„Renovated“ is one of the most frequently used words in property adverts. And that is precisely why it is also one of the most dangerous when selling property in Nuremberg in 2025. Buyers have read this word too often - and experienced too often that in the end it was just new paint. Without proof, „renovated“ quickly comes across as an advertising slogan. And that leads to two reactions: Distrust or hard negotiation. Sometimes a property that is visibly older, but is honestly described and properly documented, ends up being easier to sell than a „renovated“ property where nobody knows exactly what has been done.
In this article, I explain why certificates are so important today, how buyers really understand „renovation“ and how I, as a property agent in Nuremberg, communicate the condition in a way that creates trust instead of a discount.
Why buyers are more suspicious of „renovated“ in 2025
I see three reasons all the time:
Renovation can mean anything: from paint to core renovation.
Buyers have often experienced surprises.
Banks and budgets leave less room for „we'll see“.
Buyers don't want the word, they want the reality behind it.
Market value: condition counts - but only if it can be proven
The market value is the price that can realistically be achieved under normal market conditions. Condition strongly influences it. But condition must be verifiable. If „renovated“ is only claimed, the condition is categorised rather conservatively in the valuation.
I derive the market value:
Standard land value as location orientation
Market analysis in the neighbourhood
Reference properties with real realised sales prices
Material value method for houses
Income capitalisation approach for rented properties
Evidence helps to correctly weight the condition in these building blocks.
Standard land value: location helps, but is no substitute for credibility
The standard land value can be high, e.g. in Johannis, Wöhrd, Erlenstegen or Mögeldorf. Nevertheless, buyers in good locations do not pay „no matter what“. They expect professionalism there in particular. An unclear condition often has an even more negative effect in good locations because buyers have a higher benchmark.
Market analysis: „Renovated“ only works in Nuremberg if buyers can feel it
A market analysis shows this in many neighbourhoods:
Buyers honour genuine, verifiable condition.
Buyers are quicker to penalise ambiguity.
Buyers compare very harshly with alternatives.
In Gostenhof or St. Johannis (old buildings), buyers particularly often ask about pipes, windows, roof and heating.
In Langwasser, buyers are looking closely at windows, energy, house fees and measures.
In Eibach or Reichelsdorf, technology and years of modernisation are particularly important for houses.
The word „renovated“ is not enough in any of these cases.
Reference objects: Why documented renovations create better comparability
If reference properties show that „similarly modernised“ properties were sold at certain prices, the price seems logical. If renovation is unclear, the buyer will compare you with inferior properties - and demand a discount.
Reference objects are only effective if the condition is truly comparable. And it only becomes comparable through proof.
What buyers really understand by „renovation“
Buyers often differentiate between:
Optics: Paintwork, floors, kitchen, bathroom surfaces
Technology: heating, windows, electrics, wiring
Substance: roof, façade, moisture, supporting structure
Many sellers think optics. Buyers mean technology. This is exactly where misunderstandings arise.
Material value method: When it comes to houses, technology usually counts more than looks
The asset value method considers substance and condition. Technology is often the biggest lever for houses in Nuremberg because it is expensive and reduces the risk.
A new bathroom is nice.
A renewed electrical system is reassuring.
A modern heating system creates affordability.
A tight roof prevents fear.
Without proof, these points remain „assertions“ and are devalued by the buyer.
Income capitalisation approach: For rented properties, „renovated“ counts as a cost issue
The income capitalisation approach becomes more relevant for rented properties. Investors ask:
How high are future maintenance costs?
How stable is the lettability?
What modernisation is coming soon?
„Renovated“ without proof sounds like a risk. Risk drives down returns - and returns drive down the price.
Incidental purchase costs: Why buyers have less tolerance for unclear renovations
Incidental purchase costs such as land transfer tax, notary and land registry costs are fixed. Buyers can't say: „Then we'll just invest another 30,000.“ Many budgets are already strained by the additional costs. Unclear renovation means: unclear additional costs. And that leads to discounts or cancellations.
Did you know: Honest defects are often less serious than embellished statements
A buyer can live with an older bathroom if he knows where he stands. They can live with an old heating system if the price reflects this. What buyers find difficult to accept: the feeling of discovering something later.
Honesty creates predictability. Plannability creates offers.
Step-by-step: How to make „Renovated“ available in Nuremberg
- Create a list: What was done when?
- Collect evidence: Invoices, photos, maintenance receipts, manufacturer data.
- Use the term correctly: Make a clear distinction between renovation and modernisation.
- Use market analysis: Which measures are particularly price-relevant in the 2025 district?
- Compare reference properties: real sales in similar condition.
- Derive market value: Standard land value as a guide, condition as a verifiable factor.
- Communicate clearly during inspections: what is new, what is old, what is planned.
Conclusion: In Nuremberg, it's not the word „renovated“ that wins, but the proof
When selling property in Nuremberg, „renovated“ without proof 2025 is often worth less than „old but honest“. Buyers pay for clarity, not for wording. If you use market value, standard land value, market analysis and reference properties properly and make renovations verifiable, you will prevent mistrust and strengthen your negotiating position.
If you want to sell your property in Nuremberg and want to present your condition in such a way that buyers gain confidence instead of demanding discounts, I will accompany you as a real estate agent in Nuremberg with a well-founded valuation and marketing that does not rely on words, but on clarity - and thus on a secure deal.
