Price Your Home Correctly from Day One
Setting the right list price when your home first goes on the market is one of the most critical decisions you will make. Overpricing can lead to your home sitting on the market, requiring multiple price reductions, and ultimately selling for less than a well-priced home. Underpricing, while tempting to generate a bidding war, can leave money on the table.
The Pitfalls of Overpricing
Overpricing your home often leads to a poor outcome.
Issue | Description |
|---|---|
Missed Opportunity | Your home will only attract attention from potential buyers searching within the lower, correct price range during the first critical weeks. |
Buyer Skepticism | Buyers and their agents quickly spot an overpriced listing, often skipping it entirely, assuming you are not a serious seller. |
Stale Listing | When a home sits for too long, it develops a negative "stigma," forcing deeper price cuts later to rekindle interest. |
Appraisal Issues | Even if you find a buyer, the sale can fall apart if the bank appraisal does not meet the inflated list price. |
The best method for pricing is a comprehensive Comparative Market Analysis (CMA). This analysis focuses on the data, not emotion.
1. Analyze Comparable Sales (Comps)- Recently Sold Homes: The strongest indicator of value is what similar homes have actually sold for in your immediate neighborhood within the last six months.
- Active Listings: Use these to gauge the current competition, but remember that an active list price is not a sale price.
- Expired Listings: Look at homes that failed to sell. These often represent the price ceiling for the neighborhood.
No two homes are exactly alike. Adjust the sold prices of your comps based on their differences relative to your home.
- Positive Adjustments: Increase the comp's price for features your home has that the comp does not (e.g., a new roof, upgraded kitchen).
- Negative Adjustments: Decrease the comp's price for features the comp has that your home does not (e.g., an extra bathroom, a larger lot).
Pricing must reflect the current state of the market.
Market Type | Recommended Strategy |
|---|---|
Seller's Market (Low inventory, high demand) | Price aggressively at the top end of the CMA range to generate multiple offers. |
Buyer's Market (High inventory, low demand) | Price competitively at the low end of the CMA range to stand out from the competition. |
Balanced Market (Equal supply and demand) | Price centrally within the CMA range for the best chance of a quick, fair sale. |
The perfect price is a range, not a single number. The goal is to set the price just slightly below the competition while remaining within the bounds of what the sold comps support. This maximizes buyer interest and positions your home to receive offers quickly.
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