Agent

6 Go-To House Pricing Strategies Used to Sell Real Estate in 2026

House pricing strategy #1: Start with a free online home value estimate

It used to be that the only way to access information about pricing your home would be to pay a few hundred dollars for an appraisal or ask a real estate agent’s opinion.

Today, detailed property data is widely available online. Sellers now have a head start with the ability to do more preliminary research and access relevant data about their home in an instant.

You can begin the process of researching how to price your home with a tool like HomeLight’s Home Value Estimator.

Answer a short questionnaire to tell us a few details, such as:

  • Are you thinking of selling soon?
  • What is the condition of your home?
  • What type of property is it?
  • When was the home built?

Our tool then pulls publicly available data, your home’s last sale price, current market trends, and recent sales records to provide you with an estimated range of value for your home in less than two minutes — all free.

However, you’ll need to follow up your online home value estimate with a real estate agent’s expertise for accuracy purposes to ensure your estimate takes into account recent upgrades and location factors, such as road noise, nearby power lines, and school district quality.

Get an Estimate on Your Home’s Value

Get all the key information you need to sell your home confidently. You’ll get the estimated value of your home, the relevant parts of a comparative market analysis, and a list of top local real estate agents.

House pricing strategy #2: Look to comparable sales for guidance

Property values are hyperlocal and always shifting, so agents and appraisers rely on comparable sales, aka “comps,” to price individual houses and capture recent changes in the market.

What’s a comparative market analysis?

A comparative market analysis (CMA) puts your home side-by-side against other recently sold properties that are similar in location, condition, and size.

A detailed CMA may run 30-plus pages and cover:

  • A deep dive into the subject property, including any recent photos and new features worth mentioning
  • Somewhere between 10 to 12 comps within a certain radius of the property, and details for each
  • A summary page detailing the sale prices of each comp
  • A map of all included listings
  • Charts and tables that show market trends data, such as inventory numbers for the area and average price per square foot

Can you do your own comps?

You can do your own comps analysis, but a top real estate agent will have experience putting together hundreds of CMAs. They will be more accurate and efficient in pulling the right data and making dollar adjustments based on competitive differences.

For example, Dominguez deals with a lot of bungalow-style homes of about 2,000 to 2,500 square feet, where additions or upgrades can increase the asking price by $100,000 to $150,000.

“When you add an addition or a coach house, it obviously brings value because it allows a lot more living space and maybe potentially an Airbnb opportunity or rental,” he says, adding that it’s important to “present the comps, see what’s actually selling in the area, and price comparably.”

If this sounds like a lot of work, it is. But HomeLight makes it easy to find a top real estate agent near you who can perform a thorough CMA and help you set a spot-on price from the start.

How do you price based on comps?

Say you had a CMA with about a dozen listings. The summary page might look something like:

  • Lowest price: $575,000
  • Average price: $621,318
  • Highest price: $690,000

If your house appears to be a bit better than average, and the market is heating up, perhaps you price around $650,000. Or maybe the photos clearly show that the comps are more updated than your inherited home, which hasn’t been refreshed in decades.

That might put you on the lower end of $575,000 to account for work needed on the home. But such a range would help you see that pricing anywhere above $690,000 is going to be way out of line, while going higher than the $620,000 average should be supported by your house having some competitive advantages.

“My emotional sellers have been in their homes for generations when their parents owned that property,” says Loretta Thomason, a top-selling real estate agent in Austin, Texas. “But, when new developments take over certain areas of town, and they see everybody else selling their homes, and the houses have been remodeled, sold for $400,000, they’re not taking into account that there’s $150,000 of work that’s been done.”

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