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How to Price Your SoCal Home — The First 14 Days Decide Everything.

The single biggest decision when listing isn't agent choice or staging — it's price. And in SoCal, the first 14 days of a listing decide whether you sell strong, sell weak, or sit.

I've watched the same scene play out hundreds of times: a seller convinced their home is worth $50K more than the comps, agent pricing accordingly, multi-week silence, frustrated price drop, sale 6 weeks later for less than the original "smart" price would have netted.

The math on pricing your SoCal home is unforgiving. Here's how I think about it with my sellers.

Why the first 14 days matter

When your home hits the market, three things happen simultaneously:

This wave of interest is concentrated in the first 14 days. After that, the algorithms shift it from "new listing" to "this has been around" — and serious buyers move on to whatever is fresh.

What "priced right" actually means

"Priced right" doesn't mean "priced at what you want." It means priced where the buyer pool says "this is interesting, let's see it," not "this looks expensive, let's wait."

The right price is typically:

The three pricing strategies

Strategy A: Below market (aggressive)

Price 1-3% below recent comparable sales. Goal: trigger multiple offers in the first weekend, let buyers bid up to true market value.

Strategy B: At market (balanced)

Price exactly at the comp median. Goal: steady showing volume, 1-3 offers within 14 days, sale within 30-45 days.

Strategy C: Above market (test-the-market)

Price 2-5% above comps. Goal: see if the market will reach. Plan to drop after 14-21 days if not.

The cost of overpricing

This is the number most sellers don't realize until they live it: the longer your home sits, the less it sells for.

Concrete data: in our local market, homes that sell within 14 days typically close at 99-101% of list price. Homes that sell after 30+ days typically close at 95-97%. Homes that sit past 60 days and require a price drop usually close at 92-95% of the original list — that's $30-50K on an $850K home.

The math:

The "safe" higher price often costs more than the "scary" lower price.

What the comps actually tell you

When I price your home, I pull every sale of a similar home (same beds/baths, ±20% square footage, similar condition) within a half-mile, sold within the last 90 days. Then I adjust for differences:

The number I land on isn't a guess. It's a defensible position with paper trail.

What to do before listing

  1. Get your free home valuation with real comps — not Zillow's Zestimate (which is wrong by 5-15% in SoCal)
  2. Decide your timeline — fast sale or maximum price? Strategy follows.
  3. Prep the home for the first 14 days — staging, deep clean, photography, ideally pre-listing inspection
  4. List on a Thursday — captures weekend showings within first 4 days
  5. Have a Plan B — what's the price drop trigger? At what day-count? Set it now, in writing, not in the moment.
The best sellers I work with don't ask "what's my home worth?" — they ask "what price gets me the strongest first 14 days?" Those are different questions, and the second one nets more money.

Thinking about selling this fall?

Free home valuation with real comps and a real pricing strategy — not just a number. 24-hour turnaround.

Get a Free Valuation →

Or — let's actually talk it through

15-minute call. I'll walk through where the market is in your specific neighborhood and what pricing strategy fits your situation.

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Jesse Oñate, bilingual realtor in Downey, CA
About the Author
Jesse Oñate · Bilingual SoCal Realtor
DRE #02133131 · 100+ closings · 5.0★ Google · Covers Downey, Whittier, Pico Rivera, Montebello & all of LA + OC. Spanish/English. More about Jesse →