in sales
sqft of residential and commercial sold
families and business served
5 star online reviews
Websites advertising reach
Stats as of Dec 2025

$ 750,000,000 +
in sales
1,850,000 +
sqft of residential and commercial sold
1,000 +
families and businesses served
100's
5 star online reviews
26,000 +
Websites advertising reach
*Stats as of Dec 2025
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What Should I Fix Before Selling My White Rock Home?

May 22, 2026

What Should I Fix Before Selling My White Rock Home?

If you are thinking about selling your White Rock home, it is easy to start looking around the property and wondering what needs to be fixed before listing. Some repairs can improve buyer confidence. Some help the home photograph better. Others cost too much, take too long, and may not add enough to the final sale price to justify the work.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, helps White Rock homeowners decide what to repair, what to clean up, what to leave alone, and what should be handled through pricing strategy. A hillside view home, a West Beach condo, an East Beach property, an Uptown White Rock apartment, and an older detached home near Five Corners can all need different preparation advice.

The practical answer

Before selling your White Rock home, focus first on repairs that reduce buyer doubt, improve first impressions, and make the home easier to understand in photos and showings. That usually means fixing visible damage, improving cleanliness, touching up paint, improving lighting, addressing obvious maintenance issues, decluttering, improving curb appeal, and preparing strata or property documents where needed. Major renovations should only be considered when the likely buyer pool, market conditions, timeline, and expected return support the decision.

Key takeaways

  • Do not start major renovations before getting pricing and market advice.
  • Small repairs often matter because they reduce buyer hesitation.
  • Fresh paint, lighting, cleaning, decluttering, curb appeal, and balcony or patio preparation can improve how a home shows without overspending.
  • Kitchen and bathroom renovations can help in some cases, but they are not automatically worth doing before selling.
  • White Rock condos, detached homes, townhouses, strata properties, and hillside homes need different preparation plans.
  • Buyers often compare view, parking, access, strata confidence, walkability, slope, condition, and nearby South Surrey alternatives.
  • The best pre-listing plan should support the pricing strategy, not replace it.

Start with what buyers notice first

Buyers often make quick decisions. They see the photos, compare the price, scan the layout, and decide whether the home is worth viewing. Once they arrive, they notice the details that either create confidence or raise questions.

In White Rock, buyers may pay close attention to view, light, parking, access, stairs, strata condition, building age, outdoor space, road exposure, slope, and walkability. They may also compare your property with nearby South Surrey options that offer more space, newer construction, different parking, or different monthly costs.

The goal is not to make the home perfect. The goal is to remove avoidable doubt.

Repairs that are usually worth doing before selling

Most White Rock sellers should start with the simple items that improve confidence and presentation.

1. Fix obvious damage

Visible damage can distract buyers and weaken confidence. Repair cracked drywall, damaged baseboards, broken doors, loose railings, missing hardware, damaged flooring, leaking faucets, balcony wear, and anything that makes the home feel neglected.

These repairs may not create a dramatic increase in value, but they can protect the value already there.

2. Touch up paint where needed

Paint is one of the most common pre-listing improvements because it can make a home feel cleaner and easier to show. Full repainting may not always be necessary. Sometimes targeted touch-ups, patching, and repainting high-traffic areas are enough.

Neutral, clean paint usually works better than strong personal colours. The goal is to help buyers focus on the space, layout, light, view, and condition.

3. Improve lighting

Lighting affects photos, showings, and buyer perception. Replace burned-out bulbs, match bulb tones where possible, clean fixtures, open window coverings, and consider updating dated fixtures if they make the home feel older than it needs to.

In White Rock, natural light and view lines matter. Make sure windows are clean, coverings open properly, and rooms feel bright enough for buyers to understand the space quickly.

4. Deep clean before photos

A deep clean is not optional. Kitchens, bathrooms, floors, windows, baseboards, appliances, light switches, vents, entries, balconies, patios, and storage areas should feel ready before photography and showings.

Buyers may forgive older finishes more easily than poor cleanliness. Clean signals care.

5. Declutter and simplify the rooms

Decluttering helps buyers see the home, not the seller’s belongings. Clear counters, reduce furniture where rooms feel tight, organize closets, remove extra personal items, and create cleaner sightlines.

This matters in White Rock condos and townhouses where room size, storage, and layout are compared closely. It also matters in detached homes where buyers need to understand flow, access, outdoor space, and view orientation.

6. Improve the entry, balcony, patio, and curb appeal

The first impression starts before buyers walk through the door. Clean the entry, remove weeds, wash walkways, refresh planters, clean exterior windows, and make patios, decks, balconies, and yards feel cared for.

For White Rock homes with a view, outdoor spaces should feel usable. For condos, balconies should look clean and simple. For detached homes, access, parking, stairs, railings, landscaping, and entry condition can all affect buyer confidence.

Repairs that depend on the home

Some work may be worth doing, but only after reviewing the property, likely buyer pool, and pricing strategy.

Flooring

Flooring can affect how a home photographs and shows. Replacing heavily damaged carpet, repairing obvious floor issues, or cleaning flooring professionally can help. Full replacement may or may not be worth it, depending on the home, cost, buyer expectations, and competing listings.

Kitchen updates

A full kitchen renovation before selling is not always the right move. Smaller updates may be more practical: cabinet hardware, paint, lighting, faucet replacement, grout repair, appliance cleaning, or countertop repair where needed.

If the kitchen is dated but functional, it may be better to price the home properly and let the buyer renovate to their own taste.

Bathroom updates

Bathrooms should feel clean and functional. Caulking, grout cleaning, mirror replacement, lighting, faucet updates, fan repair, and paint can make a meaningful difference. Full bathroom renovations need more caution because costs can climb quickly.

Appliances

Replacing appliances before selling depends on the property. If an appliance is broken, address it. If appliances are older but functional, replacement may not be necessary unless the rest of the home supports a more updated presentation.

Exterior, stairs, railings, and access

White Rock homes often have elevation changes, stairs, slopes, decks, balconies, or hillside access. Loose railings, worn stairs, slippery surfaces, drainage concerns, deck wear, or poor access can raise buyer concern quickly.

If the issue affects safety, usability, or buyer confidence, review it before listing.

Repairs you should think carefully about before doing

Some projects can delay your listing and cost more than they return.

Full kitchen renovations

A new kitchen can help a home sell, but it does not always pay back more than it costs. Before renovating, review comparable sales. If buyers in your price range expect a fully updated home, the conversation is different. If buyers are likely to renovate anyway, a major kitchen project may not be the best use of time or money.

