|
TIMING
YOUR SALE While the overall health of the market has the greatest impact on your sale, the date you put it on the market can also be important. The real estate marketing calendar generally has two distinct peaks and valleys created by ebbs and flows of activity in your local real estate market. You can use the predictability of these cycles to your advantage.
First peak season: spring flowers and For Sale signs bloom
Depending on where you live, the longer and stronger of the two
annual peak seasons begins somewhere between late January and early
March. If you're still digging out from under ten feet of snow on
March 1st, your market may take a little longer to heat up.
February through May is normally the most active selling time for
residential real estate. Families with children want to get their
purchase or sale out of the way by late spring so moving won't
disrupt the kids' schooling for the next academic year. Other people
buy or sell early in the year for tax purposes, or to avoid
interference with their summer vacation.
The first peak season is usually the best time to put your house on
the market. High sale prices result from spirited buyer competition.
Because more buyers are in the market now than at any other time of
the year, your best chance of getting a fast, top-dollar sale is
during the first season.
Second peak season: autumn leaves and houses of every color
Labor Day usually starts the second peak season. This peak normally
rolls through September, October, and into November. People who sell
during late autumn tend to be strongly motivated. Some bought new
homes in the spring before selling their old ones. Now they're
slashing their asking prices.
Others are calendar-year taxpayers who sold houses earlier in the year
and want to buy their new home before December 31st so they can pay
tax-deductible expenses (such as the loan origination fee, mortgage
interest, and property taxes) prior to the end of the year to reduce
the impact of federal and state income tax. Either way, these folks
are under pressure to sell.
Unless prices are rapidly increasing in your area, wait until activity
slows in mid-November and then buy your next home at a discount price.
You get the best of both worlds -- "sell high and buy low."
First valley: summer doldrums
Memorial Day usually marks the beginning of the first valley.
Sales activity usually slows during June, July, and August.
Buyers, sellers, and agents often take summer vacations, which
reduces the market activity. Many folks spend their weekends
having fun in the sun rather than looking at houses.
This season is an okay time to put your property on the market,
but not the best. Houses ordinarily take somewhat longer to sell
in the summer due to a lower level of buyer activity. Unless you
have to sell now (or if property values are declining), wait until
the fall to put your house on the market. You're likely to get a
higher price after people return from vacation.
Death valley: real estate activity hibernates until spring
The second peak season usually drops dead a week or so before
Thanksgiving. With the exception of a few, mostly desperate,
sellers and bargain-hunting or relocating buyers who stay in the
market until the bitter end of December, residential real estate
sales activity ordinarily slows significantly by mid-November.
This real estate Death Valley is generally the worst time of year to sell a house. Even our brilliant pricing techniques may not be able to save you from getting your financial bones picked clean by bargain-hunting vultures if you're forced to sell at this time of the year. Don't put your house on the market during Death Valley days unless you have absolutely no other alternative.
|