The latest asking prices and sale pace help shape a cleaner pricing plan
If you are deciding where to price your home in Long Island City, NY, the smart rule is to lead with precision, not optimism. My read is that you need a price that can compete with current options, because supply was 10 months recently and that gives shoppers time to compare.
Here is the constraint I plan around based on the previous 30 days supply was 10 months in Long Island City, NY. The practical impact is straightforward. When buyers have that much choice, an ambitious opening price can leave you testing the market instead of attracting it. The typical asking price for active homes was $1,137,500 last month, up 8.3% from the prior month. At the same time, a typical estimated property value was $1,058,000 recently, after a 2.2% monthly pullback. This changes your plan because a seller who ignores that gap can end up positioned above both current competition and recent value estimates. Price from the middle of the evidence, not the edge. I recommend setting your launch price against the recent asking benchmark, then stress-testing it against the recent estimated value before you go live. Get your photos, staging, and showing plan ready before launch so the first wave of attention is not wasted on a number that needs correcting. Short and clear wins. Over the last three months, 10 homes came to market, 4 moved into pending status, and 10 closed. Where people get this wrong is assuming any listing will move quickly just because homes are still selling. In Long Island City, NY, I would rather see you enter cleanly, monitor response early, and adjust fast if showings do not match the price you set.
About Allstar Team
Allstar Team is a licensed Real Estate Professional affiliated with RE/MAX City Square, specializing in the Long Island City market. With a focus on strategic marketing and deep local knowledge, Allstar Team provides clients with expert guidance in navigating complex real estate transactions. View full profile →