Curb Appeal Ideas That Actually Work (and a Few That Don't)
Drive any street in Waltham, Watertown, or Newton, and you'll see it — two homes side by side, same era, same size, and yet one of them just feels better from the curb. That feeling has a name in our business: curb appeal. And the research is unambiguous — curb appeal is the single biggest predictor of how many showings a listing gets in its first two weeks.
Here are the curb appeal moves that reliably work in Greater Boston, and the ones that surprisingly don't.
What Actually Works
1. A Freshly Painted Front Door
One gallon of paint. One afternoon. One of the highest-impact changes you can make. Choose a color that complements your siding and architecture — soft black, deep navy, hunter green, or a warm burgundy all perform well on New England colonials and Victorians.
2. Fresh Mulch and Defined Bed Edges
Nothing says "maintained" faster than crisp, dark mulch with clean bed edges. Skip the red-dyed mulch — it looks synthetic. A natural dark brown or black mulch frames your foundation plantings and photographs beautifully.
3. Updated House Numbers
Replace tired, faded numbers with modern oversized brass, black, or brushed nickel. $30-80. Two minutes with a drill. Instant lift.
4. A Clean Walkway and Front Steps
Power wash concrete, brick, or bluestone. Pull weeds from cracks. Replace cracked or wobbly steps. A clean approach to the front door lowers buyer anxiety before they even ring the bell.
5. Symmetric, Lush Planters
Two matching planters flanking the front door anchor the entry. Choose seasonally — spring bulbs, summer geraniums, fall mums, winter evergreens with red twig dogwood. Buyers notice.
6. Lighting That Still Works
Check every exterior bulb. Replace tarnished or dated fixtures. A single upgraded porch light can age-reverse a home by a decade.
7. A Trimmed, Healthy Lawn
Weekly mowing, sharp edges along walkways and driveways, bare patches re-seeded. If your lawn is beyond recovery, a professional spring lawn service runs $200-400 and pays back 10x in showings.
8. A Fresh Doormat
$25. Replace the faded one. That's it.
What Surprisingly Doesn't Move the Needle
Elaborate landscape redesigns. A $15,000 front-yard overhaul rarely returns $15,000. Buyers pay for "cared-for," not "custom-designed."
Theme decor. Seasonal flags, statuary, and novelty items can narrow your buyer pool. Keep entry areas clean and understated.
Overgrown mature plantings. Buyers read them as maintenance problems, not as charm. Trim or remove shrubs that block windows or overwhelm the entry.
New driveway asphalt — sometimes. Worth it only if the current driveway is visibly failing. A cracked but functional drive rarely deters a buyer the way a tired entry does.
The 90-Minute Curb Appeal Upgrade
If you have one Saturday morning and $150, here's the highest-leverage order:
Power wash the front steps and walkway (30 minutes)
Replace house numbers (10 minutes)
Swap the doormat (2 minutes)
Trim any shrubs that block windows or the front door (20 minutes)
Sweep, weed, and edge the front bed (20 minutes)
Add a spring planter on each side of the door (10 minutes)
Done. Photograph the house. You'll barely recognize it.
Why This Matters
Online, 95% of buyers form their first impression from the front-facing photo of your listing. If that photo doesn't stop the scroll, your home doesn't get the showing. In a market where days-on-market directly impacts final sale price, curb appeal is the quiet lever that changes everything.
If you're thinking about selling in the next year and want a walkthrough that tells you exactly where to focus your curb appeal dollars, call the Mike Hughes Team at 617-433-9225. Our complimentary Pre-Listing Staging Report covers the entry and front elevation along with every interior room.
