A simple way to avoid chasing the market after you list
The decision is not just what price to put on the sign, it is whether your first price will create real offers or slow traffic and stress. My read is that you should price with room for reality, because recent closings in Duluth, GA came in at 96.7% of asking last month. That means an overreach can cost you twice you lose time, and you often still negotiate down.
Looking at the latest numbers, the clearest signal was the gap between asking and accepted offers recent sales landed at about 96.7% of asking last month in Duluth, GA. A typical sale took 37 days, and the typical closed price was $455,000. This changes your plan because buyers have shown they will negotiate, and time is part of the price. Some metrics were not reported for this period. Even with limited detail, I can say this if your goal is a smooth sale, you do not want to enter the market priced so high that you must concede later, especially when the typical deal already closes under asking. Start with a pricing range that anticipates the 96.7% reality instead of hoping you will be the exception. Align your marketing calendar to the typical 37-day pace so you are not forced into a price cut due to personal deadlines. Before you list, decide which outcomes you will accept a faster close at a slightly lower number versus holding out longer, because your best leverage is clarity before negotiation begins.