Recent pricing and timing numbers point to a sharper listing plan, not a louder one.
If you are wondering whether you can push your asking price and still get taken seriously, my answer is yes, but only if the number fits how homes are actually moving. In Harrison Township, MI, active homes were priced at a typical $449,500 over the previous 30 days, while closed sales came in at $355,000, so price positioning needs to be deliberate from day one.
Recent market activity gives sellers a clear tension to manage. Over the previous 30 days, there were 53 active listings, a typical active asking price was $449,500, and a typical sale took 44 days to close after going under contract and completing the process. That spread between active asking prices and recent closed prices tells me overpricing is the easy mistake here. Harrison Township, MI still showed tight supply at 1.89 months, but buyers were not paying full ask on average, with accepted deals closing around 98.5% of asking, so strategy matters more than optimism. Set your asking price against recent closed results first, not just competing listings. Walk through your condition line by line and fix anything that weakens your first impression. Go live with a plan for the first two weeks, and be ready to adjust quickly if showings do not match the pace you expected.
About Ed Brittingham
Ed Brittingham is a licensed Real Estate Professional affiliated with REMAX Eclipse, specializing in the Harrison Township market. With a focus on strategic marketing and deep local knowledge, Ed Brittingham provides clients with expert guidance in navigating complex real estate transactions. View full profile →