Do I really need to do all the repairs and staging my real estate agent recommends?
My agent gave me a massive checklist of things to do before we list, including painting the entire interior, replacing the carpets, and renting professional staging furniture. I understand wanting the house to look nice, but this is going to take a lot of time and upfront cash. How do I decide which of their suggestions are actually necessary to sell the house versus just nice to have?
Asked by Emily H| 04-16-2026| 26 views|Selling|Updated 1 week ago
Short answer: No — you don’t need to do everything on the list.
But you do need to understand which items actually move the needle and which are optional.
A good pre‑listing plan has three categories:
1. Must‑Do Items (These protect your sale)
These are things that affect safety, financing, or buyer confidence.
Examples:
- Leaks, electrical issues, broken systems
- Anything that will show up on an inspection
- Obvious damage buyers will use to negotiate against you
These aren’t about “making it pretty.” They’re about preventing the deal from falling apart or costing you more later.
2. High‑ROI Cosmetic Updates (These make you money)
These are the small, strategic improvements that statistically deliver the highest return.
Examples:
- Fresh neutral paint
- New carpet or flooring in visibly worn areas
- Updated lighting
- Minor curb appeal
These aren’t mandatory, but they often increase your buyer pool and your final sale price.
If your agent is recommending them, it’s usually because they’ve seen the difference firsthand.
3. Nice‑to‑Have Extras (These are optional)
This is where staging and full‑scale cosmetic upgrades fall.
Examples:
- Renting furniture
- Replacing perfectly functional finishes
- Full interior repaint when only a few rooms need it
These can help your home show better, but they’re not required to sell.
They’re strategic choices, not obligations.
How to Decide What’s Actually Necessary
Use this simple filter:
Will this item:
- Help the home appraise?
- Prevent inspection issues?
- Increase the number of buyers who will consider the home?
- Improve the photos enough to raise online interest?
- Return more money than it costs?
If the answer is yes, it’s worth considering.
If the answer is no, it’s optional.
As far as staging, It is not mandatory
.But it can help in certain situations:
- Vacant homes
- Small or awkward rooms
- Homes competing with new construction
- Listings where photos matter more than in‑person showings
If your home already has good natural light, clean lines, and functional furniture, staging may not be necessary.
Bottom Line
You don’t need to complete the entire checklist.
You need to complete the right parts of it.
A smart agent isn’t trying to overwhelm you — they’re giving you every possible option.
Your job is to work with them to prioritize the items that:
- Protect your sale
- Maximize your return
- Fit your timeline and budget
Everything else is optional.
You do not "need" to do all the repairs suggested, but the more move in condition and "HGTV" style the home is, the quicker it will sell. Alternatives to what you mentioned in your question would be painting the problem areas, steaming the carpets if they aren't too bad and virtual staging. Please note that these are not the ideal solutions if the agent has recommended with validity to do the previously requested. Put yourself in the buyers shoes, how would you feel walking into your house in it's current state?
Keith Jean-Pierre
Managing Principal
The Dapper Agents
Operations In: NY, NJ, FL & CA
No, not all of them. Prioritize safety items (roof, HVAC, electrical), cosmetic wins that photograph well, and anything likely to fail an inspection. In Ridge Manor, Florida, skipping deferred maintenance often costs more in price reductions and buyer concessions than it saves upfront, especially on homes older than 20 years.
Kevin Neely & Kaitlynd Robbins | K2 Sells, Keller Williams Elite Partners
You should prioritize any repairs that affect the "Home’s Health," such as roof leaks or electrical issues, as these will inevitably kill a deal during the inspection. Staging is not just decoration—it is a pricing strategy. Data from 2026 shows that staged homes sell up to 73% faster and often for 3% to 10% more than vacant or cluttered homes because they allow buyers to visualize a "Move-In Ready" lifestyle. If your budget is tight, focus only on the living room and primary bedroom, as these are the primary emotional drivers for a sale.
Ask your agent to break it down by impact. Which items will actually affect your sale price or time on market, and which are just polish? Paint and carpet replacement in high-traffic areas usually pay off if they're truly worn. Staging can help if your house shows poorly empty, but it's not always necessary. Push back on anything that feels like overkill for your neighborhood or price point. A good agent will explain the ROI on each suggestion, not just hand you a generic checklist. If they can't justify why something's needed, skip it.
