When it comes to pricing your home, most people think the process is simple: look at what sold recently → pick a number → list it.
But in today’s market, that approach is outdated — and it can cost you tens of thousands of dollars. Pricing a home properly is both an art and a science. It requires understanding not just what has sold, but how buyers are behaving right now.
Here’s how I approach pricing in 2026, and why it leads to stronger results for my clients.
Recent Sales Matter — But They Don’t Tell the Whole Story
Yes, sold data is important.
It tells us what buyers have been willing to pay.
But sold data is also:
backward‑looking
often 60–90 days old
influenced by the conditions of that specific home
influenced by the motivation of that specific seller
A home that sold in February doesn’t always reflect buyer behaviour in May.
So, while I absolutely analyze solds, I never rely on them alone.
Neighbourhood Values Don’t Always Equal Your Value
This is a big one.
A neighbourhood might have homes selling for $700K+, but that doesn’t automatically mean your home is worth the same — or that it isn’t.
When I look at neighbourhood values, I’m asking:
What is the ceiling here?
What is the floor?
Where does your home sit within that range?
What is the lifestyle premium of this street or pocket?
How much do buyers invest in this area?
Sometimes a neighbourhood supports higher values than your home’s current condition.
Sometimes your home offers features that outperform the neighbourhood average.
Either way, neighbourhood context matters — but it’s not a copy‑and‑paste formula.
Active Listings Tell a Story Most Sellers Miss
This is the part almost no one talks about. Active listings don’t tell us what buyers paid — they tell us what buyers are thinking right now.
When I analyze active listings, I’m looking for:
How long are homes sitting?
Are price reductions happening?
Which homes are getting showings?
Which ones are being ignored?
What features are buyers gravitating toward?
What price points feel “sticky” in this market?
Active listings reveal buyer psychology, not just buyer history. And buyer psychology is what determines whether your home sells in 10 days or 60.
Pricing Isn’t About Picking a Number — It’s About Positioning
A strong pricing strategy considers:
your home’s condition
your upgrades
your mechanical systems
your lot size
your layout
your lifestyle features (like water access)
your neighbourhood ceiling
your competition
your buyer pool
your timing
your goals
Pricing is not about being the cheapest. It’s not about being the most expensive.
It’s about being the most compelling option for the right buyer.
Pricing your home is one of the most important decisions you’ll make — and it deserves more than a quick CMA and a guess.
If you want a pricing strategy that’s thoughtful, data‑driven, and tailored to your home’s unique strengths, I’d love to walk you through the process.
Because in this market, strategy wins.