I'm bored and I thought I'd start a discussion to solicit opinions. We might be looking to buy a bigger boat in the future, and one of the things I struggle with is trying to determine a fair market value for boats I'm interested in. I'll often look up the NADA guide value, but when I tell the seller, "NADA says your boat is worth this much" (which is always about 25% to 40% less than they're asking), they generally get all angry and indignant, because their boat is made of spun gold, don't you know. I've actually had a seller's broker say "well yes, NADA is a guide, but we have access to this super secret database that tells us what boats are REALLY worth, and besides, you have to add 10% to that to pay my commission," as if his services to the seller represented some kind of value-added that I should be willing to overpay for.
But after about a year of watching various boats on Yachtworld, here's what I've noticed. Boats that are listed at or near their NADA value actually sell. Usually within a few weeks of listing. Boats that NADA says are overpriced just sit. And sit. And sit. And then get marked down. And then sit some more. And then have "Motivated Seller!!!" added to their listings. And six months later, they're still sitting, but now they're only 15% overvalued instead of 25%.
So I ask you - when you're looking at a boat, how do you figure out what it's really worth? And I know how relative everything is based on condition. But like I explained to a person who has a (overpriced) Beneteau 390 listed that's been sitting for six months now - Beneteau only made the hull. They bought 70% of the stuff that went into that boat, and it all wears out eventually. So there's no way a 20 year old boat is worth 80% of what it cost new, unless you've already replaced every last one of those parts already. It just isn't. And yes, he got very angry.
But after about a year of watching various boats on Yachtworld, here's what I've noticed. Boats that are listed at or near their NADA value actually sell. Usually within a few weeks of listing. Boats that NADA says are overpriced just sit. And sit. And sit. And then get marked down. And then sit some more. And then have "Motivated Seller!!!" added to their listings. And six months later, they're still sitting, but now they're only 15% overvalued instead of 25%.
So I ask you - when you're looking at a boat, how do you figure out what it's really worth? And I know how relative everything is based on condition. But like I explained to a person who has a (overpriced) Beneteau 390 listed that's been sitting for six months now - Beneteau only made the hull. They bought 70% of the stuff that went into that boat, and it all wears out eventually. So there's no way a 20 year old boat is worth 80% of what it cost new, unless you've already replaced every last one of those parts already. It just isn't. And yes, he got very angry.