When you see a house that’s been sitting on the market for a while, the reaction is almost automatic. You start thinking:
What’s wrong with it?
Why hasn’t anyone bought it yet?
Am I missing something?
That mindset made sense a few years ago. But in today’s market, you may actually miss out.
More Time on Market Isn't Automatically a Concern Anymore
A few years ago, homes sold in just a matter of days. Sometimes, hours. Anything that lingered longer than that raised concerns. But that’s no longer the baseline.
Inventory has grown. Buyers have more choices. And homes are taking longer to sell across the board. Those are some of the reasons why the typical time it takes a home to sell has climbed this year:
And it’s not that 73 days is slow. That’s actually pretty normal for this time of year. It just feels slow because you heard so much about houses being snapped up in the buying frenzy a few years ago.
That shift alone explains a lot of what you’re seeing. It’s not necessarily that there’s anything wrong with the house itself. Although, let’s be honest, sometimes that is the case.
Most of the time today, a house that’s taking longer to sell simply means:
There are a lot of homes for sale in that area
The seller priced a little too high at first
The home didn’t photograph as well online
Buyers passed it over for flashier listings nearby
The timing just wasn’t right when it first hit the (click "Learn More" to finish the article)...