The Truth About Price Reductions: When (and When Not) to Lower Your Price
If your home is on the market and you’re not seeing any offers, it’s natural to start thinking about a price reduction. It’s often the first suggestion sellers hear. But should it be?
In our experience, a price drop can be a smart, strategic move—but it can also be a mistake if done too early or without understanding the full picture. Before you slash the price, we want to help you step back, assess what’s really happening, and make the decision that best serves your goals.
Let’s talk about when a price reduction makes sense—and when it doesn’t.
The First 7–10 Days Are Critical
When your home first hits the market, that’s when it gets the most attention. It shows up in saved searches. It catches the eye of motivated buyers who’ve been watching and waiting. If it doesn’t gain traction during this early window, that’s usually a sign something’s off.
Sometimes the issue is pricing. But just as often, it’s presentation or exposure.
If the photos don’t show off your home’s best features, if staging wasn’t optimized, or if the marketing didn’t reach the right buyers—dropping the price won’t solve the real problem.
That’s why we always take a strategic approach, especially during those first critical days.
What the Data Is Telling Us
We’re not the only ones seeing more price reductions lately.
Redfin reported that 24.3% of listings had at least one price drop in March 2025—a sharp increase from just a year ago. That jump reflects today’s more cautious buyer pool. With higher interest rates and tighter budgets, buyers are doing more comparison shopping and taking their time.
But here’s the important takeaway—homes with multiple price cuts tend to sell for less than those priced correctly from the beginning. Price reductions, if done too late or too often, send a message: something’s wrong with this property.
That’s not a message we want attached to your home. Accurately pricing your home with your real estate agent's professional insights and guidance, isn't just a step, it's the secret weapon for a launch that ignites the market, floods you with offers, and secures you the absolute best price
When a Price Reduction Makes Sense
There are absolutely times when adjusting the price is the right move. Here’s when we’d recommend it:
- You’ve had consistent showings, but no offers. This often means buyers see the home as a match—but not at the current price.
- Similar homes nearby have sold—and yours hasn’t. If the comps are clear, buyers are comparing, and we’re out of alignment.
- The original list price was more aspirational than strategic. That happens, especially if you launched with hopes based on last year’s market highs.
In those cases, a well-calculated price adjustment—paired with a fresh marketing push—can help spark new interest and get your listing back in front of serious buyers.
But…
When You Should Hold the Line
Sometimes, it’s not the price. And dropping it won’t fix the problem.
Before we recommend any adjustment, we’ll ask:
- Was your home marketed to its full potential? High-quality visuals, strong listing copy, and targeted exposure make a big difference. If those elements were lacking, we’ll fix them first.
- Were showings easy to book? If buyers couldn’t get in—or had limited availability to view the home—we may not have seen the full demand yet.
- Were early offers dismissed too quickly? We’ve seen sellers turn down strong offers just because they didn’t match the list price. But the first offer often starts the conversation, not ends it. With the right counter and data-backed negotiation, we can still get you where you want to be.
Lowering the price quickly, without adjusting your approach, can backfire. It's not solely the price that matters, but how buyers perceive the value they're receiving.
What We Do Instead
Before making any move, we take a pause and audit everything:
- We review the photography and staging. Are we leading with your home’s strongest features?
- We look at buyer feedback. What’s coming up in conversations or showing reports?
- We relaunch marketing if needed. If the first round didn’t gain traction, we go again—with fresh eyes and new energy.
Sometimes just repositioning the listing—without changing the price—can make all the difference. We’ve had properties sell at full asking after we updated the photos, reworded the description, or changed our strategy for promoting the home. It’s not always about the price. It’s about the presentation.
The Real Cost of Overcorrecting
If a price drop is done too steeply—or more than once—it can send the wrong signal.
In fact, a 2024 NAR report found that homes with multiple price reductions sold for 6.7% less on average than homes priced appropriately from day one. That means reducing the price repeatedly can lead to a lower final sale price than simply pricing it right (and staying patient) from the start.
So before we touch that list price, we’ll look at all the options. Because reducing the price is usually permanent.
Selling Smart in 2025
In this market, pricing is powerful—but it’s not the only tool we have. The goal isn’t just to sell. It’s to sell with confidence, clarity, and the best possible outcome for your next move.
If you’re feeling uncertain about what to do next—or wondering whether a price drop is the right step—we’d be happy to talk it through.
Let’s look at your home, your market, your buyer feedback, and make the decision that makes the most sense for you.
Because your home deserves a plan—not a panic reaction.