Use the gap between list and closed pricing to avoid overreaching
You're deciding what number to put on the sign without leaving money on the table or sitting on the market. My answer price your Simi Valley, CA home so it aligns with what buyers have been willing to close at recently, because the market has been rewarding realistic expectations. Price matters. It sets everything else in motion, including how much negotiating room you really have once showings start.
Here is the constraint I plan around based on the previous 30 days a typical closed price in Simi Valley, CA was $820,000 last month, while a typical active asking price at month-end was $849,900. Recent closings came in at about 98.5% of asking, and a typical sale timeline ran about 58 days. The practical impact is that buyers have been closing close to asking, but not blindly at any number. Some metrics were not reported for this period. What is clear is that the gap between typical asking and typical closed pricing is real, and it is exactly where many sellers misread their leverage if they start too high and then chase the market with reductions. Anchor your pricing conversation to the last month typical closed price of $820,000, then adjust only with property-specific proof rather than optimism. Set your negotiation plan before you launch decide in advance what you will concede and what you will not so you do not get forced into emotional counters when offers arrive. Align your launch timing and prep to support a smoother close inside the typical 58-day timeline, because your buyer pool will notice uncertainty as quickly as they notice price.