Bathrooms are, by design, private spaces. After all, there's a door and a lock for a good reason.
But when your house hits the market, dozens of strangers will suddenly be tramping through your bathrooms—and everything that once felt so private will now become painfully public. And those strangers will be passing judgment on what they see.
True, the nose hair trimmer you accidentally left on the counter or pile of sweaty running socks forgotten behind the door might not be a deal breaker to a potential home buyer. But they certainly won't be forgotten.
Why chance it in the first place?
1. Inappropriate art
A real estate photographer in Boulder, CO, went into a quiet, suburban home to take photos, she didn’t register anything out of the ordinary. Until she entered the half-bath. On the wall above the toilet was a 10-by-13 framed photo of a naked child peeing in an in-ground pool that the pool in their backyard. They called the homeowners to come over and immediately remove the photograph. Even weirder was the reason the photo was there.
It turns out that it was the couple's now-adult son and the parents had placed it there when he was a teen to embarrass him when his friends came over.
Your bathroom shouldn’t be an experimental art gallery. You want guests to imagine themselves living in your home, not picturing what went on before you got there.
2. Words
Justin M. Riordan, the founder of Portland, Spade, and Archer Design Agency, recently walked into a bathroom of a client’s home. Over the toilet was a poorly placed sign that read "DREAM BIG."
They hung it in a bathroom and then proceeded to leave the toilet lid up. The story it tells the viewer is not too far off from a very effective Metamucil ad.
If you love word signage, no one's stopping you from putting it up throughout your house. But steer clear of the bathroom, where pretty much anything can turn into a poop joke.
3. Food storage
When Susanna Haynie, broker-owner of Co-Re Group in Colorado Springs, CO, took young, first-time home buyers to see a historic home, she expected some old-timey quirkiness. What she wasn't prepared for was the small fridge placed within reaching distance of the toilet.
Food storage only in the kitchen, please. And if there's anything else in your bathroom that belongs in your kitchen, be it microwave or your collection of spatulas, please put them back.
Information provided by: By Stephanie Booth, Feb 28, 2019, Realtor.com