The market is giving sellers options, but only if the price and timing make sense from day one.
If you are wondering whether you can still sell well without overplaying your hand, yes - but only with a pricing plan that respects today's pace. In Cleveland, TX, the market recently carried 14.3 months of supply, so sellers have to compete for attention instead of assuming the next buyer will chase any number they pick.
A typical home sale recently closed at $216,355, while active listings sat at a typical asking price of $229,999 and new listings came out at $239,900. Recent offers reached about 97.5% of asking, which tells me sellers can still get close to their number when the property is positioned correctly. The key issue is not whether homes sell at all. It is whether the asking price fits what buyers are already proving they will accept. The time piece matters just as much. A typical sale took 102 days recently, and in the last three months the closed group shown in Cleveland, TX had a typical market time of 57 days, while pending listings showed 73 days. That is enough to tell me sellers should not expect instant traction just because they list. A home can absolutely move, but it needs to show well, enter at a believable price, and avoid forcing repeated price cuts that weaken your position. Start with a price that fits recent closings, not your best-case number. Tighten up repairs, photos, and first-week presentation before the home hits the market. Watch showing feedback closely and be ready to adjust early if activity is soft. If you own rental property here, the same pricing discipline matters because the sale market is giving buyers room to compare options.
About Greg Sanders, Realtor
Greg Sanders, Realtor is a licensed Real Estate Professional affiliated with NB Elite Realty Group, specializing in the Cleveland market. With a focus on strategic marketing and deep local knowledge, Greg Sanders, Realtor provides clients with expert guidance in navigating complex real estate transactions. View full profile →