Your listing photos live forever on the internet. Seriously—even after your home sells, those images float around Zillow, Redfin, and random real estate aggregator sites for years. And the week before your photographer arrives tends to be chaotic enough that critical details slip through the cracks.
After walking through hundreds of Franklin homes before listing day, certain oversights come up again and again. Not the obvious stuff like decluttering or deep cleaning—you've got that handled. These are the things that seem minor until they're immortalized in your listing photos or noticed during the first showing.
Most Franklin homeowners haven't thought about their house numbers since they moved in. But those faded brass digits from the Reagan administration? They're often the first thing buyers notice when they pull up to your property.
This matters more than you'd think. In neighborhoods like Westhaven or Sullivan Farms, where curb appeal sets expectations, dated address numbers can make an otherwise updated home feel neglected. And in historic areas like downtown Franklin, mismatched or peeling numbers clash with the charm buyers are paying a premium for.
Spend $30-50 on modern house numbers the week before photos. Matte black is almost universally safe. This ten-minute swap reads as "this homeowner pays attention to details"—exactly the impression you want buyers forming before they walk through your door.
Everyone remembers to pressure wash the driveway. Almost no one looks up.
Your garage door likely accounts for 30-40% of what's visible in your home's front exterior. In Winter 2026, with Franklin's recent freeze-thaw cycles, many garage doors are showing new cracks, peeling paint, or weather stripping that's pulling away from the frame.
You don't necessarily need a replacement—though if your door is original to a home built before 2010, it might be worth considering. At minimum, walk outside and look at your garage door like a buyer would. Check for:
Rust spots around the hardware
Faded or chalky paint (common on south-facing doors)
Weather stripping gaps at the bottom
Dents you've stopped noticing
A fresh coat of exterior paint on a garage door costs a few hundred dollars and can shift your entire curb appeal. Many Franklin sellers skip this because they're focused on interior updates, but listing photos almost always lead with the front of the house.
Ceiling fans with brass accents and frosted glass shades. Bathroom vanity lights with decorative scrollwork. That chandelier in the breakfast nook that came with the house in 2004.
Dated light fixtures are the fastest way to make an updated kitchen or bathroom look older than it is. Buyers in Franklin's $500K-$800K range—which covers a significant chunk of the market right now—have developed an eye for this. They've scrolled through enough listings to spot a boob light from a thumbnail image.
The fix isn't complicated. Modern flush mounts run $40-80 at any home improvement store. Simple matte black or brushed nickel fixtures read as contemporary without being trendy. You're not trying to make a design statement; you're trying to remove distractions.
Focus on what shows in photos: entry fixtures, kitchen pendants, dining room lighting, and primary bathroom vanities. The hallway ceiling fan in the back of the house? Less critical.
Here's something that doesn't affect photos but absolutely affects showings: buyers in Franklin have learned to check HVAC systems. They'll open the utility closet. They'll look at the filter. They'll note the service sticker.
A dirty filter or a service date from 18 months ago signals deferred maintenance. It makes buyers wonder what else hasn't been kept up. And in a market where inspection negotiations can get contentious, you don't want to give buyers reasons to scrutinize.
Before listing:
Replace all HVAC filters
Schedule a basic service call and get a fresh sticker on the unit
Clear any storage away from the indoor unit so it's easily visible
This costs maybe $150-200 and removes a potential objection before it forms. Many Franklin buyers are relocating from areas with different climate demands—they're already nervous about Tennessee humidity and HVAC capacity. A clean, recently-serviced system offers reassurance.
Tennessee requires working smoke detectors for sale, and inspectors will test every single one. But the issue that catches sellers off guard isn't functionality—it's appearance and age.
Smoke detectors should be replaced every ten years. Many Franklin homes built in the early 2000s still have original units. Even if they beep when tested, yellowed plastic housings and outdated designs make your ceilings look neglected in photos. And if any are past their replacement date, you'll be swapping them out before closing anyway.
Get ahead of this. Replace any smoke or carbon monoxide detectors older than ten years. Choose matching white units so your ceilings photograph cleanly. This runs about $25-40 per detector and eliminates an inspection item before it appears on the report.
Walk through your home with your phone's camera. Take photos of every room, the exterior, the garage, the mechanical spaces. Look at them like a buyer scrolling through listings on their lunch break.
The things that jump out at you in those photos? Those are the details worth addressing before your professional photographer arrives. You've invested significant effort into preparing your Franklin home for market—don't let small oversights undermine that work.
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At Redbird Real Estate, we specialize in residential sales, property management, and commercial real estate services in and around Franklin,...
Franklin, Tennessee
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