What Goes Wrong Before the Property Even Reaches the Market
The most consequential mistake in residential property sales is not choosing the wrong marketing method or underinvesting in photography. It is pricing.
The opening weeks of a listing represent the property at its most valuable from a market attention standpoint. Buyers who have been searching for weeks respond immediately to new stock. They bring current knowledge of what comparable properties have achieved and what they are worth relative to alternatives. A property priced correctly in that window attracts competitive interest. A property priced incorrectly in that window gets inspected, assessed as poor value, and passed over.
The pattern that follows is familiar to anyone who has watched the market for long enough. The listing stagnates. The vendor becomes frustrated. The agent recommends a reduction. The reduction attracts buyers who have been waiting for exactly this moment - buyers who offer below the reduced price because they know the vendor is now motivated by the passage of time rather than the quality of the property.
The property is fine. The process is the problem.
Selecting an Agent When You Decide to Sell Your House - What the Interview Should Cover
Choosing an agent is one of the most consequential decisions in a property sale, and it is routinely made on the wrong basis. The agent who quotes the highest price is not necessarily the agent who will achieve the highest price.
Quoting high at the listing appointment is a well-documented strategy for winning listings. It works because vendors respond to the number they were hoping to hear. The market does not respond to the same number - it responds to comparable sales, buyer demand, and current stock levels. An experienced vendor will compare agents on their comparable sales evidence and their active buyer pool, not their opening estimate.
Useful questions to ask when interviewing an agent:
- What have you sold in the last 90 days within 500 metres of this property?
- How many buyers on your database are currently looking in this price range?
- What is your average days on market for properties at this price point?
- Can you show me the comparable sales you used to arrive at your price estimate?
Those four questions shift the conversation from impression management to evidence - which is where it needs to be.
Why the Launch Price Matters More Than Any Other Decision
There is a practical framework for arriving at a defensible launch price. It starts with comparable sales - properties with similar characteristics that have sold within the last 60 to 90 days in the same area. Those sales establish a reference range. The subject property is then positioned within that range based on its relative strengths and weaknesses.
According to REA Group 2024 Property Seeker Survey of more than 13,400 Australians, 55% of buyers want clarity on price before they will even consider inspecting a property - and of those, 76% report feeling more confident making an offer once the price point is clearly established. That is not a minor preference. It is a direct signal that transparent, evidence-based pricing produces more inspection activity and more confident buyer behaviour.
The comparable sales tell you what the market has paid. Buyer demand tells you what direction the market is moving. Used together, they produce a price position that reflects current conditions rather than historical averages or owner expectations.
How Buyers Assess a Property During an Inspection
Understanding what buyers are looking for during an inspection changes how a vendor prepares their property. The things that matter most to buyers are not always the things that matter most to the people who live there.
The comparison is immediate and concrete. A buyer who inspected a well-presented property the previous weekend arrives at the next inspection with that property in mind. If the current property compares unfavourably in presentation, condition, or layout, the offer either does not come or comes in below expectations.
Key presentation factors buyers consistently prioritise:
- Street appeal and first impression within the first 30 seconds
- Natural light and the sense of space in main living areas
- Kitchen and bathroom condition relative to comparable properties
- Evidence of deferred maintenance that signals larger hidden issues
- Outdoor space functionality and presentation
The Settlement Process When You Sell Your House - What to Expect
In practice, the post-offer period involves a sequence of steps that can each generate delays or complications if not managed actively. The buyer typically has a cooling-off period in which they can withdraw. They may have finance conditions that require lender approval. A building and pest inspection may be conducted. Each of these steps has implications for the sale that a vendor needs to understand before they arise.
The key steps between offer and settlement that vendors need to track:
- Cooling-off period - typically two business days in South Australia, during which the buyer can withdraw
- Finance approval - if the offer is subject to finance, lender confirmation is required within the agreed timeframe
- Building and pest inspection - results may prompt a renegotiation if significant issues are identified
- Form 1 disclosure - the vendor must provide this statutory document and the buyer has a right of rescission period after receiving it
- Settlement date - final transfer of title, release of deposit, and handover of keys
An offer accepted is not a sale completed. The difference is a sequence of steps requiring attention, communication, and occasionally further negotiation. Vendors who understand this manage the final stage more effectively than those who believe the hard part is over.
Sell My House - Questions Most Vendors Have Answered
How long does it take to sell a house
Method and market conditions drive timeframe more than most vendors expect. A correctly priced private treaty sale in an active market can move from listing to settlement in under 10 weeks. An overpriced listing in a soft market can extend that to six months or more.
Is it better for sellers to attend or avoid property inspections
The general recommendation from experienced agents is that vendors should not be present during open inspections. Buyers move through a property more freely, comment more openly, and spend more time when the owner is not present. Vendor presence tends to create an uncomfortable dynamic that shortens inspection times and inhibits the candid assessment buyers need to make a confident offer.
What are the typical selling costs for a residential property
Selling costs become predictable once itemised. Commission is negotiated at listing. Marketing is agreed in advance. Legal transfer costs are modest relative to the transaction value. The variable most vendors underestimate is pre-listing presentation - repairs, cleaning, and staging - which is not always included in what agents quote.
Is it better to sell before buying or buy before selling
In a fast-moving market with limited stock, some vendors choose to buy first and accept the bridging risk. In a slower market or with limited borrowing capacity, selling first and renting temporarily is the more conservative approach. The right sequence is determined by individual circumstances, not by a general rule.
Regional Property Perspective
Understanding how to sell your house effectively requires more than a general process framework - it requires knowledge of how the specific market you are selling in behaves, what buyers in that market are looking for, and what comparable sales in the last 90 days actually tell you about price. Gawler East Real Estate works with residential vendors across the Gawler District and northern Adelaide corridor to navigate the sale process from appraisal through to settlement, using local market knowledge to support each decision.