Match your asking price to what buyers are actually closing at.
You are deciding what asking price gives you the best shot at a strong net without sitting on the market. My answer anchor your expectations to what buyers have been willing to close at, because last month in Ventura County, CA, offers typically ended up around 98.2% of asking. The decision question do you start high to test the ceiling, or start closer to where you expect to land? With a typical sale taking time, I recommend you start with a price that creates urgency instead of creating excuses.
Looking at the latest numbers, the clearest signal was the gap between asking and closing 98.2% sold-to-list last month for single family homes plus condos/townhomes in Ventura County, CA. The typical sold price was $859,250 last month, and the typical sale timeline was 48 days. That matters because your list price is not just a number, it is a filter. Some metrics were not reported for this period. What we do have is a realistic closing benchmark 98.2% of asking paired with a 48 day typical pace, which supports a disciplined approach a price that attracts qualified buyers fast and keeps them engaged through negotiations. Set your asking price with a defined landing zone, not a wish number, and decide in advance what a normal negotiation range looks like when homes close around 98.2% of asking. Prepare your appraisal and condition story early gather key documents, repair receipts, and a clean disclosure package so you do not lose leverage mid-escrow during a longer 48 day typical cycle. If you want top-end terms, tighten your first two weeks I want maximum exposure and easy access immediately so you are not forced into later price reductions.