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Should I Price my WI condo for a bidding war?

Condo bidding war
Condo bidding war
Bidding War

For months now (years?) Wisconsin condo and home Sellers have been pricing there condos and houses to generate bidding wars.

(caution:  every sale is different, below is an example of a general concept and the approach is NOT for everyone, but described to introduce ideas)

They price a little below what they think it will sell for in order to attract attention, their real estate agent goes to great effort to market and show the property to as many people as possible and set a Will Consider Offers Date, usually 3 or 6 days from the listing date (this is called withholding offers). The hope is that on the Consideration Date multiple people will have fallen in love with the condo or house and the competition for it will drive the price up.

Breaking news: it doesn’t always work.

We see it all the time: houses set up to generate multiple offers that don’t sell on Consideration Date. What could have gone wrong?

  • The Weather Real estate is an extremely seasonal business in Wisconsin – if the sun is shining, people are out buying homes. Rainy weekend? Your Realtor will be playing Angry Birds through your open house because all the Buyers stayed home. Snowy weekend? Hope the Association subcontractor removes the snow!  What does that mean to you as a Seller? Fewer Buyers and less competition for your house.

  • Competition – How much your house sells for and how long it takes is dependent on what else Buyers are looking at. If there are lots of other properties in your neighborhood or price range on the market at the same time, the likelihood of multiple offers decreases. This is why we often encourage people to list in February and March before the ‘rush’ happens and when there are fewer houses on the market.

  • You Got Greedy – Your house is only worth what someone is prepared to pay for it. It’s nice that you thought you’d get $30K over what your house is worth because your neighbor did, but greed won’t get you more money. One of our greatest pet peeves is the Seller who prices their house at $299K, gets 3 offers on Consideration Date and turns them all down because they really wanted $325,000. If you want $325,00, price your house closer to $325,000.

  • It’s the Wrong Kind of Property. Multiple offers most frequently occur for the types of properties that are most in demand: renovated, well-staged houses, unique condos and studios on hot streets in hot neighborhoods. If your home has too many objections and compromises – things the Buyers don’t want, it’ll be tough to convince multiple Buyers to bid on it at the same time.

  • Buyers are Tired of the Game. We see this every year – there are only so many bidding wars a Buyer wants to lose before they start to hate the game and will avoid it at all costs. Bidding war fatigue towards the end of a selling season is real so you need to time your sale accordingly.  Face it, in Wisconsin we tend to stop everything during hunting and football season.

  • Some Buyers aren’t committed to the process. Some buyers simply don’t like to compete for a home, and the approach can actually turn off a buyer.  Not every condo or home selling situation fits this type of ‘splash’ into the market. 

(caution:  we will say it again – every sale is different, below is an example of a general concept and the approach is NOT for everyone, but to introduce ideas)

So what’s a Wisconsin condo or home Seller to do?

  • Talk to a real estate agent who knows your neighborhood and what’s going on in the market – they’ll be able to help guide your pricing decision and whether or not you should try to generate a bidding war.

  • If Buyer fatigue is a problem in your neighborhood, you may end up getting MORE for your house by pricing it higher and not withholding offers. Of course, that might mean you get an offer on Day 1 and that’s not a bad thing if you get the price you want.

  • Don’t count your chickens before they’re hatched – the market will dictate how much your house is worth. Don’t make any assumptions.