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How to Make Your House Smell Good for Showings | Redlow Group

Seller TipsSelling Tips with Sam — Redlow Group

How to Make Your House Smell Good for Showings

Sam from Redlow Group shares 5 tips to get your home smelling fresh and welcoming before buyers arrive — covering pet odors, cigarette smoke, food smells, dirty laundry and trash, and bathroom prep.

Michael Sims Redlow Group
Ryan Clemons Redlow Group

Michael Sims & Ryan Clemons
Co-Chairmen & Founders  ·  Redlow Group
Published • Updated
Quick Answer

How do you make your house smell good for real estate showings?

To make your house smell good for showings, address pet odors by cleaning litter boxes, bathing pets, and shampooing carpets and furniture every few months. Specifically, smoke outside or use an air purifier and baking soda on fabrics. Additionally, avoid cooking before showings and instead use a wax melter, vanilla extract in the oven, or cinnamon sticks simmered on the stove to fill the home with pleasant aromas. Furthermore, keep shoes away from the entryway, stay on top of laundry, empty all trash cans, and keep the bathroom clean with the toilet lid down and good soap and hand towels set out before every showing.

📞 Ready to List? Contact Redlow Group

How your house smells is one of the first things buyers notice — and one of the most common reasons they walk out without making an offer. Specifically, bad smells trigger an immediate emotional negative reaction that no amount of good photos or staging can overcome. For more on the full seller preparation process, our curb appeal guide and photography preparation guide cover what buyers see once they stop holding their breath.

5 Tips to Get Your House Smelling Good Before a Showing

Tips 1-2
Pet Odors and Cigarette Smoke
Tip 1 — Pet Odors: Clean Everything, Regularly

Keep all litter boxes clean and out of sight, bathe dogs regularly, and wash pet blankets and beds often. Specifically, shampoo carpets and upholstered furniture every three to four months to keep the home smelling fresh — pet odor accumulates in fabric over time and is one of the most common buyer complaints during showings. Additionally, keep hardwood floors swept and mopped so pet hair does not compound the issue. Furthermore, addressing pet odors before listing is not optional if you want buyers to stay long enough to make an offer.

Tip 2 — Cigarette Smoke: Take It Outside

If anyone in the home smokes, smoke exclusively outside while the home is listed — no exceptions. Specifically, cigarette smoke embeds into walls, carpet, and upholstery in ways that are extremely difficult to mask and immediately off-putting to most buyers. Additionally, if smoking indoors cannot be avoided, use an air purifier, diffuser, or ozone machine to help reduce the smell. Furthermore, sprinkling baking soda on carpets and furniture and letting it sit for a few days before vacuuming is an affordable and surprisingly effective way to absorb embedded odors.

Food, Laundry, Trash, and the Bathroom

Tips 3-5
Cooking, Clutter, and the Clean Bathroom
Tip 3 — Avoid Cooking Before Showings — Use Pleasant Alternatives

Avoid cooking food before a showing — buyers are sensitive to smells and strong cooking aromas, even pleasant ones, can draw them out of the experience. Specifically, use a showing as an excuse to go out for dinner, visit a friend, or have a picnic. Additionally, before leaving, set a wax melter with cookie, citrus, or cinnamon scents to fill the home with welcoming aromas. Furthermore, a vanilla extract trick works well: three capfuls in a mug with half water at 300 degrees for 30 minutes — or cinnamon sticks simmered in water on the stovetop, a tip Sam credits to her mother-in-law.

Tip 4 — Shoes, Laundry, and Trash

Keep all shoes away from the front door area and store them in a closet with a freshener inside. Specifically, a pile of shoes by the front door is one of the first smells buyers encounter and it sets a negative tone immediately. Additionally, stay on top of laundry — piles of dirty clothes in hallways or visible from walking paths are both a visual and olfactory problem. Furthermore, empty all kitchen and bathroom trash cans before every showing — it takes seconds and makes a significant difference in how the home smells overall.

