Courtesy of Stephen Wilde of Wilde Law Firm

Carolina Living Real Estate has sold numerous Short Sales and we are huge advocates of using Wilde Law Firm to represent our sellers and assist them with getting their home sold.  As Stephen has said, Realtors should not be handling these transactions by themselves due to liability.  We know that with regard to banks and short sales in NC, Stephen knows his stuff.   Thus, we have chosen to publish an article he wrote in his newsletter.

Enjoy!

If you are an investor in the real estate market looking for steals then you might want to skip short sales and head to the courthouse steps. Short sales require a “market price” offer and have for several years now. Seriously, I am not kidding. Just so you know, the bank/servicer has heard all of the arguments….”Well if you don’t take this offer it will go to foreclosure”…”That is ridiculous. You will never get that for the property”…”Well look at what it will cost to get this property up to livable standards”…”If you don’t give us a discount, my buyer will walk”…etc. None of these arguments will result in an approval below market price.

Bank/Servicer. Remember that we are usually dealing with a loan servicer who does not own the loan but is merely servicing it. The loan servicer must strictly follow the note holder’s guidelines. The loan servicer will be audited and if they have deviated from the guidelines at all, like approving a short sale below market price, they will suffer the consequences monetarily.

Why? The main reason for this strict guideline is that the note holders do not want to establish a ‘sold comp’ in that neighborhood below market price because it negatively affects all the other property values….many of these properties also have loans secured by the property. Prior to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac establishing this ‘market price offer’ requirement we had a falling market. After this guideline change we finally saw the market become more solid in most areas.

Market Price. “Market price” is usually defined as what other properties have sold for in that neighborhood or in a one-mile radius of the property in the last 3 months. Pull the ‘sold comps’ and you will come up with the range that the short sale offer needs to be in. That is correct, there is no discount for a short sale. Note: If it is an FHA or VA short sale the appraiser assigned to provide the value of the property is not usually allowed to use distressed sale comps (short sale or foreclosures) in the valuation.

“Let’s just see what the bank/servicer says.” This is a strategy that many take when approaching a short sale. In other words, “let’s base our entire short sale strategy on the bank making a mistake.” This strategy usually ends up shooting the Seller in the foot with a valuation at the top end of the ‘sold comps’ range…or even higher.

Property Condition Issue. If there is a major defect or issue such as a roof, foundation, HVAC, water damage, mold or Radon, then we can usually get an approval that takes into account the amount it will take to fix that specific issue. However, a certified home inspection and several estimates will have to be presented at the BPO/appraisal appointment in order to get the market value established lower than the comps. Note: It is important to establish the condition issue and the repair costs prior to the BPO appointment, not after the short sale approval letter is issued. After the Approval Letter has been issued the bank/servicer generally does not reconsider the valuation or renegotiate price.

General Fix up. Please understand that the bank/servicer does not own the property or even the loan, most of the time. They are not going to put in new carpet, paint, refinish floors, upgrade kitchens, buy appliances, mow the lawn or clean the pool so do not think that you are going to get a reduction in market price for these items. The only thing these issues will do is establish market price at the lower end of the ‘sold comp’ range.

I don’t give you this information to be difficult or to cozy up to the bank/servicers. I am just attempting to inject some reality into the market. Our approach is always to try to understand the bank/servicers as much as possible and give them something they can say yes to at every step of the process so that we can get the parties to closing as quickly as possible. Arguing with the driver of the bus is far less successful. We may have to roll up our sleeves and get into a scrap on occasion but I feel that approach should be used sparingly, not as the first and only strategy.

Why Brokers Don’t Like Zillow

  • Have you ever had your agent ask you not to use Zillow as your source for searching Real Estate?
  • Have you ever questioned your agent about the data that exist on Zillow?
  • Have you ever found out that data on Zillow seems to be a bit off?
  • Have you ever questioned your agent about why the Zillow Zestimate is so far off his/her analysis?

There are some problems that exist between what consumers find on Zillow and what Realtor’s actually enter in our MLS.  Also, there are lags in status updates and other data found ( Zestimates…) As Brokers we have to agree to Zillow terms to have our data syndicated to their website.

As part of these terms the most troubling is “Zillow reserves the right to change data and we agree to not hold them accountable”.  I admit that is not the exact verbiage but it is an accurate summary.   Also, Zillow gives brokers ZERO ability to change(fix) data. Also, Zestimates are joke.  When agents do market analysis we know if a basement is finished, if counter tops have been updated,  if floor coverings are new…   Do you think Zillows this????

How in the world can they?  So,  how can their Zestimates be accurate. These items are not even the biggest problem. Case in point:  Let’s say a seller puts his home for sale and the listing agent syndicates home to numerous websites like Zillow.   Let’s also say the home has 3.5 bathrooms and 5 bedrooms.  Now what if in he syndicating of data, Zillow publishes 3 bathrooms and 4 bedrooms.

Zillow will NOT allow the agent to fix the problem.  Now the seller gets mad and calls the Real Estate Commission to complain about misrepresentation (yes people will).  Guess who is at fault?   Right the Broker… There are companies now looking very closely about whether they even want to syndicate the data.

Liability is a scary thing! The most accurate site on the web is Realtor.com.