Home sellers today might find themselves encountering a sharp and painful divide between their hopes and reality.
The hope, of course, is that their house will quickly fetch multiple offers way over the asking price. The reality? Their property might sit for a while, perhaps with no offers at all.
At that point, sellers might have to contemplate what not long ago was unthinkable: slashing the asking price of their home.
While price reductions might have been a rarity during the red-hot seller’s market of the past couple of years, they’re becoming increasingly common today. Realtor.com listing data shows that the share of homes that reduced their list price reached 14.9% in June versus 7.6% a year earlier.
Why have price cuts on listings nearly doubled? Because many home sellers have yet to adjust their lofty expectations against the harsh new reality that has rapidly taken over the real estate market today. Mortgage rates are up, curbing homebuyers’ borrowing power. The number of listings on the market is up, too, by18.7% in June compared with last year.
Meanwhile, home prices have already started falling in some parts of the country, all of which adds up to the fact that those legendary days of $100,000-over-asking bidding wars that sellers might fantasize about may largely be over. And, if your home’s current price doesn’t reflect these new conditions, it might just sit there until you do something about it—like slash the price.
Truth is, a price reduction could even bring on that bidding war that could drive a home’s price higher than before. But there’s an art to pulling this off. To help, here’s a guide to pulling off a successful price reduction today. We’ll break down how to know when it’s time, and how exactly to go about trimming your listing price without sounding the death knell to buyers.
How to tell if it’s time to reduce the price of your home
If you’re asking yourself whether you need to lower the list price on your home, then the answer is likely yes.
“The longer a home sits on the market, the more buyers are likely to glance over it or write it off as something wrong with it,” says Stephen Michalakos, a real estate agent with Engle & Volkers St. Petersburg in Florida. “If the market has rejected your price, it’s time to adjust your position.”
There are differing opinions as to the amount of time you should leave a home on the market before considering a price reduction. Most real estate agents will tell you anywhere between two and four weeks.
“Anyone in today’s market should not be afraid to drop their list price if their home has been on the market for several weeks with no serious interest,” says Tomas Satas, CEO at Windy City Home Buyer in Cicero, IL.
If your home has had few showings, negative feedback from buyers, and no offers, it’s likely time to cut the price.
“I’ve had some clients get very upset when I’ve advised them that a price reduction was needed,” says Ken Sisson, a real estate agent with Coldwell Banker in Studio City, CA. But sellers who hear this from their agents should take care to not blame the messenger.
“Agents don’t control the market. We navigate it,” Sisson points out.
Flavia Berys, a real estate agent and founder of Bookmark Realty in San Diego, recommends sellers and their agents tour and visit other similar homes to gauge the current competition.
“Sometimes the market has shifted,” she says, “and the only way to see it from a buyer’s perspective is to tour the homes that are competing with yours to see how a buyer would compare them and the value.”
Get more tips like this on Realtor.com
Related Links
Waterfall Countertops May Be the Latest Kitchen Trend…But What Comes Next?
Millennials would give up TikTok and alcohol for a dream home
If there is a home that you would like more information about, if you are considering selling a property, or if you have questions about the housing market in your neighborhood, please reach out. We’re here to help.