You don’t need to do everything on that list. You need to do the things that change how buyers feel the moment they walk in.
Here’s how I look at it with my own listings.
If something makes a buyer think “I have work to do,” fix it. That’s where deals get weaker. Paint and flooring usually fall into this because they impact the entire home.
If something is nice but doesn’t change the feeling, it’s optional. Full staging, for example, depends on the house. Vacant homes benefit a lot. Lived-in homes sometimes just need decluttering and a light touch.
Think in layers.
First, clean and declutter. Non-negotiable.
Second, remove anything that feels dated or worn.
Third, only then consider upgrades or staging if it actually adds value.
Your goal isn’t to make it perfect. It’s to make it feel easy for a buyer to say yes.
If you want, you can push your agent a bit and ask this directly:
“If I don’t do this item, how does it affect price or time on market?”
That’s where you’ll see what actually matters and what doesn’t.
The easiest way to sort through a long prep list is to tie every suggestion back to return on investment, market expectations, and what will actually show up in photos and first impressions, not just what sounds ideal, in most cases paint in dated or bold colors, worn or heavily stained flooring, and obvious cosmetic issues that buyers will immediately notice are the highest priority because they influence perception and appraisal, while full staging rentals, major replacements that are purely cosmetic, or projects that won’t be fully visible in listing photos tend to be more optional depending on price point and competition, a good agent should be able to show you recent comparable sales so you can see what condition those homes were in and help you prioritize only what is needed to compete, not everything on a wish list, and it is completely reasonable to ask them to categorize each recommendation as must do, strong advantage, or optional so you are not overspending before you even hit the market
Emily, you’re not wrong to feel overwhelmed. That list your agent gave you is a lot, especially when it means more time, more disruption, and more money upfront. The truth is, you don’t have to do every single thing on that checklist to get your home sold. What you choose to tackle should really line up with two things: what your local market is doing right now and what makes sense for your budget and your timeline. In a slower or more competitive market, buyers are usually pickier, so doing a bit more prep and staging can help your home stand out and protect your final price; in a hotter market, you can often get a great result without going nearly as far. A simple way to move forward is to go back to your agent and say, “If we narrow this list down to the most important items based on today’s market and my situation, which ones would you prioritize and why?” Then focus on the things that give you the highest impact for the least cost items that will really show up in photos, first impressions, and appraisal, not just the nice‑to‑have upgrades. From there, the pricing should follow the same logic: your home should be priced according to how it will actually look and show when it hits the market, not some imaginary, fully renovated version. That way, you’re not just pouring money into cosmetics, you’re making targeted, strategic decisions that fit your reality and give you the best odds of a strong result.
You don’t need to do every repair or staging item—focus on what truly impacts your sale.
Must-do: Major repairs, safety issues, and anything that could fail inspection
Worth it: Neutral paint, fixing worn flooring, basic decluttering/staging
Optional: Full staging and high-end cosmetic upgrades
Ask your agent what will actually increase price or help the home sell faster, and prioritize from there. You can also start with basics, list the home, and adjust based on buyer feedback.
Good luck!
Not all repairs and staging are created equal
A good listing prep plan usually falls into three categories:
1. Must-do (high impact on sale)
These are things that affect:
First impression
Inspection results
Buyer confidence
Examples:
Fixing obvious leaks or water damage
Repairing broken systems (HVAC, roof issues, electrical problems)
Removing strong odors (pets, smoke, mold)
Basic deep cleaning and decluttering
👉 These are usually worth doing because they directly reduce buyer objections or prevent deal fallout.
2. High-ROI cosmetic updates (do selectively)
These can help you sell faster and sometimes for more money—but only if targeted:
Painting (especially if walls are dark, damaged, or very dated)
Updating very worn flooring (not always full replacement)
Small kitchen/bath refreshes (hardware, lighting, caulk, etc.)
👉 These should be based on your price point and competition—not a blanket “do everything.”
3. Nice-to-have (often optional)
This is where many sellers over-invest:
Full professional staging in every market
Replacing all carpet just because it’s not new
Major cosmetic renovations that won’t match buyer taste anyway
“Flipping” the home before selling
👉 These only make sense if your agent can clearly show you a return on investment or if your home is competing in a very polished, luxury segment.
