Story time.
Youโve done all your homework, found a great agent, decluttered, vacuumed every square inch of your house including the dog, had stunning pictures taken, and listed your home. The first two weeks bring showings and cheerful updates from your agent. But then the days begin to tick by without an offer.
You begin to question if you made the right choice of agent, especially as the updates become less cheerful and, letโs face it, less often.
Let’s think back to that first conversation with your agent.
Did they suggest a listing price you didn’t particularly care for? Maybe they recommended $490,000. But your neighbor’s house just sold for $500,000. And Zillow says yours is worth even more. So naturally, you listed at $500,000.
Yikes.
One of the hardest conversations I have as a real estate agent isn’t about inspections, appraisals, or interest rates.
Itโs about price. Whether that’s the initial listing price or the dreaded price-reduction conversation.
Lemme tell you, nobody calls me excited to lower the price of their home.
In fact, most sellers would rather discuss almost anything else. The problem is that many homeowners don’t realize how quickly a small pricing mistake can turn into a much larger financial loss.
Letโs get back to your house. Youโve had some showings, but nobody is writing an offer.
Your agent suggests a $10,000 price reduction, and immediately, your brain starts doing that thing that every seller’s brain does.
“But my neighbor sold for more.”
“But Zillow says it’s worth more.”
“But we need this amount to buy our next house.”
So you decide to wait.
After all, what’s the harm in giving it a little more time? Great question, and hereโs the harm.
The First Two Weeks Matter Most.
The strongest buyer interest usually happens when a property first hits the market.
That’s when every active buyer receives notifications.
That’s when agents schedule showings.
That’s when people get excited.
A well-priced home takes advantage of that initial momentum, while an overpriced home wastes it.
Once that momentum is gone, it’s very difficult to get it back.
You can lower the price later, but you can never relaunch a listing as brand new.
After the first two weeks, all the current buyers have already seen your house. Now youโre playing the game of waiting for new buyers to enter the market.
A month later, the showings have slowed.
The excitement that comes with a new listing has faded. Buyers have seen it online for weeks. Some begin wondering if something is wrong with it.
Now the conversation isn’t about reducing the price by $10,000.
Now we’re discussing a reduction of $20,000 or $25,000.
The listing continues to age.
More buyers pass it over.
The home that once looked fresh now looks stale.
Eventually, an offer arrives.
Not for $490,000.
Not for $480,000.
But for $470,000.
The seller accepts because they’re exhausted, frustrated, and ready to move on.
Ironically, the $10,000 reduction they refused months earlier would likely have saved them far more money in the long run.
Part of the problem is that many sellers assume a home has one magic value.
It doesn’t. In reality, every home has three values.
The first is what buyers think it’s worth. The second is what the seller is willing to accept. The third is what an appraiser can support.
A sale only happens when those three numbers get close enough to each other to make a transaction possible.
Sometimes the seller is the outlier.
Sometimes the buyer is.
Sometimes the appraiser shows up and ruins everyone’s day.
But until those three opinions align, the house doesn’t sell.
Thereโs Gotta Be a Reason!
When a home isn’t selling, there are generally only three possible reasons:
Condition. Price. Marketing.
That’s it.
Most sellers immediately assume the problem is marketing.
“Maybe we need better photos.”
“Maybe we need more advertising.”
“Maybe we need more exposure.”
And while marketing certainly matters, here’s the uncomfortable truth:
If enough buyers are seeing the home and nobody is making an offer, marketing usually isn’t the problem anymore.
The market has already delivered its verdict. The verdict may be wrong. The market occasionally gets things wrong. But arguing with it rarely changes the outcome.
Think of it this way: A beautifully marketed overpriced house is still overpriced.
A perfectly priced home with terrible marketing may struggle initially.
A home in poor condition may need either improvements or a price that reflects its condition.
But if I had to rank the three factors by importance, price wins almost every time.
Buyers will overlook outdated paint for the right price.
They’ll overlook ugly carpet for the right price.
They’ll overlook a small kitchen for the right price.
But paying more than they believe a home is worth? Not going to happen.
Why This Happens
Most sellers think buyers view homes the way sellers do.
They don’t.
Sellers see memories. They remember birthday parties in the dining room, family gatherings in the backyard, and years spent making the house a home.
Buyers don’t see any of that.
Buyers compare options. They compare square footage, condition, location, upgrades, and price.
That’s it. And they’re comparing your home against every other available option at the same time.
The Market Doesn’t Care What You Need
This is the part nobody enjoys hearing.
The market does not care what you owe.
The market does not care what you spent on improvements.
The market does not care what Zillow estimated.
The market certainly does not care what you need from the sale.
The market only cares about one thing:
What a qualified buyer is willing to pay today.
That isn’t harsh. It’s simply reality.
Price Is a Marketing Tool
Many sellers think price is the result of marketing.
In reality, price is part of the marketing.
A home priced correctly attracts attention.
A home priced aggressively attracts urgency.
A home priced too high attracts comparisons.
Every showing that ends without an offer is feedback. Every week without meaningful activity is feedback.
The market is constantly communicating. The question is whether we’re willing to listen.
The Bottom Line
Let’s circle back to how a seller loses $30,000 by refusing a $10,000 reduction.
The first reduction would have positioned the home correctly while buyer interest was still high. Instead, the listing sits. Showings slow. Buyers become skeptical.
The eventual reduction has to be larger to generate the same attention the original reduction would have created weeks earlier. By the time an offer finally arrives, the seller has often given up far more than the amount they were originally trying to save.
If you don’t get anything else out of this article, remember this:
The goal isn’t to get the highest list price.
The goal is to get the highest sale price.
Those are not always the same thing.
Sometimes the seller who refuses a $10,000 reduction ends up losing $30,000, and not because the house was bad or the market was unfair, but because timing, perception, and buyer psychology matter far more than most people realize.
And unfortunately, the market tends to send the bill after it’s too late to change the strategy.
