By Veronica Ocejo Johnson, August 1, 2023
By Veronica Ocejo Johnson, August 1, 2023
The market is inching towards change which means homes are staying on the market longer. This also means I’m getting text messages and emails with a link and the sentence, “This home has been on the market forever, what is wrong with it?”. Typically, I select the link, and will review the whole listing for what could be wrong, like crumbling siding or a caved in roof. The home has only been on the market for 20 days. I’ll roll my eyes, groaning while whining at my phone, “NOTHING IS WRONG!”. I calmly write back, “Oh gosh I don’t know, should we find out?”.
I think it’s the assumption that kills me. So many would-be buyers make assumptions about a home because they mistake access to information via a housing app as having ALL the information available on the home. Did you know there’s a whole portion of the Multiple Listing Service (MLS) with information just for agents? The majority of listings in the MLS will also have seller disclosures and the most accurate history on the property, only available to Realtors who agree to the same Code of Ethics and pay dues, among other things.
No matter who sends the text, the sentiment behind the question is always the same, “This house didn’t sell on the first day it was on the market, so there must be a catastrophic reason no one wants it.” While I understand the logical jump, it’s too far of a leap! In my experience, homes that are on the market for longer than usual are affected by one or more of the following reasons:
Furthermore, a listing that suffers during the first couple of weeks may continue to suffer in the real estate apps that buyers are using. On any search platform, newer data tends to be rewarded. In other words, the longer a home stays on market, the lower on the search feed it will be likely to show up. Again, nothing may be “wrong” with this home, but for a combination of issues that weren’t addressed properly, the listing suffers from the start.
Now I want to qualify, there are some homes that have serious issues that will impact days on market —no matter the marketing. It could be structural issues with the home or that the home is massively overpriced. But those are the outliers, not the common denominator.
So how should you treat days on market?
Give the home with high days on market a chance! It’s always worth a call to me to schedule a showing and walk through. In my experience when representing buyers who aren’t scared by higher days on market, I find that I have more leverage for negotiating on behalf of my buyers. I can actually get deals! Which means you can, too.
If you are ready for less competition and more leverage in the buying process, call me and let’s go tour some homes that have been on the market for a while! There’s more gold out there than you know.