Know What the 2026 Buyer Is Filtering For
Before we talk strategy, it helps to understand what is driving buyer decisions right now. It is not just about bedrooms and bathrooms anymore. Today's buyer is thinking about what a home will cost them after they buy it.
Layout and Function Over Size
Estate's 2026 Design Trends Report, 86% of buyers say flexible layouts help them see past square footage. Dedicated home offices, walk-in pantries, multipurpose rooms — these features outweigh raw size. Nearly half of buyers in that same study said they will not buy a home that does not feel right the moment they walk in.³
Move-In Ready Is Increasingly Non-Negotiable
Home inspections are the number one reason deals fall apart today.⁴ In mid-2025, 15% of pending sales fell through, above the 12% historical norm, largely because financially stretched buyers will not absorb surprise repair costs.⁴
The tolerance for deferred maintenance has evaporated. Buyers are already stressed about affordability. When a buyer sees deferred maintenance, they do not see "potential." They see risk. In fact, 58% of agents report buyers want closing cost credits, and 20% recommend sellers reduce price based on inspection findings.⁵
Energy Efficiency as a Financial Filter
Energy efficiency is being evaluated as a financial hedge — against utility costs, against climate risk, against future insurability. According to Zillow's 2026 Home Trends Report, terms like "zero-energy ready" and "home battery system" appearing far more frequently.⁶ Sellers who understand this can position features like updated HVAC systems, new windows, or solar panels not as nice-to-haves, but as cost-saving assets.
The bottom line: sellers who understand this mindset can position their listing to meet it head-on.
Win the Screen Before You Win the Showing
The online listing is the first showing. By the time a buyer walks through the front door, they have already decided they are interested — or they have scrolled past.
The First Photo Is Everything
85% of homebuyers consider listing photos the most critical factor when evaluating a property online.⁷ Not the price. Not the description. The photo.
Listings with professional photography receive up to 61% more views and sell 32% faster.⁷ In a market where inventory is rising and buyers are choosier, professional photography is an enormous opportunity for sellers who take presentation seriously.
Go Beyond Standard Photography
Going above and beyond can garner even more attention for your home. Twilight photos used as the primary listing image average 76% more views.⁷ Homes with aerial or drone photos can often sell faster.⁸ Listings with video get 403% more inquiries.⁸
These are not small edges. In a market where buyers have more options, these are the differences that help a listing generate momentum.
3D Tours Are Becoming Expected
Virtual tours do two things at once. They filter out unqualified buyers before they waste anyone's time. And they give serious buyers the confidence to move faster when they do show up in person. In fact, listings with 3D virtual tours sell up to 31% faster and for up to 9% more. 9,10
The visual package for a listing is doing the work of an open house before anyone sets foot in the property. If the first photo does not stop the scroll, the square footage and the price will never get a chance to matter.
Remove Every Reason to Say "No"
In a slower market, uncertainty creates lower offers or no offers. Every unanswered question is a reason to negotiate down or walk away.
The smartest move? Answer the scary questions before they are asked.
That starts with a pre-listing inspection. For $300 to $800, a seller can identify and address issues on their own timeline and terms — before a buyer's inspector turns a minor finding into a deal-killing negotiation. NAR has been actively encouraging this approach, noting that pre-listing inspections allow sellers "the opportunity to address any repairs before the For Sale sign even goes up." 11
Beyond the inspection, consider providing the ages of major systems (HVAC, roof, water heater), a 12-month utility cost history, and documentation of any recent repairs. This is not about over-sharing. It is about removing the discount that buyers are mentally applying for risk and uncertainty.
Photos win hearts. Data wins brains. A winning listing needs both.
Price It Right or Pay the Price
Everything above — understanding the buyer, presenting beautifully, being transparent — leads here. Pricing. Overpriced listings do not just sit longer. They sell for less than if they had been priced correctly from the start.
The Overpricing Trap
39% of all listings nationwide had price reductions in 2025. The typical home sold for nearly 4% under its asking price during peak season — the steepest discount in six years.12
When a listing sits, days on market climb and buyers start to assume something is wrong — even when the only issue was the price. That stigma is real and hard to undo. Buyers begin to wonder what they are missing.
The First Two Weeks Are Everything
A listing's visibility and buyer interest peak immediately after launch. Pricing high to see what happens is dangerous — every week of inactivity makes the next correction less effective.
Pricing competitively from the start can attract multiple offers and often results in a higher final sale price.13 The goal is not to leave money on the table by underpricing. The goal is to price with precision, right at the point where serious buyers recognize value and act fast.
One Bold Move Beats Death by a Thousand Cuts
Multiple small reductions signal desperation and train buyers to wait for the next drop. A single strategic correction, aggressive enough to restart the clock, is almost always more effective.
Homes with repeated small reductions sell for significantly less as a percentage of original list than those with one well-timed adjustment.13 The market reads hesitation as weakness.
Pricing correctly from day one is not conservative. It is strategic. And it is one of the most valuable things a good agent brings to the table.
The New Definition of a Winning Listing
The 2026 winner is not the cheapest or the biggest. It is the most ready.
Prepared with the buyer's mindset in mind. Presented with scroll-stopping professional media. Supported by transparency that builds confidence. Priced with precision from day one.
That is the new bar. Meet it, and your listing competes. Miss it, and you are watching it sit.
If you are thinking about selling or if you have a listing that is not performing the way you expected — let's talk. The difference between a home that moves and one that sits often comes down to strategy, not the property itself.