• 24
    watchers
  • 483
    plays
  • 96
    collected

Sell This House

Season 1 2003 - 2004
TV-PG

  • 2003-07-06T15:30:00Z on A&E
  • 25m
  • 13h (26 episodes)
  • United States
  • English
This how-to reality show helps homeowners stage their too-long-on-the-market homes to sell. Prospective buyers are taped by hidden cameras during an open house, and their comments provide the basis for changes in redecorating and staging the house. After the transformation, the prospective buyers return to comment on the changes, and with luck, place bids on the home! SCHEDULED AIRINGS A&E usually, but not always, airs the show on Saturday mornings from 11:30 until noon ET/PT, and Sunday afternoons from 5:00 to 6:00 p.m. ET/PT, and schedules original episodes on both days with no discernible pattern. Since their programming is so erratic, it's best to check the A&E web site here for precise scheduling information.

26 episodes

Series Premiere

2003-07-06T15:30:00Z

1x01 Kirkland, WA - Zach and Secunda Rogers

Series Premiere

1x01 Kirkland, WA - Zach and Secunda Rogers

  • 2003-07-06T15:30:00Z30m

After over four months with no offers in one of the hottest real estate markets in the country, this fairly new four bedroom, three bath home with hardwood floors, high ceilings, custom colors and windows needed some repainting in neutral colors, decluttering, furniture rearrangement, and new shelving to get sold at its asking price just a few weeks after being restaged.

A Seattle couple who needs to sell their home and move to Minnesota gets professional advice from designer Roger Hazard to make it more appealing to potential buyers.

A designer helps a suburban couple add small touches to their home.

Designers help an urban couple to clear clutter.

All this three bedroom split level country home needed to get an offer was extensive wallpaper removal; lots of spackle, primer, and paint; major cleaning and decluttering; recovering the dining room chairs and sofa; removing and rearranging furniture; and new window treatments and shelving.

Some minor landscaping to add curb appeal; lots of paint to brighten up the interior; decluttering; removing and repositioning furniture; and a new slipcover, window treatment, grass rug, and some lamps transformed a dark and drab home into a bright, beachy retreat that sparked buyer interest.

Designers help a Texas couple sell their home.

Roger tackles a surprise problem when he removes a smelly carpet.

Roger removes wallpaper and highlights French doors and a sun porch to help a Georgia couple sell their home.

This 2,400 square foot house with three bedrooms and two baths needed a good cleaning and decluttering, furniture removal and repositioning, some paint, new window treatments and cabinet pulls, and redefining an extra dining area into a sitting room to attract buyer interest.

A youngster's cluttered bedroom and a master bedroom's colorful decor may drive potential buyers away from an upscale Illinois home.

Drab walls and a bedroom that smells like cigarette smoke may influence potential buyers.

This thirty-three year-old, four bedroom ranch only needed decluttering, including the removal of countless pieces of artwork on the walls, spackling, repainting, rearranging furniture, removal of area rugs, and some new drapes to get an offer for nearly one million dollars.

Clutter and cat odor problems undermine a Seattle couple's ability to sell their condo.

Gold carpet and fish wallpaper in a bathroom might be some of the reasons why a three-bedroom home outside Seattle isn't selling.

A couple tries to sell a 2-bedroom condo on Madison Avenue in New York.

This spacious five bedroom house with a four car garage and a pool on an acre of land, with spectacular views of a mountain in the Arizona desert, needed just a little paint, a lot of furniture rearrangement, and the addition of a few accent pieces to find a buyer.

Rearranging the furniture, highlighting the fireplace with some paint, clearing the kitchen counters, creating a gravel path to the pool, creating an accent wall in the master bedroom with paint, clearing off the lanai to eliminate any distraction from the outstanding ocean view, and turning a mishap with the dining room table into an advantage was all it took to get make this house look like more than a million dollars, and, in just a few days, get an offer to match.

A dated kitchen and a scattering of antiques handicap an Upper East Side apartment.

Tanya comes across an unwelcome guest in a picture-perfect Arizona neighborhood.

Steam cleaning and stretching the living room carpeting; painting the living room fireplace and bookshelves; rearranging the furniture; painting the dining room, kitchen cabinet fronts and hardware; and decluttering and rearranging the bookshelves and kitchen counters was all it took to get an offer above asking price for this ranch style country charmer.

This 3,600 square foot home built in 1949 needed lots of paint; major decluttering; new window treatments; removal of a wall of books and bookshelves; and removing and repositioning furniture to expose beautiful garden and bay views and attract buyer interest.

Designer Roger Hazard must draw attention away from a bright-green carpet.

A woman and her daughter must repaint and remove clutter and odor from their Florida home.

After over four months on the market with no interest, all it took to find a buyer for this cozy home was painting the living room; removing and rearranging furniture; decluttering; removing a bedroom canopy, living room ceiling fan, and pictures from the walls in several rooms; removing the screens and cleaning the windows in the sun room; and adding some lamps to brighten the interior.

Opening up the windows to the gorgeous view of the trees, bringing warmth to the family room, repainting a too-pink living room and removing the Christmas decorations and abundance of floral fabrics was all it took to get an offer on this house.

Loading...