Your Home Has Been on the Market for Weeks. Here's What to Do Next.
Every listing has a days on market count, and buyers and their agents use that number when deciding which homes to tour and how to structure an offer. When a home has been on the market for several weeks without an accepted offer, there are a few common reasons and a clear set of options for what to do next.
How Long Is Too Long on the Market?
Buyers and their agents pay attention to how long a listing has been active. A higher days on market count often leads buyers to assume there's an issue with the property, even when the home itself is in great condition. That perception alone can reduce showing traffic and invite lower offers.
What qualifies as "too long" varies significantly by market. In a fast-moving market, three weeks without an offer can stand out. In a slower one, 90 days might be well within the normal range. Local context is the only reliable measure here, and a knowledgeable agent will be able to tell you exactly where your listing stands relative to the pace of your area.
The longer a home stays on the market, the more negotiating power tends to shift toward buyers. That can result in lower offers or more aggressive contingency requests. Addressing the factors behind a slow listing sooner rather than later helps preserve your position in negotiations.
Why Your House Is Not Selling: Four Common Causes
Before making any changes, it's worth identifying what's actually contributing to the lack of activity. A price reduction, for example, won't help if the real issue is poor listing photos or limited showing availability. Four areas are worth examining.
Pricing. Is the home priced at or above the top of the comparable range? Even a small premium over similar properties can cause buyers to choose other options. Buyers compare listings side by side, and a home that appears overpriced relative to its neighbors will often get skipped before anyone schedules a tour.
Presentation. This includes photography, staging, and the listing description. Most buyers form their first impression online, and that impression determines whether they request a showing. If photos were taken before staging was complete, or the listing description doesn't lead with the home's strongest features, both are worth revisiting.
Accessibility. Restrictive showing windows and long notice requirements reduce the number of showings. If buyers or their agents are finding it difficult to schedule a visit, that's a straightforward fix that can have a significant impact on activity.
Market conditions. Sometimes conditions shift after a listing goes live. Inventory in your price range may have increased, or interest rates may have changed. A home that was competitively priced at launch can become less competitive if the surrounding market moves.
What to Do If Your Home Isn't Selling
Once you've identified the contributing factors, the response should match the diagnosis. These options are listed from lowest cost to most significant.
Refresh the presentation first. New photography, especially if the originals were shot before the home was fully prepared, can make a real difference in online traffic. Staging adjustments in key rooms like the primary bedroom, living room, and kitchen help buyers see the home's potential. An updated listing description with more specific language gives the listing a stronger first impression. Pairing these updates with a new round of social media and email marketing can also put the home in front of buyers who may not have seen the original launch.
Make a strategic price adjustment. If pricing is the issue, the adjustment needs to be large enough to matter. Dropping $5,000 on a $500,000 home often doesn't register with buyers or change which search brackets the listing appears in. The goal is to cross a pricing threshold (for example, from $510,000 to $499,000) so the home shows up in a new range of buyer searches. One well-timed adjustment tends to be more effective than a series of smaller reductions, which can signal a lack of direction rather than a strategic decision.
Pull the listing and relist. In some markets, taking a home off the market for 30 to 60 days and relisting it can reset the days on market count. This works best when paired with real changes: a new price, updated photos, revised staging.
Reassess the overall strategy. The pattern of activity can point to the underlying issue. A home that's getting showings but no offers typically has a pricing or presentation issue. A home that's not getting showings at all usually points to a marketing or pricing gap. If adjustments haven't changed the level of activity, it may be time to have a direct conversation about what comparable homes are actually selling for.
Common Mistakes When a Listing Goes Stale
A few common missteps are worth noting. Accepting a low offer purely because the listing has been active for a while can mean leaving money on the table if the underlying issues haven't been addressed first. Making multiple small, untargeted changes without diagnosing the root cause tends to delay results rather than produce them. And reducing communication with your agent at this stage works against you. Showing feedback, comparable sales data, and market activity updates all inform better decisions, and that information needs to be part of an ongoing conversation.
Talk to Your Agent About Why Your Home Is Sitting on the Market
The most productive next step is a direct conversation with your agent focused on the data. What are buyers saying in their showing feedback? What have comparable homes sold for in the past 30 days? What specific changes would make your home more competitive at its current price? The answers to those questions typically point to a clear path forward.
A good agent will walk you through the numbers, explain your options, and help you make an informed decision about what to adjust and when.