
HGTV isn’t really the problem. The problem is the expectation it helped create.
After years of watching dramatic before-and-after transformations, professionally staged homes, and spotless listings that appear ready for a magazine cover, many homeowners have come to believe their house needs to look the same before it can successfully sell.
Then reality shows up.
The dog tracks mud through the kitchen. The toddler empties every toy bin in the house. The laundry basket never quite makes it upstairs. A new baby is on the way. An aging parent needs help. The landscaping hasn’t been touched in two weeks.
And suddenly, selling a home feels less like a real estate transaction and more like an impossible standard nobody can actually achieve.
The truth is that most homes are not sold under ideal circumstances. They’re sold while people are working, parenting, caring for pets, preparing for babies, helping aging parents, and navigating everything else life throws at them.
Yet homes owned by people in exactly those situations sell every day.
One of the biggest misconceptions in real estate is that buyers expect perfection. Most don’t. They understand that children live in homes. Pets live in homes. Laundry gets folded on kitchen tables. Toys appear in living rooms. Life leaves evidence.
What buyers are really looking for is confidence that the home has been cared for.
That distinction matters because buyers often overlook things sellers spend hours worrying about while becoming fixated on things sellers barely notice anymore. A basket of toys in the family room rarely changes a buyer’s opinion of a home, but a strong pet odor might. Dog bowls in the kitchen are usually not a problem, but damaged screens, torn trim, or scratched doors can be. The issue is rarely the item itself. The issue is the story buyers begin telling themselves after they see it.
Buyers don’t have the benefit of context.
They don’t know why the grass is gone. They don’t know why the screen is torn. They don’t know whether the overflowing garage is the result of a recent move, a busy family, or years of accumulated clutter.
They only see what is in front of them.
That is why seemingly minor issues can have an outsized impact on buyer perception. A torn screen may only require a simple repair. A worn section of yard may be relatively inexpensive to address. But buyers are evaluating more than the issue itself. They are trying to determine whether the home has been consistently maintained.
Once buyers begin questioning maintenance, they frequently start questioning everything else.
That is why sellers with limited time, limited energy, and limited budgets should focus less on perfection and more on eliminating doubt.
The first priority is almost always odor. Buyers can overlook a surprising amount, but smells are difficult to ignore and even harder to forget. Pet odors, smoke, mildew, and excessive air fresheners can become distractions that linger long after a showing ends.
The second priority is addressing small maintenance issues that create outsized concerns. Loose handrails, broken screens, peeling caulk, damaged trim, burned-out light bulbs, and similar items rarely cost much to repair. Yet they can significantly influence how buyers perceive the overall condition of a property because they raise questions about what buyers cannot see.
The third priority is appearance, not perfection. A seller does not need a magazine-worthy backyard to attract buyers. But if a yard looks abandoned, buyers notice. A seller does not need professionally organized closets, but if every storage space is overflowing, buyers may begin to wonder whether the home offers enough room for their own belongings.
Too often, homeowners spend thousands of dollars solving problems buyers never cared about while ignoring the things buyers notice within the first few minutes. New countertops rarely compensate for a home that smells like wet dog. Fresh throw pillows don’t make buyers forget damaged screens. Expensive staging accessories won’t erase concerns about deferred maintenance.
When time, money, and energy are limited, the goal is not creating a perfect house. The goal is creating confidence.
In fact, one of the most practical strategies for busy families is to stop trying to manage every possible showing and instead create systems that reduce stress. Concentrated showing windows, temporary help from friends or family, doggy daycare during launch weekend, and focusing on the handful of issues that truly affect buyer perception often produce better results than chasing perfection room by room.
Most buyers are surprisingly forgiving of evidence that people live in a house, but they are far less forgiving of evidence that maintenance has stopped. That distinction can save sellers thousands of dollars and countless hours spent preparing a home for market, because despite what television sometimes suggests, homes are not sold because they are perfect. They are sold because buyers feel confident in what they are seeing. And fortunately for the rest of us, perfection has never been a requirement for that.

Karen Moeller
STLKaren.com
Karen.McNeill@STLRE.com
314.678.7866
About the Author:
Karen Moeller is a St. Louis area REALTOR® with MORE, REALTORS® and a regular contributor to St. Louis Real Estate News, helping clients make informed, data-driven decisions.