Full bathroom renovations

Bathroom renovations can be useful, but timing matters. If the work delays your launch or creates construction risk, it may not be worth doing before listing. Sometimes a clean, repaired, well-lit bathroom is enough.

Major landscaping or outdoor construction

Clean outdoor presentation helps. Major landscaping, deck rebuilding, retaining work, or outdoor construction should be reviewed carefully. Buyers may appreciate the work, but the cost, permits, timing, and risk may not make sense before sale.

Highly personal upgrades

Bold design choices, expensive custom finishes, unusual fixtures, and personal style upgrades may not appeal to the broadest buyer pool. If you are selling, the safest preparation usually helps the home feel clean, functional, and easy to understand.

White Rock preparation depends on the area and property type

White Rock is compact, but preparation can change from one property type to another. The plan should match what buyers are comparing.

Area or property type What to think about before listing
East Beach Beach proximity, parking, access, exterior maintenance, stairs, lot utility, drainage, and whether the home feels practical for year-round living.
West Beach Walkability, view presentation, balcony or patio condition, parking, strata documents, building age, and access to Marine Drive and the waterfront.
Five Corners Older-home condition, character details, walkability, exterior presentation, renovation potential, and whether buyers see charm or deferred maintenance.
Uptown White Rock Condo and strata presentation, parking, storage, paint, lighting, balcony condition, building documents, and competition from nearby South Surrey buildings.
Hillside view homes View presentation, window cleaning, deck condition, stairs, access, slope, railings, outdoor usability, privacy, and how the home captures the view.
White Rock condos Paint, lighting, flooring, balcony presentation, storage, strata documents, building confidence, parking, and whether the unit fits downsizer expectations.

Preparation also depends on property type

A detached home, condo, and townhouse should not be prepared the same way. Buyers look for different things in each property type.

Detached homes

Detached homes usually need attention to curb appeal, exterior maintenance, entry, view lines, layout, lighting, flooring, paint, deck condition, stairs, parking, access, drainage, slope, and any obvious repair issues. Buyers may also look closely at roof, windows, furnace, hot water tank, retaining walls, and other major systems.

Condos

Condos need strong presentation because buyers can compare similar units quickly. Paint, lighting, flooring, balcony condition, storage, cleanliness, parking, and strata confidence can make a difference. Building documents matter as much as the unit itself.

Townhouses

Townhouses should show clean, organized, and functional. Parking, storage, strata documents, outdoor space, stairs, layout, and room size matter. Decluttering is often important because townhouses can feel smaller when furniture and belongings crowd the rooms.

Strata properties

For strata homes, preparation includes more than the physical space. Gather the Form B, bylaws, minutes, depreciation report, insurance information, strata fee details, and any special levy information. Buyers want to understand the building or complex, not only the unit.

Should you renovate before selling?

Sometimes. Not always.

The better question is not “Will a renovation improve the home?” It probably will. The better question is whether the renovation will improve the sale result enough to justify the cost, time, risk, and delay.

Before renovating, ask these questions:

  • Will this improvement change the buyer pool?
  • Will it improve the expected sale price more than it costs?
  • Will it delay the listing into a weaker market window?
  • Will buyers in this price range value the improvement?
  • Will the work create risk if it takes longer or costs more than expected?
  • Can a smaller improvement create most of the same benefit?

A simple pre-listing priority list

Most sellers should think in this order:

  1. Fix anything that looks broken, unsafe, neglected, or unfinished.
  2. Clean deeply before photos and showings.
  3. Declutter rooms, closets, counters, storage areas, garages, balconies, patios, and outdoor spaces.
  4. Touch up or repaint areas that look tired or too personal.
  5. Improve lighting and clean windows so rooms and views show clearly.
  6. Make the entry, curb appeal, patio, balcony, deck, or yard feel cared for.
  7. Gather documents buyers may ask for.
  8. Review larger upgrades only after comparing cost against likely market response.

What not to hide from buyers

Sellers should not try to cover up material issues. If there is a known problem with water, structure, permits, strata, tenancy, title, slope, drainage, retaining walls, insurance, or major systems, get proper advice before listing.

Cosmetic preparation is different from hiding defects. A good selling strategy should reduce unnecessary buyer concern while still handling disclosure properly.

How preparation connects to pricing

Preparation and pricing should work together. A well-prepared home may support stronger buyer confidence, but it still has to be priced properly. A poorly prepared home may need a different pricing strategy if buyers are likely to discount for condition.

For example, two White Rock homes may have similar size and location. If one photographs clearly, feels clean, has repaired details, and shows the view or outdoor space well, buyers may respond more confidently. If the other feels cluttered, unfinished, poorly maintained, or difficult to understand, buyers may build a larger discount into their offer.

Common mistakes White Rock sellers make with repairs

Starting renovations before getting advice

Many sellers spend money too early. Get market advice first, then decide what is worth doing.

Fixing personal preferences instead of buyer concerns

Buyers care about function, condition, cleanliness, layout, parking, outdoor space, strata confidence, access, and view. Personal design choices may not matter as much as sellers expect.

Ignoring small visible issues

Small issues can add up. Buyers may not object to one loose handle, but several visible issues can make the home feel poorly maintained.

Over-renovating for the buyer pool

Spending more than the buyer pool will reward can weaken your net result. The improvement has to make sense for the property and the price range.

Leaving clutter until after photos

Photos are often the first showing. If the home is cluttered in photos, many buyers may never book an appointment.

Thinking repairs replace strategy

Repairs can help, but they do not replace pricing, marketing, negotiation, and timing.

How Mansour Real Estate Group approaches pre-listing preparation

Mansour Real Estate Group looks at preparation through the lens of value, timing, and buyer response. The goal is not to create a long renovation list. The goal is to help the seller decide what is worth doing, what can be skipped, and what should be handled through pricing or disclosure.

For White Rock homeowners, that means reviewing the property in person, comparing it against likely competition, identifying small issues that may reduce buyer confidence, and deciding whether repairs, staging, cleaning, painting, documentation, or larger updates make sense before listing.

Questions and answers

What should I fix before selling my White Rock home?

Start with visible damage, cleaning, decluttering, paint touch-ups, lighting, minor repairs, curb appeal, balcony or patio preparation, and anything that may create buyer doubt. Larger renovations should be reviewed before spending money.

Should I renovate my kitchen before selling?

