A clear way to set your asking price without guessing
You are deciding one thing price to attract serious offers without leaving money behind. My rule of thumb in Northridge, CA is to price around what buyers actually closed at recently, then defend that number with tight terms and presentation.
If you only remember one closed data point right now, make it this a typical median sale in Northridge, CA closed at $989,000 last month, while the typical median asking price for active homes was $1,210,399 over that same recent period. Where people get this wrong is assuming the market will automatically reward a reach price just because nearby listings are high. Some metrics were not reported for this period. What is clear is that closed pricing and current asking prices did not match one-for-one in the latest figures, so I treat pricing as a proof exercise condition, location, and buyer objections need to be addressed upfront to justify where you land. Price your home with a tight comparison set anchored to the $989,000 typical closed price last month, then adjust only for features you can document not hopes. Build your launch plan around buyers paying about 99.5% of asking last month, which means overpricing usually shows up as time. Pre-negotiate your bottom line before you list so you can respond fast if the first offer arrives below your target, instead of chasing the market after weeks of showing.