Bethany Kuiken
Guide · 6 min read

Home staging checklist for Houston sellers

Room-by-room, the things that actually move price in 2026.

By the agent·Updated May 25, 2026

Staging is the highest-ROI prep work most sellers underdo. You don't need a full furniture rental. You need 8 hours of focused work, $200-500 in supplies, and a willingness to remove things you love. Here's the checklist that works.

The 8-step playbook

Do these, in this order.

  1. 01
    Remove 50% of everything
    Half your books off the shelf. Half the photos off the fridge. Half the toiletries off the counter. Buyers need to picture themselves, not you.
  2. 02
    Paint anything not white or warm neutral
    Walls in any saturated color get repainted. Stick to Sherwin Williams Alabaster, Repose Gray, or Agreeable Gray. Trim white. Done.
  3. 03
    Deep clean (professional)
    Pay $200-400 for a one-time deep clean. Baseboards, ceiling fans, vents, inside the oven. Photos pick up dust.
  4. 04
    Curb appeal: 1 weekend
    Mow, edge, mulch front beds, pressure-wash the porch, paint the front door, swap the hardware. The drive-up shot is 70% of click-throughs on Zillow.
  5. 05
    Kitchen reset
    Empty the counter. Single fruit bowl. One herb plant. Clear coffee station. New dish towels. Toaster in the cabinet.
  6. 06
    Master bedroom only
    New white duvet, two pillows, one side table per side, one piece of art over the bed. That's it. Closet half-empty.
  7. 07
    Bathrooms
    New white towels rolled. Hide all toiletries. Plant. Quartz cleaner on stains. New shower curtain if yours has any mildew.
  8. 08
    Light each room
    Every lamp on, every blind open, every overhead on for photos AND showings. Buyers walk into dark rooms and walk back out.

What's the single biggest mistake sellers make?

Personal photos on the walls. Buyers cannot help but look at them, which means they can't picture themselves in the house. Take down every photo with a face in it. Same with personal artwork on the fridge and trophies on shelves.

Should I rent furniture?

If your home is vacant: yes, at least for the living room and primary bedroom. If your home is occupied: rarely. Rearranging your own furniture, removing 50% of it, and adding a few pieces (white duvet, art, rug, plants) usually gets 90% of the result for 10% of the cost.

What about smell?

Bake cookies the morning of a showing is a cliché but works. Or boil water with cinnamon sticks and orange peel. Avoid plug-in air fresheners and candles. Buyers assume you're covering something up. If a smoker or pet has lived in the home, treat the carpet professionally before listing.

Outside: what matters?

Front door area gets photographed, every car in the driveway sees it, and it's the first impression on showing. Fresh paint, new hardware, a planter on each side, a clean welcome mat. Backyard: mow it, edge it, hide the kids' toys, scoop the pet area twice a day during showing season.

How much should I spend?

Under $500 for an occupied home if you do the work yourself. $1,500-3,000 if you hire a stager to refresh. $4,000-8,000 if you rent furniture for a vacant home. ROI in Houston for a well-staged vs. unstaged comparable: roughly 5-10% on sale price, plus faster sale. The math always works out.

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