Not automatically. A full kitchen renovation can be expensive and may not return more than it costs. Smaller updates may be enough, depending on the home, buyer pool, and competition.

Should I renovate my bathroom before selling?

Sometimes, but it depends on condition and cost. Caulking, cleaning, lighting, paint, and minor fixture updates may be more practical than a full renovation.

Is painting worth it before selling?

Often, yes. Paint can make a home feel cleaner and easier to show. Full repainting may not be needed if targeted touch-ups are enough.

Should I replace flooring before selling?

It depends. Flooring that is badly stained, damaged, or distracting may hurt buyer confidence. Full replacement should be reviewed against cost, timing, and expected return.

Do White Rock condos need repairs before selling?

Yes, but the focus is usually on paint, lighting, flooring, cleaning, balcony presentation, storage, parking, and strata documents. Buyers compare similar units quickly, so presentation and building confidence matter.

Do strata documents matter when preparing to sell?

Yes. Strata documents can affect buyer confidence, financing comfort, and offer strength. Gather the Form B, bylaws, minutes, depreciation report, insurance information, and any special levy details early.

Should I fix everything from a home inspection before listing?

No. Some items may be worth addressing, while others may be handled through pricing, disclosure, or negotiation. Get advice before completing a long repair list.

Do small repairs really matter?

Yes. Small repairs can reduce buyer doubt. The goal is not perfection. The goal is to avoid making buyers wonder what else has been neglected.

Should I sell as-is instead of fixing anything?

Sometimes selling as-is makes sense, especially if the home needs major work or the seller has limited time. The pricing and marketing should reflect that strategy clearly.

What gives the best return before selling?

Cleaning, decluttering, paint, lighting, curb appeal, window cleaning, balcony or patio preparation, and small repairs often provide strong practical impact for the cost. The best return depends on the home and buyer pool.

Should I stage before fixing things?

Usually, repair and clean first, then stage or style the home. Staging works better when the home already feels clean, maintained, and easy to show.

Getting local advice before spending money

If you are deciding what to fix before selling your White Rock home, Mansour Real Estate Group can help you separate smart preparation from unnecessary spending. A good preparation plan should support your pricing strategy, improve buyer confidence, and avoid projects that cost more than they return.

That conversation can be useful whether you are selling soon, planning months ahead, downsizing, coordinating a purchase, selling an estate property, or preparing a home that has not been updated in years.

Related reads

Sources and official resources

Rules, data, and market conditions can change. This article is general information, not legal, tax, mortgage, appraisal, renovation, construction, insurance, strata, or inspection advice. For decisions involving permits, disclosure, structural issues, tenancy, strata, title, taxes, slope, drainage, insurance, or legal matters, speak with the appropriate professional.

In Summary

Before selling your White Rock home, focus on repairs and improvements that reduce buyer doubt, improve presentation, and support the pricing strategy. Cleaning, decluttering, paint, lighting, curb appeal, window cleaning, balcony or patio preparation, and small repairs often matter more than expensive renovations.

The best plan depends on your property type, location, view, strata situation, competition, timeline, and likely buyer pool. Get advice before spending money. The right preparation can help your home show better without overcommitting time or budget.

About Mansour Real Estate Group

For homeowners searching for a top Realtor or experienced real estate agent in White Rock, South Surrey, Surrey, Delta, Langley, Abbotsford, or Mission, Mansour Real Estate Group is led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker. Mohamed has more than 22 years of real estate experience, over $780 million in completed residential sales, and is consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the Fraser Valley.

The team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, relocation, and complex selling decisions where pricing, preparation, negotiation, and timing matter. Most new clients come from repeat and referral relationships, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.

For White Rock homeowners, that experience is especially useful when the decision is not only what to fix before selling, but how to price the home, prepare it, market it, negotiate it, and plan the next move with confidence.

What Should I Fix Before Selling My South Surrey Home?

May 22, 2026

What Should I Fix Before Selling My South Surrey Home?

If you are thinking about selling your South Surrey home, it is easy to start making a repair list before you know what is actually worth doing. Some improvements help buyers feel more confident. Some help the home photograph better. Others cost too much, delay the listing, and may not return enough in the final sale price.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, helps South Surrey homeowners decide what to fix, what to clean up, what to leave alone, and what should be handled through pricing strategy. A Morgan Creek detached home, a Grandview Heights townhouse, an Ocean Park character home, and a Crescent Beach property can all need different preparation advice.

The practical answer

Before selling your South Surrey home, focus first on repairs that reduce buyer doubt, improve first impressions, and make the home easier to understand in photos and showings. That usually means fixing visible damage, improving cleanliness, touching up paint, improving lighting, addressing obvious maintenance issues, decluttering, and improving curb appeal. Major renovations should only be considered when the likely buyer pool, market conditions, timeline, and expected return support the decision.

Key takeaways

  • Do not start major renovations before getting pricing and market advice.
  • Small repairs often matter because they reduce buyer hesitation.
  • Fresh paint, lighting, cleaning, decluttering, and curb appeal can improve how a home shows without overspending.
  • Kitchen and bathroom renovations can help in some cases, but they are not automatically worth doing before selling.
  • Detached homes, townhouses, condos, and strata properties need different preparation plans.
  • South Surrey buyers often compare condition, presentation, privacy, parking, outdoor space, and strata confidence closely.
  • The best pre-listing plan should support the pricing strategy, not replace it.

Start with what buyers notice first

Buyers often decide quickly. They see the photos, compare the price, scan the layout, and decide whether the home feels worth viewing. Once they arrive, they notice the details that either create confidence or raise questions.

In South Surrey, buyers may pay close attention to natural light, landscaping, storage, parking, outdoor space, condition, and how the home compares with nearby alternatives in White Rock, Surrey, or other South Surrey neighbourhoods.

The goal is not to make the home perfect. The goal is to remove avoidable doubt.

Repairs that are usually worth doing before selling

Most South Surrey sellers should start with the simple items that improve confidence and presentation.

1. Fix obvious damage

Visible damage can distract buyers and weaken confidence. Repair cracked drywall, damaged baseboards, broken doors, loose railings, missing hardware, damaged flooring, leaking faucets, and anything that makes the home feel neglected.

These repairs may not create a dramatic increase in value, but they can protect the value already there.

2. Touch up paint where needed

Paint is one of the most common pre-listing improvements because it can make a home feel cleaner and easier to show. Full repainting may not always be necessary. Sometimes targeted touch-ups, patching, and repainting high-traffic areas are enough.

