If you want a clean sale, price for the actual pace instead of a fantasy sequel.
Thinking about listing and wondering if Millbrae, CA gives you room to push the price? My short answer yes, but only if the home is positioned for a market where a typical sale took 15 to 25 days over the previous 30 days. That is quick enough to reward smart preparation, but not so forgiving that the market will rescue an overreach with a standing ovation. I would treat this as a competitive window, not a license to get cute. In Millbrae, CA, the strongest clue is not one headline number. It is the mix recent sales reached 34 homes over the previous 30 days, typical sale time was 15 days in one recent reading and 19 days in another, and well-priced homes were described as drawing multiple offers. That combination tells me buyers are showing up, but they are not required to applaud every price tag like it deserves its own trophy case.
If your real question is, "Can I list now without leaving money on the table?" yes, with discipline. Over the previous 30 days, the typical asking price was $1,590,000, while a typical closed price in nearby recent readings landed at $1,543,444 and $1,600,000. That is close enough to tell me pricing accuracy matters more than dramatic theater. The tricky part in Millbrae, CA is that small monthly volume can make prices wobble around like a shopping cart with one bad wheel. Only 7 to 34 homes sold per month in the recent figures, and one recent jump in price per square foot was tied to smaller, higher-quality homes rather than a clean marketwide leap. My read is simple if your place has standout condition, walk-to-station appeal, or sits in a premium pocket like the hillside areas, I would lean into those advantages. If it is in an area affected by airport noise, I would not pretend buyers will forget their ears. Prep the home like speed matters, because it does. Set the price around real recent positioning, not your favorite cocktail-party estimate. Highlight the features the file ties to premiums - transit access, walkability near downtown, or a stronger neighborhood tier - and deal with obvious negatives before launch. If your home sits near the flight path, address soundproofing and disclosure early. That is not pessimism. That is how I keep a listing from becoming stale and awkward.
About Charlie Giang
Charlie Giang is a licensed Real Estate Professional affiliated with Charlie Giang, specializing in the Millbrae market. With a focus on strategic marketing and deep local knowledge, Charlie Giang provides clients with expert guidance in navigating complex real estate transactions. View full profile →