Set your price around what actually closed, not hopes
You're deciding whether you can push the price on your move without risking a stalled listing. My rule in Jurupa Valley, CA is simple price off recent closed reality, then let demand prove you right. The decision question I want you to answer now is this do you need a predictable closing timeline, or can you tolerate a longer wait to chase a higher number?
If you only remember one closed data point right now, make it this a typical closed sale in Jurupa Valley, CA landed at $660,000 last month, and a typical sale took 36 days to get to the finish line. Over that same period, recent offers landed at about 100% of asking, and supply stood at 1.85 months. That matters because it tells me pricing is still being tested by buyers, not simply accepted. Some metrics were not reported for this period. What is reported is enough to keep you out of the most common seller mistake anchoring your list price to a neighbor story instead of the range of homes that actually closed in the last month. Start with a pricing range tied to the last month closed level of $660,000, then adjust for your home's condition, size, and features instead of guessing. Build your launch plan around the 36-day typical sale timeline finish prep, photos, and showing access before you go live so you do not waste the first two weeks. Hold a hard line on value, but stay disciplined on positioning because offers recently came in around 100% of asking and that is the negotiation posture you should expect.