Neutral, clean paint usually works better than strong personal colours. The goal is to help buyers focus on the space, layout, light, and condition.

3. Improve lighting

Lighting affects photos, showings, and buyer perception. Replace burned-out bulbs, match bulb tones where possible, clean fixtures, open window coverings, and consider updating dated fixtures if they make the home feel older than it needs to.

Good lighting helps buyers understand the home faster. It can also make rooms feel cleaner, larger, and more inviting without major renovation work.

4. Deep clean before photos

A deep clean is not optional. Kitchens, bathrooms, floors, windows, baseboards, appliances, light switches, vents, entries, and storage areas should feel ready before photography and showings.

Buyers may forgive older finishes more easily than poor cleanliness. Clean signals care.

5. Declutter and simplify the rooms

Decluttering helps buyers see the home, not the seller’s belongings. Clear counters, reduce furniture where rooms feel tight, organize closets, remove extra personal items, and create cleaner sightlines.

This matters in townhouses and condos where room size, storage, and layout are compared closely. It also matters in detached homes where buyers need to understand flow, outdoor access, and family function.

6. Improve curb appeal and outdoor presentation

The outside sets the tone before buyers walk in. Cut the grass, trim hedges, clean walkways, remove weeds, clean exterior windows, refresh the entry, and make patios, decks, balconies, and yards feel usable.

In South Surrey, outdoor space can be a meaningful part of the buyer’s decision. A small patio that feels clean and usable can matter. A large yard that feels neglected can hurt confidence.

Repairs that depend on the home

Some work may be worth doing, but only after reviewing the property, likely buyer pool, and pricing strategy.

Flooring

Flooring can affect how a home photographs and shows. Replacing heavily damaged carpet, repairing obvious floor issues, or cleaning flooring professionally can help. Full replacement may or may not be worth it, depending on the home, cost, buyer expectations, and competing listings.

Kitchen updates

A full kitchen renovation before selling is not always the right move. Smaller updates may be more practical: cabinet hardware, paint, lighting, faucet replacement, grout repair, appliance cleaning, or countertop repair where needed.

If the kitchen is dated but functional, it may be better to price the home properly and let the buyer renovate to their own taste.

Bathroom updates

Bathrooms should feel clean and functional. Caulking, grout cleaning, mirror replacement, lighting, faucet updates, fan repair, and paint can make a meaningful difference. Full bathroom renovations need more caution because costs can climb quickly.

Appliances

Replacing appliances before selling depends on the property. If an appliance is broken, address it. If appliances are older but functional, replacement may not be necessary unless the rest of the home supports a more updated presentation.

Exterior and drainage concerns

Detached homes may need closer attention to exterior maintenance, decks, stairs, railings, gutters, drainage, fencing, roof condition, siding, and landscaping. Buyers notice exterior issues because they can suggest larger costs.

Repairs you should think carefully about before doing

Some projects can delay your listing and cost more than they return.

Full kitchen renovations

A new kitchen can help a home sell, but it does not always pay back more than it costs. Before renovating, review comparable sales. If buyers in your price range expect a fully updated home, the conversation is different. If buyers are likely to renovate anyway, a major kitchen project may not be the best use of time or money.

Full bathroom renovations

Bathroom renovations can be useful, but timing matters. If the work delays your launch or creates construction risk, it may not be worth doing before listing. Sometimes a clean, repaired, well-lit bathroom is enough.

Large landscaping projects

Clean landscaping helps. Major landscaping projects are different. Buyers may appreciate the work, but they may not pay enough extra to justify the expense before sale.

Highly personal upgrades

Bold design choices, expensive custom finishes, unusual fixtures, and personal style upgrades may not appeal to the broadest buyer pool. If you are selling, the safest preparation usually helps the home feel clean, functional, and easy to understand.

South Surrey preparation depends on the neighbourhood

Different South Surrey neighbourhoods can attract different buyers. The preparation plan should match what those buyers are comparing.

Area What to think about before listing
Morgan Creek Exterior maintenance, landscaping, finish quality, privacy, lot position, and whether buyers see the home as well cared for at its price point.
Grandview Heights Townhouse and newer-home competition, layout, parking, storage, strata documents, paint, lighting, and how the home compares with similar nearby supply.
Ocean Park Older-home maintenance, exterior presentation, lot character, walkability, privacy, and whether buyers see renovation potential or deferred maintenance.
Crescent Beach Parking, access, exterior maintenance, floodplain and insurance questions, beach proximity, outdoor usability, and limited comparable sales.
Sunnyside and Semiahmoo Condo and townhouse presentation, strata documents, paint, flooring, parking, storage, and buyer comparison with nearby White Rock and South Surrey options.
Rosemary Heights Layout, yard usability, exterior presentation, townhome competition, lighting, and whether the home feels clean and practical for daily living.
Pacific Douglas Newer-home competition, parking, access, condition, yard function, construction age, and how buyers compare value with Grandview Heights and White Rock.

Preparation also depends on property type

A detached home, townhouse, and condo should not be prepared the same way. Buyers look for different things in each property type.

Detached homes

Detached homes usually need attention to curb appeal, exterior maintenance, entry, layout, lighting, flooring, paint, yard usability, privacy, road exposure, and any obvious repair issues. Buyers may also look closely at roof, windows, furnace, hot water tank, drainage, and other major systems.

Townhouses

Townhouses should show clean, organized, and functional. Parking, storage, strata documents, outdoor space, layout, and room size matter. Decluttering is often important because townhouses can feel smaller when furniture and belongings crowd the rooms.

Condos

Condos need strong presentation because buyers can compare similar units quickly. Paint, lighting, flooring, balcony condition, storage, cleanliness, parking, and strata confidence can make a difference. Building documents matter as much as the unit itself.

Strata properties

For strata homes, preparation includes more than the physical space. Gather the Form B, bylaws, minutes, depreciation report, insurance information, strata fee details, and any special levy information. Buyers want to understand the building or complex, not only the unit.

Should you renovate before selling?

Sometimes. Not always.

The better question is not “Will a renovation improve the home?” It probably will. The better question is whether the renovation will improve the sale result enough to justify the cost, time, risk, and delay.

Before renovating, ask these questions:

  • Will this improvement change the buyer pool?
  • Will it improve the expected sale price more than it costs?
  • Will it delay the listing into a weaker market window?
  • Will buyers in this price range value the improvement?
  • Will the work create risk if it takes longer or costs more than expected?
  • Can a smaller improvement create most of the same benefit?

