Should You Sell Your Sandy Home As-Is or Fix It First? — article hero illustration

Seller Guide

Should You Sell Your Sandy Home As-Is or Fix It First?

By Andrew Ho · November 14, 2025
Should You Sell Your Sandy Home As-Is or Fix It First? — supporting illustration

The choice between selling your Sandy home as-is or making improvements first comes down to two questions: what’s the work going to cost, and what’s it going to return? Cosmetic prep (paint, carpet, cleaning) almost always pays back 2-3x. Major remodels usually don’t. Choose based on your timeline, cash position, and target buyer.

What “as-is” actually means

Selling as-is means you’re not making repairs or improvements before listing. It does not mean:

  • You can hide known defects (Utah law requires disclosure)
  • The buyer can’t inspect
  • The home is automatically below market

What it does mean:

  • You won’t negotiate repairs on the inspection report
  • Buyers price in their own perceived repair costs
  • Your buyer pool skews toward investors, cash buyers, and bargain hunters
  • Closing typically happens faster

The repair-versus-discount math

Three categories of pre-sale work, ranked by typical ROI:

High ROI (almost always worth it)

ProjectTypical costTypical value addWhy it works
Fresh interior paint, neutral colors$3,500-$6,000$10,000-$18,000First impression, photos pop
Replace worn carpet$4,000-$8,000$8,000-$15,000Buyers see “move-in ready”
Deep clean + declutter$1,500-$3,000$5,000-$15,000Affects every showing
Exterior power wash + minor landscaping$1,000-$2,500$5,000-$10,000Curb appeal drives buyer interest
Minor handyman repairs (door knobs, switch plates, leaky faucets)$500-$1,500$5,000-$10,000Removes inspection negotiation leverage

Total cost: $10,500-$21,000. Typical value add: $33,000-$68,000.

Medium ROI (depends on home and price point)

ProjectTypical costTypical value add
Refinish hardwood floors$2,500-$5,000$5,000-$10,000
Replace dated light fixtures$800-$2,000$2,000-$5,000
Paint kitchen cabinets (vs replace)$2,500-$5,000$5,000-$15,000
New garage door$1,500-$3,500$2,000-$5,000

Low or negative ROI (usually skip)

ProjectTypical costTypical value add
Full kitchen remodel$40,000-$80,000$25,000-$50,000
Full bathroom remodel$15,000-$35,000$10,000-$20,000
Adding a room$30,000-$80,000Varies, often less
New roof (unless absolutely needed)$12,000-$25,000$5,000-$10,000
New HVAC (unless absolutely needed)$8,000-$15,000$3,000-$8,000

Big remodels lose money because buyers want to choose their own finishes. The new $60,000 kitchen you love may not match the next owner’s taste — and you’ve paid for both.

What changes when your home is over $1M in Sandy

At the luxury end of Sandy (Pepperwood, White City bench, Granite Hills), the as-is calculation shifts. Buyers expect higher condition standards, and the gap between as-is and prepared widens to 10-15%. Pre-sale cosmetic work moves from “should do” to “must do” at this price point.

When as-is genuinely wins

Three scenarios where as-is is the right call:

  • You inherited the home and live out of state. The logistics of repairs from afar usually cost more than the value add.
  • The home needs structural work beyond cosmetic. Foundation, sewer line collapse, major water damage. These work better with investor buyers who know how to price the work.
  • You need to close fast. Job relocation, divorce, financial stress. As-is closes 2-3 weeks faster on average.

The honest middle path

For most Sandy sellers, the right answer is light prep, not full renovation: paint, carpet, clean, declutter, fix obvious nits, leave the dated kitchen alone. This typically costs $10,000-$15,000 and returns $25,000-$45,000 — without months of renovation timeline.

What to do next

The right path depends on your specific home. Get a free Sandy home valuation — we’ll provide two estimates: one as-is, one assuming light prep, so you can see the dollar difference for your home specifically.

For a walkthrough conversation on which specific repairs make sense for your Sandy home, reach out to Andrew. We see Sandy homes every week and know which features Sandy buyers reward and which they ignore.

The right answer isn’t always to fix or always to sell as-is. It’s to know the dollar difference for your home, then choose based on your timeline and cash position.

Common Questions

Should I sell my Sandy home as-is or fix it up first?

Depends on the type of work. Cosmetic prep (paint, carpet, decluttering, light landscaping) almost always returns 2-3x its cost. Major renovations (full kitchen or bath remodels) rarely return their cost and usually don't make sense before selling.

What repairs add the most value before selling in Sandy?

Fresh interior paint in neutral colors, replacing worn carpet, deep cleaning, decluttering, exterior power wash, and minor landscaping. These typically cost $5,000-$12,000 total and add $15,000-$30,000 to sale price.

Do Sandy buyers expect updated kitchens and bathrooms?

At the $700K+ price point, yes — but they don't expect new. Clean, functional, dated-but-tidy kitchens sell. Original 1980s kitchens with chipped tile and burnt cabinets significantly hurt offers.

How much less will I get selling as-is in Sandy?

Typically 5-12% less than a prepared home. On a $750,000 home, that's $37,500-$90,000. The discount accounts for both buyer's perceived repair cost and reduced buyer pool.

Will I sell faster as-is?

Usually 2-3 weeks faster. As-is homes attract investor and cash buyers who close quickly. Prepared homes attract owner-occupants who pay more but require more time.

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