How to prepare your boat for sale
You've come to the decision to sell your pride and joy, contacted your local Boatshed broker to get her listed, but what are you going to do to make your boat look fabulous to potential buyers? Boatshed brokers share their top tips, based on their personal experiences, for getting your boat looking swell to sell.
Everyone who is involved in sailing has met a fellow sailor who has travelled over land and sometimes sea to take a look at 'The most perfect boat' after spotting one or two exterior photo's on a brokers page - only to get there and found that the 'Most perfect boat' was anything but. You are lucky if this is a tale told to you, not so lucky if it's you telling the tale.
That's where Boatshed differs from other brokers
Boatshed brokers will take unlimited photos of each boat and a few video clips too. We firmly believe that by taking photo's of everything (yes, keel bolts, engines and bilges) provides any potential buyer with a good and true understanding of the true condition of the boat. Saving time, money and heartache for both parties and helping to achieve quicker and more sales than any other brokerage in the world.
So how should I best prepare my boat for listing ?
- Ask your Boatshed broker for a full list of everything they will be photographing, then use it as a checklist to ensure all areas are clean and look good.
- Remove all personal belongings and anything that is not going to be sold with the boat e.g ribs / kayaks. Decluttering was one piece of advice nearly every Boatshed broker gave.
- Do the washing up, put it away and please empty or wipe through the fridge!
- Strip the beds so that potential buyers aren't distracted by your jazzy bedsheets (that they aren't buying!)
- Ensure your bilges are dry and the engine clean and free of oil (remember we will be taking a picture)
- Scrub those decks and clean those windows. If your decks look green, then scrub it clean. (either do this yourself or have a boat valet company do this for you)
- If your boat is ashore and likely to stay there, a single coat of anti foul looks better than a semi scrubbed and tatty bottom.
And when I have a viewing?
We have countless tales of Boatshed brokers coming to take potential buyers onboard for a viewing only to discover (unbeknown to the owner usually) that their own children have gone onboard and had a party / slept over or even worse were still asleep onboard on the day of a viewing - not nice for either party.
- Go check the boat ahead of time, and we don't mean 10 minutes before your buyer is due, and check that as above, all personal belongings have been removed from the boat and that the sink is not full of dishes.
- If it's been a while or you've been out on the water between the broker taking photo's and a viewing, again scrub the decks, clean the windows and make sure that she looks clean and as presentable as she was in the photos.
- First impressions count - people will make up their minds within 30 seconds of stepping aboard, so smelling great (not musty) looking clean and tidy are paramount.
We hope that these pointers are helpful in reminding you the part you need to play to help Boatshed sell your boat. If you haven't listed with Boatshed yet, then click here to find your local Boatshed broker.
Happy Selling!