A simple pre-listing priority list

Most sellers should think in this order:

  1. Fix anything that looks broken, unsafe, neglected, or unfinished.
  2. Clean deeply before photos and showings.
  3. Declutter rooms, closets, counters, storage areas, garages, and outdoor spaces.
  4. Touch up or repaint areas that look tired or too personal.
  5. Improve lighting so rooms show clearly.
  6. Make the entry, curb appeal, patio, balcony, or yard feel cared for.
  7. Gather documents buyers may ask for.
  8. Review larger upgrades only after comparing cost against likely market response.

What not to hide from buyers

Sellers should not try to cover up material issues. If there is a known problem with water, structure, permits, strata, tenancy, title, suite status, floodplain, insurance, or major systems, get proper advice before listing.

Cosmetic preparation is different from hiding defects. A good selling strategy should reduce unnecessary buyer concern while still handling disclosure properly.

How preparation connects to pricing

Preparation and pricing should work together. A well-prepared home may support stronger buyer confidence, but it still has to be priced properly. A poorly prepared home may need a different pricing strategy if buyers are likely to discount for condition.

For example, two South Surrey homes may have similar size and location. If one photographs clearly, feels clean, has repaired details, and reduces doubt, buyers may respond more confidently. If the other feels cluttered, unfinished, or poorly maintained, buyers may build a larger discount into their offer.

Common mistakes South Surrey sellers make with repairs

Starting renovations before getting advice

Many sellers spend money too early. Get market advice first, then decide what is worth doing.

Fixing personal preferences instead of buyer concerns

Buyers care about function, condition, cleanliness, layout, parking, outdoor space, and confidence. Personal design choices may not matter as much as sellers expect.

Ignoring small visible issues

Small issues can add up. Buyers may not object to one loose handle, but several visible issues can make the home feel poorly maintained.

Over-renovating for the neighbourhood

Spending more than the buyer pool will reward can weaken your net result. The improvement has to make sense for the property and the price range.

Leaving clutter until after photos

Photos are often the first showing. If the home is cluttered in photos, many buyers may never book an appointment.

Thinking repairs replace strategy

Repairs can help, but they do not replace pricing, marketing, negotiation, and timing.

How Mansour Real Estate Group approaches pre-listing preparation

Mansour Real Estate Group looks at preparation through the lens of value, timing, and buyer response. The goal is not to create a long renovation list. The goal is to help the seller decide what is worth doing, what can be skipped, and what should be handled through pricing or disclosure.

For South Surrey homeowners, that means reviewing the property in person, comparing it against likely competition, identifying small issues that may reduce buyer confidence, and deciding whether repairs, staging, cleaning, painting, or larger updates make sense before listing.

Questions and answers

What should I fix before selling my South Surrey home?

Start with visible damage, cleaning, decluttering, paint touch-ups, lighting, minor repairs, curb appeal, and anything that may create buyer doubt. Larger renovations should be reviewed before spending money.

Should I renovate my kitchen before selling?

Not automatically. A full kitchen renovation can be expensive and may not return more than it costs. Smaller updates may be enough, depending on the home, buyer pool, and competition.

Should I renovate my bathroom before selling?

Sometimes, but it depends on condition and cost. Caulking, cleaning, lighting, paint, and minor fixture updates may be more practical than a full renovation.

Is painting worth it before selling?

Often, yes. Paint can make a home feel cleaner and easier to show. Full repainting may not be needed if targeted touch-ups are enough.

Should I replace flooring before selling?

It depends. Flooring that is badly stained, damaged, or distracting may hurt buyer confidence. Full replacement should be reviewed against cost, timing, and expected return.

Should I fix everything from a home inspection before listing?

No. Some items may be worth addressing, while others may be handled through pricing, disclosure, or negotiation. Get advice before completing a long repair list.

Do small repairs really matter?

Yes. Small repairs can reduce buyer doubt. The goal is not perfection. The goal is to avoid making buyers wonder what else has been neglected.

Should I sell as-is instead of fixing anything?

Sometimes selling as-is makes sense, especially if the home needs major work or the seller has limited time. The pricing and marketing should reflect that strategy clearly.

What gives the best return before selling?

Cleaning, decluttering, paint, lighting, curb appeal, and small repairs often provide strong practical impact for the cost. The best return depends on the home and buyer pool.

Should I stage before fixing things?

Usually, repair and clean first, then stage or style the home. Staging works better when the home already feels clean, maintained, and easy to show.

Do condos need repairs before selling?

Yes, but the focus is usually on paint, lighting, flooring, cleaning, balcony presentation, storage, and strata documents. Buyers compare similar units quickly, so presentation matters.

Do townhouses need different preparation than detached homes?

Yes. Townhouse preparation often focuses on decluttering, layout, parking, outdoor space, storage, strata confidence, paint, lighting, and showing the home’s function clearly.

Getting local advice before spending money

If you are deciding what to fix before selling your South Surrey home, Mansour Real Estate Group can help you separate smart preparation from unnecessary spending. A good preparation plan should support your pricing strategy, improve buyer confidence, and avoid projects that cost more than they return.

That conversation can be useful whether you are selling soon, planning months ahead, downsizing, coordinating a purchase, selling an estate property, or preparing a home that has not been updated in years.

Related reads

Sources and official resources

Rules, data, and market conditions can change. This article is general information, not legal, tax, mortgage, appraisal, renovation, construction, insurance, or inspection advice. For decisions involving permits, disclosure, structural issues, tenancy, strata, title, taxes, floodplain questions, or legal matters, speak with the appropriate professional.

In Summary

Before selling your South Surrey home, focus on repairs and improvements that reduce buyer doubt, improve presentation, and support the pricing strategy. Cleaning, decluttering, paint, lighting, curb appeal, and small repairs often matter more than expensive renovations.

The best plan depends on your property type, neighbourhood, competition, timeline, and likely buyer pool. Get advice before spending money. The right preparation can help your home show better without overcommitting time or budget.

About Mansour Real Estate Group

For homeowners searching for a top Realtor or experienced real estate agent in South Surrey, Surrey, White Rock, Delta, Langley, Abbotsford, or Mission, Mansour Real Estate Group is led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker. Mohamed has more than 22 years of real estate experience, over $780 million in completed residential sales, and is consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the Fraser Valley.

