Frequently Asked Questions

FAQ2026-04-20T15:59:11-07:00
FAQ

Home Staging Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is home staging, and how is it different from decorating?2026-04-20T10:39:22-07:00

Home staging is the strategic preparation of a property for sale — with the goal of helping buyers emotionally connect to the home as quickly and powerfully as possible. It’s a sales tool, not an expression of personal taste.

Decorating, by contrast, is about making a space feel like you. It reflects the owner’s personality, preferences, and lifestyle. Staging does the opposite — it deliberately de-personalizes a home and presents it as a neutral, aspirational canvas that the largest possible pool of buyers can imagine themselves living in.

A staged home often looks more beautiful than a decorated one — but the beauty is intentional and strategic, not personal. Every piece of furniture, every accessory, every styling choice is made with the buyer in mind, not the seller.

Does home staging actually help homes sell faster and for more money?2026-04-20T10:39:22-07:00

Yes — consistently, and with data to back it up. The National Association of Realtors reports that staged homes sell significantly faster than unstaged homes, and that the majority of buyers’ agents say staging makes it meaningfully easier for buyers to visualize a property as their future home.

In the Southern Oregon market specifically, staged homes tend to:

  • Generate more online clicks and saves before the first showing
  • Attract more foot traffic at open houses
  • Receive offers sooner — often within the first 1–2 weekends
  • Sell for 5–15% more than comparable unstaged properties nearby

The return isn’t guaranteed — no professional can promise a specific outcome — but across 150+ homes staged in the Rogue Valley, the pattern holds strongly.

How much does home staging cost in Southern Oregon?2026-04-20T10:39:22-07:00

Staging costs vary by service type and home size. Here’s a realistic range for the Medford and Rogue Valley area:

  • Staging Consultation: $250–$400 for a 90-minute walkthrough and written action plan
  • Occupied Home Staging: $500–$1,500, depending on the number of rooms and how much supplementing is needed
  • Vacant Home Staging (first month): $1,800–$4,000 for a full furniture and accessory install
  • Monthly rental continuation: $500–$1,200/month after the initial period

The right investment level depends on your home’s price point, condition, and how competitive your market segment is. A staging consultation is always the best starting point — it tells you exactly what your home needs before you commit to a larger investment.

What is the difference between vacant staging and occupied staging?2026-04-20T10:39:23-07:00

Vacant staging applies to homes that are empty — either because the seller has already moved out, the home is new construction, or it’s an investment property. Because there’s no existing furniture to work with, I source and install everything: sofas, beds, dining tables, art, lamps, rugs, and all accessories. The home is furnished for the duration of the listing.

Occupied staging is for sellers who are still living in the home while it’s listed. I work with the furniture and belongings already present — editing, rearranging, and supplementing with select accessories where needed. Sellers typically need to pack and store a meaningful amount of their belongings to achieve the right look.

Both approaches work well. Vacant staging tends to produce more dramatic transformations and photographs especially well. Occupied staging is more affordable but requires the seller to be an active participant in maintaining the presentation during showings.

How long does the staging process take from start to finish?2026-04-20T10:39:23-07:00

The timeline varies by service:

  • Consultation: Scheduled within 3–5 business days; the walkthrough itself takes 60–90 minutes
  • Occupied staging: After the consultation and seller prep (decluttering, packing), the staging day typically takes 4–8 hours
  • Vacant staging: The design plan is developed within a few days of the consultation; the install day is typically 6–10 hours depending on home size

For sellers with a firm listing date, I recommend reaching out at least 2–3 weeks in advance to allow time for the consultation, seller preparation, and install scheduling. During peak spring and fall listing seasons in the Rogue Valley, my schedule fills quickly — earlier is always better.

Do I need to stage every room in my house?2026-04-20T10:39:23-07:00

Not necessarily. The rooms that carry the most weight with buyers — and where staging delivers the clearest return — are:

  • The living room or great room
  • The primary bedroom
  • The kitchen (styling and editing, not renovation)
  • The entryway or foyer
  • The primary outdoor living space

Secondary bedrooms, home offices, and utility spaces matter less to most buyers — though they should always be clean, decluttered, and presentable. For vacant homes, I typically recommend staging the living room, dining area, primary bedroom, and kitchen at minimum. Adding secondary bedrooms increases cost but can meaningfully impact homes in family-oriented neighborhoods.

