What Home Upgrades Are Actually Worth It Before Selling in Des Moines?

What Home Upgrades Are Actually Worth It Before Selling in Des Moines?

June 19, 20265 min read

You want to sell your home, and somebody told you to renovate first. So now you're staring at your kitchen wondering if you need new cabinets, new counters, new everything. Take a deep breath. You probably don't need to do nearly as much as you think. In fact, spending too much before you sell is one of the most common (and most expensive) mistakes I see Des Moines homeowners make.

Here's the truth: the goal before selling isn't to build your dream home. It's to spend a little in the right places so buyers fall in love fast and pay top dollar. Some upgrades pay you back two and three times over. Others barely move the needle. As your local agent, my job is to help you tell the difference. Let's walk through it together, friend to friend.

Start With the Outside — It's Cheaper Than You Think

The highest-return projects in 2026 aren't fancy kitchens. They're the boring outdoor fixes. The national Cost vs. Value data shows a garage door replacement returns about 268% — it costs under $5,000 and adds over $12,500 in resale value. A new steel front door returns around 216%, and manufactured stone veneer comes in near 208%.

Why do these win? Because the first photo a buyer sees online is the front of your house. In Des Moines, where homes are now averaging about 46 days on the market (up from 32 a year ago), curb appeal is what makes a buyer click instead of scroll past. Fresh mulch, a clean front door, trimmed bushes, and a tidy garage door do more for your sale than a $40,000 kitchen ever will.

The Kitchen: Refresh, Don't Rebuild

Kitchens sell homes — but a full gut job rarely pays off. Here in the Midwest, a minor kitchen remodel adds roughly $18,000 to $20,000 in value at about a 72–80% return. A major overhaul? It can drop to around 51% nationally. That means you could spend $60,000 and only get $30,000 back when you sell.

So refresh instead of rebuild. Paint the cabinets, swap the hardware, update the faucet, and add modern light fixtures. Buyers want clean, bright, and move-in ready — not a brand-new chef's kitchen they're paying for. At Ratliff Real Estate Group, I'll walk your kitchen with you and tell you honestly which $500 fixes will photograph beautifully and which $5,000 ones you can skip.

Paint and Flooring Are Your Best Friends

If you only do two things inside, do these. A gallon of neutral paint costs about $40 and transforms a room. Greige, soft white, and warm gray make spaces look bigger and newer in photos. Bold colors and dated wallpaper make buyers do mental math on the work ahead — and they'll lowball you for it.

Flooring is the other big one. Worn carpet and scratched floors scream "old" even when the home is solid. Professional carpet cleaning or affordable luxury vinyl plank in high-traffic areas can pay back several times over. These are the upgrades that quietly help a home in our $207K Des Moines median price range sell faster and closer to asking.

Fix What an Inspector Will Catch

Here's where smart sellers protect their bottom line. With about 2.8 months of inventory, the Des Moines market is more balanced than it's been in years, which means buyers are paying closer attention and asking for more. The fastest way to lose money is a deal that falls apart at inspection — or a buyer who uses repairs to negotiate you down.

So before you list, handle the unglamorous stuff: a leaky faucet, a cracked window seal, a furnace that's overdue for service, a GFCI outlet that doesn't work. These repairs are cheap up front but expensive when a buyer discovers them and asks for a credit. I often recommend a pre-listing walkthrough so we catch these together before a single buyer steps inside.

Skip These — They Won't Pay You Back

Some projects feel productive but rarely return your money in our market. Be cautious with sunrooms and home additions, high-end smart-home systems, swimming pools, and over-the-top landscaping. These are personal-taste upgrades. The next owner may not value them the way you do, and you almost never recoup the cost.

The rule I share with every Ratliff Real Estate Group seller is simple: spend on what makes a buyer say "this home is clean and cared for," not on what makes it uniquely yours. Your taste is wonderful. It just doesn't always show up on the appraisal.

FAQ

1. Do I have to renovate before selling my Des Moines home?

No. Most homes sell well with paint, deep cleaning, decluttering, and a few small repairs. Big renovations are usually optional and often don't pay for themselves.

2. What's the single best upgrade for resale value?

Curb appeal and the front entry. A clean garage door, fresh front door, and tidy landscaping give the highest return for the lowest cost.

3. Should I replace my kitchen counters before listing?

Usually a refresh beats a replacement. Hardware, paint, and lighting give most of the visual lift at a fraction of the price.

4. Is it worth fixing small repairs before I list?

Yes. Small fixes prevent big negotiation losses at inspection. A $150 repair can save you a $2,000 buyer credit.

5. How do I know which upgrades are worth it for MY home?

Every home and price point is different. That's exactly what a pre-listing walkthrough is for — I'll tell you what to do and what to skip before you spend a dime.

Let's Make Your Home Sell for More — Without Overspending

You don't have to guess, and you don't have to gamble your savings on renovations that won't pay off. With 11+ years helping Des Moines families, I'll walk your home with you, point out the handful of upgrades worth doing, and build a plan to get you top dollar. I believe selling your home should feel like a blessing, not a burden — and that starts with a plan rooted in honesty.

Call or text me today for a free pre-listing walkthrough and home value consultation. Let's get your home sold the smart way.

Natasha Ratliff

Ratliff Real Estate Group | RE/MAX Precision

📞 515-943-0219

✉️ [email protected]

Serving Des Moines, Ankeny, Grimes, Altoona, Pleasant Hill, the 50317 zip code, Urbandale, Waukee, Clive, and West Des Moines.

Natasha Ratliff

Natasha Ratliff

Best Realtor in Des Moines and surrounding areas

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