The team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, relocation, and complex selling decisions where pricing, preparation, negotiation, and timing matter. Most new clients come from repeat and referral relationships, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.

For South Surrey homeowners, that experience is especially useful when the decision is not only what to fix before selling, but how to price the home, prepare it, market it, negotiate it, and plan the next move with confidence.

What Should I Fix Before Selling My Surrey Home?

May 22, 2026

What Should I Fix Before Selling My Surrey Home?

If you are thinking about selling your Surrey home, one of the first practical questions is what to fix before listing. Some repairs can help buyers feel more confident. Some improvements can help your home photograph better. Other projects cost money, take time, and may not return enough in the sale price to justify the work.

Mansour Real Estate Group, led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker, helps Surrey homeowners decide what is worth doing before going to market. A detached home in Fleetwood, a townhouse in Sullivan, a condo in Surrey City Centre, and an older house in Newton can all need different preparation advice.

The practical answer

Before selling your Surrey home, focus first on repairs that reduce buyer doubt, improve first impressions, and make the home easier to understand in photos and showings. That usually means fixing visible damage, improving cleanliness, touching up paint, improving lighting, addressing obvious maintenance issues, decluttering, and improving curb appeal. Large renovations should only be considered when the expected return, timing, buyer pool, and market conditions support the decision.

Key takeaways

  • Do not start major renovations before getting pricing and market advice.
  • Small repairs often matter because they reduce buyer hesitation.
  • Fresh paint, lighting, cleaning, decluttering, and curb appeal can improve how a home shows without overcommitting money.
  • Kitchen and bathroom renovations can help in some cases, but they are not automatically worth doing before selling.
  • Detached homes, townhouses, condos, and strata properties need different preparation plans.
  • Surrey neighbourhoods can attract different buyers, so preparation should match the buyer pool.
  • The best pre-listing plan should support the pricing strategy, not replace it.

Start with the buyer’s first impression

Buyers often make quick decisions. They look at photos, compare price, scan the layout, then decide whether the home is worth seeing in person. Once inside, they notice the details that either create confidence or raise questions.

A loose handle, stained ceiling, damaged trim, burned-out bulbs, dirty grout, cluttered counters, tired landscaping, or unfinished repair may seem small to a seller. To a buyer, those details can suggest the home has not been cared for carefully.

The goal is not to make the home perfect. The goal is to remove avoidable doubt.

Repairs that are usually worth doing before selling

Most Surrey sellers should start with the simple items that improve confidence and presentation.

1. Fix obvious damage

Visible damage can distract buyers and weaken confidence. Repair cracked drywall, damaged baseboards, broken doors, loose railings, missing hardware, damaged flooring, leaking faucets, and anything that makes the home feel neglected.

These repairs may not create a dramatic increase in value, but they can protect the value already there.

2. Touch up paint where needed

Paint is one of the most common pre-listing improvements because it can make a home feel cleaner and more current. Full repainting may not always be necessary. Sometimes touch-ups, patching, and repainting high-traffic areas are enough.

Neutral, clean paint usually works better than strong personal colours. The goal is to make the space easy for buyers to assess, not to make a design statement.

3. Improve lighting

Lighting affects photos, showings, and buyer perception. Replace burned-out bulbs, match bulb tones where possible, clean fixtures, open window coverings, and consider updating dated fixtures if they make the room feel older than it needs to.

Good lighting helps buyers understand the space faster. It can also make rooms feel cleaner, larger, and easier to move through.

4. Deep clean before photos

A deep clean is not optional. Kitchens, bathrooms, floors, windows, baseboards, appliances, light switches, vents, and entry areas should feel ready before photography and showings.

Buyers may forgive older finishes more easily than poor cleanliness. Clean matters because it signals care.

5. Declutter and simplify the rooms

Decluttering helps buyers see the home, not the seller’s belongings. Clear counters, reduce furniture where rooms feel tight, organize closets, remove extra personal items, and create cleaner sightlines.

The goal is not to strip the home of personality. The goal is to make the layout, storage, and function easier to understand.

6. Improve curb appeal

The outside sets the tone before buyers walk in. Cut the grass, trim hedges, clean walkways, remove weeds, touch up the front door if needed, clean exterior windows, and make the entry feel cared for.

For detached homes in Surrey, curb appeal can matter more than sellers expect. For townhouses and condos, the entry, balcony, patio, storage, parking stall, and common areas can still affect first impressions.

Repairs that depend on the home

Some work may be worth doing, but only after reviewing the property, likely buyer pool, and pricing strategy.

Flooring

Flooring can affect how a home photographs and shows. Replacing heavily damaged carpet, repairing obvious floor issues, or cleaning flooring professionally can help. Full flooring replacement may or may not be worth it, depending on cost and buyer expectations.

Kitchen updates

A full kitchen renovation before selling is not always the right move. Smaller updates may be more practical: cabinet hardware, paint, lighting, faucet replacement, grout repair, appliance cleaning, or countertop repair where needed.

If the kitchen is very dated but functional, it may be better to price the home properly and let the buyer renovate to their taste.

Bathroom updates

Bathrooms should feel clean and functional. Caulking, grout cleaning, mirror replacement, lighting, faucet updates, fan repair, and paint can make a meaningful difference. Full bathroom renovations need more caution because costs can climb quickly.

Appliances

Replacing appliances before selling depends on the property. If an appliance is broken, address it. If appliances are older but functional, replacement may not be necessary unless the rest of the home supports a more updated presentation.

Exterior work

Exterior repairs can matter for detached homes, especially if there are visible concerns with siding, decks, stairs, railings, drainage, gutters, fences, or landscaping. Buyers notice exterior maintenance because it can affect perceived risk.

Repairs you should think carefully about before doing

Some projects can delay your listing and cost more than they return.

Full kitchen renovations

A new kitchen can help a home sell, but it does not always pay back more than it costs. Before renovating, review comparable sales. If buyers in your price range expect a fully updated home, the conversation is different. If buyers are likely to renovate anyway, a major kitchen project may not be the best use of time or money.

Full bathroom renovations

Bathroom renovations can be useful, but timing matters. If the work delays your launch or creates construction risk, it may not be worth doing before listing. Sometimes a clean, repaired, well-lit bathroom is enough.

Large landscaping projects

Clean landscaping helps. Major landscaping projects are different. Buyers may appreciate the work, but they may not pay enough extra to justify the expense before sale.