During our consultation, I’ll give you a clear recommendation on exactly which rooms deserve investment and which can be handled with simple DIY cleanup.

Can I stage my home myself, or do I really need a professional?2026-04-20T10:39:24-07:00

DIY staging is absolutely possible — and for sellers on tight budgets, a professional consultation followed by self-implementation can be a very effective middle ground. I provide a detailed written action plan after every consultation, and many sellers execute it themselves with excellent results.

That said, professional staging consistently outperforms DIY in a few areas:

  • Objectivity. It’s genuinely hard to see your own home the way a stranger does. A professional brings fresh eyes that aren’t filtered by years of living in the space.
  • Inventory. Professional stagers have access to curated furniture and accessory inventories that most homeowners simply don’t own — and that are specifically selected to photograph beautifully.
  • Photography readiness. A professionally staged room looks different on camera than a self-staged one. The proportions, scale, and styling choices are calibrated for the lens, not just the eye.

For higher-price-point homes or competitive listing situations, professional staging is almost always worth the investment. For more modest homes or sellers comfortable with design, a consultation-plus-DIY approach can work very well.

What should I do to prepare my home before the stager arrives?2026-04-20T10:39:24-07:00

The more preparation you do before staging day, the better the result — and the faster the process goes. Here’s what I ask of sellers before I arrive:

  • Deep clean the entire home, including baseboards, windows, appliances, and grout lines. Staging cannot substitute for clean.
  • Declutter aggressively. Remove at least 50% of items from closets, shelves, and countertops. Pack personal photos, collections, and anything that makes the home feel uniquely yours.
  • Complete any agreed-upon repairs — patching walls, fixing dripping faucets, replacing burned-out bulbs, touching up paint.
  • Address pet evidence — odors, beds, bowls, and toys should be removed or stored before showings.
  • Clear the garage and storage areas well enough that buyers can see their potential — not just your overflow.

I send a detailed preparation checklist after every consultation so sellers know exactly what to do before install day.

What happens to the staging furniture after my home sells?2026-04-20T10:39:24-07:00

For vacant staging, all furniture and accessories are rented — they remain my inventory throughout the listing period. Once you receive an accepted offer and a closing date is set, we coordinate a de-staging appointment that typically happens the day after closing or as agreed in the staging contract.

My team handles all removal — you don’t need to do anything except coordinate access. De-staging is generally completed within a few hours.

Occasionally, buyers fall in love with specific staging pieces and ask to purchase them. This happens fairly often, and it’s something I’m happy to facilitate on a case-by-case basis — just let me know if a buyer expresses interest and we can discuss options.

For occupied staging where I’ve brought in supplemental accessories, those items are removed at the same time and the home is returned to its original condition.

Does staging work in all price ranges, or only for high-end homes?2026-04-20T10:39:24-07:00

Staging works across all price points — but the right type of staging investment scales with the home’s value. Here’s how I think about it:

  • Entry-level and mid-range homes ($250K–$450K): A staging consultation plus DIY prep or a targeted occupied staging delivers strong results without overinvesting. Buyers in this range are often first-time buyers who are highly influenced by presentation but also price-sensitive — a clean, well-edited home stands out dramatically against competing listings.
  • Mid-to-upper range ($450K–$700K): Full occupied or partial vacant staging is typically the right call. Buyers at this level have more choices and higher expectations — staging is the difference between a fast, strong offer and an extended listing with a price reduction.
  • Luxury and high-end ($700K+): Full vacant staging with high-quality inventory is almost always warranted. Buyers at this price point are often comparing your home to model homes and professionally photographed listings. Anything less than a fully realized staging feels like it’s missing something.

No matter the price range, the principle is the same: staging helps buyers connect emotionally, and emotional connection drives offers. If you’re not sure what level of investment is right for your home, a consultation is the best first step.

Homes staged by Down to Earth sell faster and for more — because buyers don’t just see a house, they feel a home.

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