The opening price can shape the entire selling timeline in a slower market.
The market gives you the most attention when a listing is new. If that opening price is off, fixing it later usually costs more than sellers expect. In Woodside, NY this April 2026, I would take first-week pricing seriously because the recent numbers point to a market where buyers have time and choices. A typical sale took 194 days last month, supply stood at 7.2 months, and the market leaned toward buyers. In Woodside, NY, that tells me the launch price is not a detail. It is the strategy.
Sellers often want to leave room to negotiate, but there is a difference between strategic room and obvious overpricing. Last month, active homes carried a typical asking price of $693,500 while recent sales closed at a typical $450,000. That gap should get your attention. It means many asking prices are not automatically translating into closed values. The first week matters because buyers notice fresh listings immediately, then compare them against everything else still on the market. In Woodside, NY, a longer average path to a sale already means patience may be necessary, so I do not want to waste early attention on a price that scares off the right buyers. Once a home lingers, the seller often ends up negotiating from a weaker position. Choose a launch price that invites serious traffic instead of testing the top edge of the market. Watch the first round of feedback closely and be ready to react. Do not let age become your negotiator. If the home is not getting the response it should, I would adjust while the listing still feels current.
About Lissette Abreu
Lissette Abreu is a licensed Real Estate Professional affiliated with Remax Team, specializing in the Woodside market. With a focus on strategic marketing and deep local knowledge, Lissette Abreu provides clients with expert guidance in navigating complex real estate transactions. View full profile →