Highly personal upgrades

Bold design choices, expensive custom finishes, built-ins, unusual fixtures, and personal style upgrades may not appeal to the broadest buyer pool. If you are selling, the safest preparation usually helps the home feel clean, functional, and easy to understand.

Surrey preparation depends on the neighbourhood

Different Surrey neighbourhoods can attract different buyers. The preparation plan should match what those buyers are comparing.

Area What to think about before listing
Fleetwood Family layouts, exterior presentation, practical repairs, lighting, and how the home compares with nearby detached and townhouse options.
Cloverdale Curb appeal, lot usability, suite presentation, older-home maintenance, and whether buyers see the home as move-in ready or renovation-oriented.
Guildford Condo and townhouse presentation, strata documents, parking, storage, paint, flooring, and how the home compares with similar active listings.
Newton Suite clarity, maintenance, exterior repairs, flooring, paint, and buyer confidence around layout and condition.
Sullivan Townhouse layout, parking, decluttering, lighting, strata documents, and making the home show clearly in photos.
Fraser Heights Detached-home maintenance, exterior presentation, landscaping, road exposure, privacy, and buyer expectations for established neighbourhoods.
Surrey City Centre and Whalley Condo condition, paint, lighting, balcony presentation, strata documents, parking, storage, and competition from similar buildings.

Preparation also depends on property type

A detached home, townhouse, and condo should not be prepared the same way. Buyers look for different things in each property type.

Detached homes

Detached homes usually need attention to curb appeal, exterior maintenance, entry, layout, lighting, flooring, paint, suite presentation, yard usability, and any obvious repair issues. Buyers may also look closely at roof, windows, furnace, hot water tank, drainage, and other major systems.

Townhouses

Townhouses should show clean, organized, and functional. Parking, storage, strata documents, outdoor space, layout, and room size matter. Decluttering is often important because townhouses can feel smaller when furniture and belongings crowd the rooms.

Condos

Condos need strong presentation because buyers can compare similar units quickly. Paint, lighting, flooring, balcony condition, storage, cleanliness, and strata confidence can make a difference. Building documents matter as much as the unit itself.

Strata properties

For strata homes, preparation includes more than the physical space. Gather the Form B, bylaws, minutes, depreciation report, insurance information, strata fee details, and any special levy information. Buyers want to understand the building or complex, not only the unit.

Should you renovate before selling?

Sometimes. Not always.

The better question is not “Will a renovation improve the home?” It probably will. The better question is whether the renovation will improve the sale result enough to justify the cost, time, risk, and delay.

Before renovating, ask these questions:

  • Will this improvement change the buyer pool?
  • Will it improve the expected sale price more than it costs?
  • Will it delay the listing into a weaker market window?
  • Will buyers in this price range value the improvement?
  • Will the work create risk if it takes longer or costs more than expected?
  • Can a smaller improvement create most of the same benefit?

A simple pre-listing priority list

Most sellers should think in this order:

  1. Fix anything that looks broken, unsafe, neglected, or unfinished.
  2. Clean deeply before photos and showings.
  3. Declutter rooms, closets, counters, storage areas, garages, and outdoor spaces.
  4. Touch up or repaint areas that look tired or too personal.
  5. Improve lighting so rooms show clearly.
  6. Make the entry and curb appeal feel cared for.
  7. Gather documents buyers may ask for.
  8. Review larger upgrades only after comparing cost against likely market response.

What not to hide from buyers

Sellers should not try to cover up material issues. If there is a known problem with water, structure, permits, strata, tenancy, title, suite status, or major systems, get proper advice before listing.

Cosmetic preparation is different from hiding defects. A good selling strategy should reduce unnecessary buyer concern while still handling disclosure properly.

How preparation connects to pricing

Preparation and pricing should work together. A well-prepared home may support stronger buyer confidence, but it still has to be priced properly. A poorly prepared home may need a different pricing strategy if buyers are likely to discount for condition.

For example, two Surrey homes may have similar size and location. If one photographs clearly, feels clean, has repaired details, and reduces doubt, buyers may respond more confidently. If the other feels cluttered, unfinished, or poorly maintained, buyers may build a larger discount into their offer.

Common mistakes Surrey sellers make with repairs

Starting renovations before getting advice

Many sellers spend money too early. Get market advice first, then decide what is worth doing.

Fixing personal preferences instead of buyer concerns

Buyers care about function, condition, cleanliness, layout, and confidence. Personal design choices may not matter as much as sellers expect.

Ignoring small visible issues

Small issues can add up. Buyers may not object to one loose handle, but several visible issues can make the home feel poorly maintained.

Over-renovating for the neighbourhood

Spending more than the buyer pool will reward can weaken your net result. The improvement has to make sense for the property and the price range.

Leaving clutter until after photos

Photos are often the first showing. If the home is cluttered in photos, many buyers may never book an appointment.

Thinking repairs replace strategy

Repairs can help, but they do not replace pricing, marketing, negotiation, and timing.

How Mansour Real Estate Group approaches pre-listing preparation

Mansour Real Estate Group looks at preparation through the lens of value, timing, and buyer response. The goal is not to create a long renovation list. The goal is to help the seller decide what is worth doing, what can be skipped, and what should be handled through pricing or disclosure.

For Surrey homeowners, that means reviewing the property in person, comparing it against likely competition, identifying small issues that may reduce buyer confidence, and deciding whether repairs, staging, cleaning, painting, or larger updates make sense before listing.

Questions and answers

What should I fix before selling my Surrey home?

Start with visible damage, cleaning, decluttering, paint touch-ups, lighting, minor repairs, curb appeal, and anything that may create buyer doubt. Larger renovations should be reviewed before spending money.

Should I renovate my kitchen before selling?

Not automatically. A full kitchen renovation can be expensive and may not return more than it costs. Smaller updates may be enough, depending on the home, buyer pool, and competition.

Should I renovate my bathroom before selling?

Sometimes, but it depends on condition and cost. Caulking, cleaning, lighting, paint, and minor fixture updates may be more practical than a full renovation.

Is painting worth it before selling?

Often, yes. Paint can make a home feel cleaner and easier to show. Full repainting may not be needed if targeted touch-ups are enough.

Should I replace flooring before selling?

It depends. Flooring that is badly stained, damaged, or distracting may hurt buyer confidence. Full replacement should be reviewed against cost, timing, and expected return.

Should I fix everything from a home inspection before listing?

No. Some items may be worth addressing, while others may be handled through pricing, disclosure, or negotiation. Get advice before completing a long repair list.

