Sorry. No, I can't explain why it says that on Zillow or Trulia!
Trulia and Zillow are big national sites that provide info about real estate. The real estate information on Trulia and Zillow is not even necessarily real estate for sale. It's just real estate information.
Trulia and Zillow are real estate search sites popular with buyers, nationally.
Zillow has Zestimates (estimates of real estate value that are not very accurate) Matt Grohe in Des Moines Iowa wrote this post about Trulia and Zillow, two of the Big Three Real Estate sites.
Houses may be UnZillowable a concept from the late Joseph Ferrara of the Sellsius Real Estate Blog.
Trulia does not have Zestimates or Testimates or anything clever as far as home values. You will find old listings on both Trulia and Zillow. You will find "Foreclosures" which are not real estate for sale on many sites. I think for Central Ohio, the school info on Trulia or Zillow could get a buyer or seller in trouble... It's just proximity.
Thanks Matt for allowing me to Re-Blog your post for Central Ohio consumers who may be confused about information they find on Zillow or Trulia about homes they are looking at, or their own home.
Sorry. No, I can't explain why it says that on Zillow or Trulia! maybe Matt can....
;- )
Back in the olden days, say 2008 or 2009, if you mentioned Zillow or Trulia you'd often get a
blank stare. Nowadays it's more common for clients to come to their agents asking questions about what they've seen on the popular real estate sites. Oh, how I long for the good old days.
Trulia, based in San Francisco California and Zillow, based in Seattle Washington are data aggregators who target buyers and sellers of residential real estate. The centerpiece of the sites is listing data but they also provide information on schools, neighborhoods, sales trends, and home values, and the latter is often where the trouble starts.
In many cases, at least here in Iowa, the data on the sites does not jive with the facts, facts such as whether or not a property is actually for sale, how much the last sale of a property was for and the derivatives of these facts, number of sales, average listing prices, historical trends and property values. The data is in many cases just plain wrong and it serves to unnerve and aggravate both buyers and sellers alike. There's nothing like sitting down with a buyer to make an offer on a property and having them bring up the fact that the "Zestimate" says the house is worth $40,000 less than it is listed for on a $130,000 property, and despite the fact that it was the best house among the 20 you looked at in the $120-$140,000 range, the buyer still thinks they're having the wool pulled over their eyes.
The frustration is rivaled only perhaps by the buyer who has serious concerns about the neighborhood you showed them homes in because Trulia says prices there are down this year and it is overrun with foreclosures, even though your MLS data shows they've appreciated and there are only a handful of distressed sales. Or how about the buyer who wants to look at the home on Grand Ave which you did not send to them, but which they found for sale online, the same buyer who is demanding to know why you aren't sending them all the homes available for sale. The home in question? Oh, it's not for sale and hasn't been for months.(Client: Could you check again please? It's there online) And oh there is also the buyer who wonders "why does this house on Zillow say it has no garage when I can drive by and see it has a two car garage!?" And while we're on the subject please tell me why the website only shows one photo of the front of this other house? (a house which is not even for sale by the way!)
I feel for them all. These are people making a major purchase or sale and who might be basing their decisions upon data that is not consistently reliable. It also causes a breech of trust of sorts with real estate agents who are trying to provide accurate data which the client might view as suspect because it does not match the unmonitored aggregated data on an internet website! It's coming down to agents squaring off against an algorithym and having to defend impirical facts against blatant inaccuracies.
This weekend I entertained an out of town buyer looking at homes in the Des Moines area. I found myself
spending a lot of time explaining why the reality of the market or home values did not match what was being presented on sites such as these. It was unnerving and I didn't like being in the position of explaining why the data was misleading and inaccurate. I found myself often saying that it was not a good idea to rely solely upon the data they presented to make purchase or sale decisions. Eventually I was able to show through MLS data, public records and plain common sense how the information presented was patently inaccurate and misleading. It was a Pyrrhic victory however as I faced the reality that even having done so the incongruity of facts created dissonance in the mind of the buyer, dissonance which could only be relieved by further research on, of all places, the internet.
It seems this is a new hat we agents get to wear, quantifying conflicting data from various Internet sites and putting it all in perspective in the mind of a buyer or seller. The Internet has created a treasure trove of data, all available at the click of a mouse. Problem is that the proverbial wheat needs to be separated from the proverbial chaff, and I suspect in the future this will command larger and larger blocks of our most precious commodity, time. I guess in that respect we in real estate probably have a lot in common with doctors and lawyers!
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Contact Matt Grohe Realtor® RE/MAX Real Estate Concepts - 3125 Douglas Ave #205 Douglas Ave. Des Moines, IA , or call 515-988-3726 to list your property for sale or to purchase a property in Des Moines, West Des Moines, Windsor Heights, Clive, Johnston, Urbandale, Ankeny, Waukee, Norwalk, Carlisle or surrounding areas.
Online at: http://www.MyIowaHome.com
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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER
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blank stare. Nowadays it's more common for clients to come to their agents asking questions about what they've seen on the popular real estate sites. Oh, how I long for the good old days.