How to decide what’s actually necessary
Instead of following the list blindly, ask your agent these questions:
1. “What is the cost vs. expected return for each item?”
If they can’t quantify it, it’s probably optional.
2. “What would happen if we don’t do this?”
This quickly separates essential fixes from cosmetic upgrades.
3. “Which items are about selling faster vs. selling for more?”
Those are two different goals—and they should not be mixed.
4. “What are comparable homes in my price range actually doing?”
This is the most important benchmark. You’re not selling a perfect house—you’re competing in a real market.
A truth many sellers don’t hear clearly:
Homes do not need to be perfect to sell.
They need to be:
Clean
Well-presented
Properly priced
Free of obvious red flags
Beyond that, returns diminish quickly.
Not every recommendation from a real estate agent is a requirement for selling—it’s a strategy suggestion. The smartest sellers focus their time and budget on repairs that remove objections and improve buyer confidence, while skipping upgrades that do not meaningfully impact price or speed of sale.
That’s impossible to know without seeing the property. Staged properties do sell for statistically a lot more than un-staged homes; however, that’ll vary depending on the current condition of your property.
I believe the question you posed at the end of your post is key. I would ask your agent to prioritize the list they provided you. What is the "Must", "Want", and "Need" on the pre-sell checklist. I am in agreement with what Agent Keith wrote as well, starting from the driveway and walking into your home as if you were buying it, what stands out to you? What do you notice?
Happy Selling!
Alāna Mey
Top-Rated Real Estate Broker in Bellingham, WA
Compass
www.AlanaMey.com
If you trust your agent, then listen to them. I once met some heirs to their parents estate. They had tried with a different agent to sell it and the only offer they could get was $850,000 in a neighborhood of million dollar homes. I made them a list AND GOT FIRM BIDS from contractors, some of whom deferred part of the payment until escrow closed. The list added up to $45,000 and we were able to finish the repairs in about 3 weeks. When we put the home back on the market, it received multiple offers and sold for $1,015,000, a net gain of $120,000! Each of the three heirs was very pleased to get an extra $40,000.
If cash is an issue, there are companies that will do all the work and get paid at the end of escrow. There are also ways to get a no-interest deal from someplace like Home Depot to do the improvements, then you pay it off at close of escrow. I will never recommend something I don't think will at least pay for itself in the final sales price AND will result in a faster, smoother sale because we often get multiple offers for these move-in ready homes.
First, develop a budget for what you can/are willing to spend, and set a timeframe for completion to meet your time goal. This can make some of your decisions easier. Next, ask your agent what your return on investment will be on major items. Is the expected return in a higher sales price, a shorter time on market, or hopefully both? Once those things have been developed, create a list of priorities that includes a timeline for getting the items completed, to see if you can realistically make it happen to hit your goals This is all about a give and take assessment of your priorities and working with your agent to help you accomplish the goals that fit your financial capabilites, yets still provides you a path to reach your price and timeframe goals. Should be a fairly easy assessment if your agent has experience helping sellers go through the process.
Every agent has "go to" repairs and cosmetic facelift items that have big ROI, and I would focus on those along with any other "deal killer" items that need to be corrected, so once you have your buyer, you dont lose them over something that could have been prevented. Every market, house and price range are to be evaluated on a case by case basis......there is no "one size fits all". Happy Selling
You don't have to do anything at all but if you want to maximize the return you will get from the sale, you do have few options:
1 - Sell your home in AS IS condition and list it at a very aggressive price to generate a lot of traffic and get multiple offers. I would recommend working with an agent who is experienced in AS IS sales.
2 - Do all suggestions made by your agent
3 - Do some improvements recommended by your agent
I would suggest to weight pros and cons for each scenario and do cost analysis. If you have a great agent who understands each scenario, he/she should be able to help you figure out what makes sense for you. In a perfect world you will go with option #2 but we don't live in a perfect world so rely on your agent to help you figure this out.
Vicky Kustov
CRS, SRS, SRES, ABR
Top-Producing Agent – Client Satisfaction Award Winner
2024 Elite Realty Experts Realtor® of the YEAR
Committed to Exceptional Service and Results
Burlington, MA
(781) 956-7789