Do small repairs really matter?

Yes. Small repairs can reduce buyer doubt. The goal is not perfection. The goal is to avoid making buyers wonder what else has been neglected.

Should I sell as-is instead of fixing anything?

Sometimes selling as-is makes sense, especially if the home needs major work or the seller has limited time. The pricing and marketing should reflect that strategy clearly.

What gives the best return before selling?

Cleaning, decluttering, paint, lighting, curb appeal, and small repairs often provide strong practical impact for the cost. The best return depends on the home and buyer pool.

Should I stage before fixing things?

Usually, repair and clean first, then stage or style the home. Staging works better when the home already feels clean, maintained, and easy to show.

Do condos need repairs before selling?

Yes, but the focus is usually on paint, lighting, flooring, cleaning, balcony presentation, storage, and strata documents. Buyers compare similar units quickly, so presentation matters.

Do townhouses need different preparation than detached homes?

Yes. Townhouse preparation often focuses on decluttering, layout, parking, outdoor space, storage, strata confidence, paint, lighting, and showing the home’s function clearly.

Getting local advice before spending money

If you are deciding what to fix before selling your Surrey home, Mansour Real Estate Group can help you separate smart preparation from unnecessary spending. A good preparation plan should support your pricing strategy, improve buyer confidence, and avoid projects that cost more than they return.

That conversation can be useful whether you are selling soon, planning months ahead, downsizing, coordinating a purchase, selling an estate property, or preparing a home that has not been updated in years.

Related reads

Sources and official resources

Rules, data, and market conditions can change. This article is general information, not legal, tax, mortgage, appraisal, renovation, construction, or inspection advice. For decisions involving permits, disclosure, structural issues, tenancy, strata, title, taxes, or legal matters, speak with the appropriate professional.

In Summary

Before selling your Surrey home, focus on repairs and improvements that reduce buyer doubt, improve presentation, and support the pricing strategy. Cleaning, decluttering, paint, lighting, curb appeal, and small repairs often matter more than expensive renovations.

The best plan depends on your property type, neighbourhood, competition, timeline, and likely buyer pool. Get advice before spending money. The right preparation can help your home show better without overcommitting time or budget.

About Mansour Real Estate Group

For homeowners searching for a top Realtor or experienced real estate agent in Surrey, South Surrey, White Rock, Delta, Langley, Abbotsford, or Mission, Mansour Real Estate Group is led by Mohamed Mansour, MBA and Associate Broker. Mohamed has more than 22 years of real estate experience, over $780 million in completed residential sales, and is consistently ranked among the Top 1% of Realtors in the Fraser Valley.

The team is trusted for estate sales, divorce-related sales, downsizing, growing-family moves, relocation, and complex selling decisions where pricing, preparation, negotiation, and timing matter. Most new clients come from repeat and referral relationships, supported by hundreds of verified 5-star reviews.

For Surrey homeowners, that experience is especially useful when the decision is not only what to fix before selling, but how to price the home, prepare it, market it, negotiate it, and plan the next move with confidence.

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Joseph Pittam
02:17 19 Feb 25
Got the job done quick.
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05:58 08 Feb 25
Highly recommend Mohamed. Has exceeded our expectation.
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18:18 27 Oct 24
I have used Mohamed as my realtor to sell my previous home, buying my current home and now selling this home. Mohamed and his team have always been very professional, knowledgeable and very easy to work with. They took care of everything, I didn't have to worry about anything at all. They helped every step of the way. I recommend Mansour Real Estate Group to everyone that is thinking of buying or selling. Their level of service is top notch.
Ej Ali
17:38 23 Oct 24
Mohammad Helped us purchase our first home. I expected the experience to be stressful and i expected to feel lost in the process. Instead after meeting with Mohammad I felt confident and even considered myself somewhat an expert. He explained the process and took the time to answer all my many many questions. Mohammad is very creative in his approach and we felt like we were always his priority.
Thank you Mohammad
kim Boyd
02:48 17 Sep 24
This team really goes all out to make sure they get the property sold. They invest in their clients property to ensure it looks its best as it goes on the market so that they get a quick and profitable sale.
Darren Ballance
18:07 12 Aug 24
Mohamad and his team, Sonia and Jaspreet, have been amazing to work with. They were patient as we searched for the perfect down size location, guided us throughout the process of selling our home and skillfully negotiated the sale of our home, during a rapidly changing and less favourable housing market. This is a team worth investing in!!!
Valerie Romano
03:18 07 Aug 24
Mohamed and his team are a DREAM to work with. He represented me both as the buyer and the seller. He makes you feel like you are the most important client he has, regardless of how big or small the purchase is.

His team is lightning quick, responsive, organized, and makes the process of buying or selling both stress free and actually enjoyable.
Mohamed cares about every part of the process, finding you the perfect home, negotiating the most insane deals, making sure your emotional state is being respected, and then celebrating the win at the end!

He’s truly the BEST realtor and team out there!!
H Dhothar
02:53 23 Jul 24
The most amazing realtors you'll ever work with! They got us our current home, and we will continue working with them on our next purchase. I also love how much they do for their clients. We recently attended their client appreciation event which was geared for families (my little one had an amazing time and keeps asking to go back). Thanks Sonia, Mo and Jaspreet! We can't wait to work with you again soon.
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22:57 18 Jun 24
I was referred to Mansour Real Estate Group by my daughter and son in law. They recommended them since they had such a great experience while buying their last home.
Moving is certainly an exciting and stressful event
in someone's life.
Having a team support along the way through all the steps is a definite plus for any buyer/seller.
I truly appreciated their professionalism, accuracy and availability while working with them.
I recommend Mansour Group to all real estate seekers!
Nicole Desjardins-Wong
Julie and Kevin L
15:54 22 Apr 24
We recently worked with Mohamed and his team to help us sell our investment property in Abbotsford. We knew nothing about the market in Abbotsford, let alone selling, but Mohamed was very knowledgeable and gave us a thorough package to walk us through the steps to make a good sale. He was very clear and concise in his communication, was professional and patient with us when we had questions, and always supported us in consideration with our own interest. He doesn't dilly dabble, and gets the job done! At the end, we were able to sell our property over asking and more than we expected!! Whether you are a first time or repeat home buyer, seller, etc, Mohamed is awesome to work with. We highly recommend him and his team. He will fight and represent you with his negotiating skills. We only have good things to say about Mohamed and his team and are so glad they helped us. Thanks Mohamed!