A smart list price is one you can defend with facts and condition
If you are struggling with one decision, it is this do you price to attract attention fast, or do you price high and wait for the perfect buyer. My answer is to price so the first serious buyer sees value immediately, then let the terms and presentation protect your bottom line.
If you only remember one data point from January 2026, make it 108.5% of asking for sold homes in Rensselaer, IN. Pair that with the January 2026 typical timeline of 41 days to sell, and the January 2026 typical sold price of $177,700 versus a typical asking price of $274,450 among active listings. This changes your plan because selling above asking 108.5% in January 2026 usually comes from creating a clear reason to act, not from starting at an inflated number and hoping. Some metrics were not reported for this period, so I will not claim every segment behaved the same way, but these January 2026 figures are enough to set expectations you need a pricing story that matches the market and you need patience for a process that can take weeks, not days. Pick a starting price you can justify the moment a buyer asks "why this number," because January 2026 showed buyers will pay up when the value is obvious. Plan your prep and launch so the home is showing-ready from day one, since the typical January 2026 sale still took 41 days and stale listings lose leverage. If your home competes in a higher price bracket, be even more intentional about terms and condition so you do not get forced into price cuts after you miss the first wave of interest.
About Lindsay Phelan
Lindsay Phelan is a licensed Real Estate Professional affiliated with RE/MAX Executives, specializing in the Rensselaer market. With a focus on strategic marketing and deep local knowledge, Lindsay Phelan provides clients with expert guidance in navigating complex real estate transactions. View full profile →