Tip 5 — Keep the Bathroom Clean and Fresh

Always flush the toilet and close the lid before every showing — this is non-negotiable. Specifically, keep the vanity wiped down, the mirror clean, and good soap and fresh hand towels set out before buyers arrive. Additionally, a light scent is fine in the bathroom — a single air freshener or candle is welcoming. Furthermore, Sam’s advice is direct: do not overdo scents anywhere in the home. You can have too much of a good thing, and a house that smells aggressively perfumed is as off-putting as one that smells bad.

Frequently Asked Questions — House Smells When Selling

How do you get rid of pet odors before selling your house?
To eliminate pet odors before selling, keep litter boxes clean and out of sight, bathe pets regularly, wash all pet bedding and blankets frequently, shampoo carpets and upholstered furniture every three to four months, and keep hardwood floors swept and mopped. These steps address the source of pet odor rather than just masking it with air fresheners.
What can I use to make my house smell good for a showing?
Effective options include a wax melter with cookie, citrus, or cinnamon scents; three capfuls of vanilla extract in a mug with half water heated in the oven at 300 degrees for 30 minutes; or cinnamon sticks simmered in one to two cups of water on the stovetop. Keep scents subtle and pleasant — avoid overpowering fragrances that can be as off-putting as bad smells.
Does cigarette smoke in a house hurt resale value?
Yes — cigarette smoke embeds into walls, carpet, and upholstery and is one of the most difficult odors to eliminate. It is immediately noticeable to most buyers and can significantly reduce the number of offers received. If a home has smoke odors, smoke exclusively outside during the listing period and use a combination of air purifiers, baking soda treatments on fabrics, and professional carpet and wall cleaning where possible.

More Questions About Preparing Your Home for Sale

Should you cook before a real estate showing?
Avoid cooking before a showing if possible — even pleasant food smells can be polarizing and distract buyers from the experience. Use the showing as an opportunity to go out for dinner or visit a friend, and leave a wax melter or simmering cinnamon on the stove to fill the home with a welcoming, neutral warmth while you are away.
How do you prepare a bathroom for a real estate showing?
Before every showing, flush the toilet and close the lid, wipe down the vanity, clean the mirror, empty the trash, and set out good soap and fresh hand towels. Remove all personal items including toothbrushes and grooming products. A light, subtle scent is welcoming — but avoid heavy air fresheners that can feel like an attempt to mask a problem.
How can Redlow Group help me sell my home in Indiana?
Redlow Group provides full seller guidance and representation across Monticello, White County, and northwest Indiana — including pre-listing preparation advice, professional photography, FAA certified drone footage, digital marketing, and transaction management. Contact the team at redlowgroup.com/contact/ for a free consultation.

Ready to List? Work with Redlow Group

Redlow Group prepares, markets, and sells homes across Monticello, White County, and northwest Indiana — with the local expertise and professional marketing that gets results.

  • 1.Pre-listing seller guidance including odor prep, staging, and photography preparation
  • 2.Professional photography and FAA certified drone footage for every listing
  • 3.Multi-channel digital marketing reaching buyers across Indiana and beyond
  • 4.Full transaction management from listing through closing day

Sam from Redlow Group’s Selling Tips series covers five steps to get your house smelling good before showings — addressing pet odors through regular cleaning and carpet shampooing, eliminating cigarette smoke by taking it outside and using baking soda treatments, avoiding cooking before showings and using vanilla or cinnamon to create welcoming aromas, keeping shoes, laundry, and trash under control, and preparing the bathroom with a clean vanity, fresh towels, and the toilet lid closed. Specifically, how a home smells is one of the most immediate and powerful impressions buyers form — and a bad smell can end a showing before it begins. Furthermore, most of these fixes cost nothing and take minutes to implement before every showing.

Your house needs to be ready to sell — and that starts with making sure it smells like somewhere a buyer wants to live.

— Redlow Group
Your Monticello Indiana Real Estate Experts  ·  redlowgroup.com

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