
5 Home Selling Tips Most Sellers (and Agents) Overlook
When selling a home, most sellers focus on price. While pricing is critical, how your home is positioned, described, and emotionally presented often determines whether buyers act quickly—or hesitate.
Below are five proven home-selling tips that many homeowners (and even agents) overlook, yet they can directly impact days on market and final sale price.
1. Always Proofread the MLS Remarks (Yes—Even If Your Agent Writes Them)
The MLS remarks section is usually written by the agent—but here’s the truth:
They didn’t live in your home. You did.
Remarks should:
Highlight how the home feels to live in
Tell a story buyers can visualize themselves stepping into
Emphasize lifestyle, flow, light, privacy, and upgrades
Buyers purchase emotionally first, then justify logically later. If the remarks read like a checklist instead of a story, you’re leaving money on the table.
Seller tip: Read the remarks out loud. If you can’t imagine living there, neither can the buyer.

2. Avoid Language That Signals Desperation or Discounting
Certain words may seem harmless—but data shows they can actually hurt your sale.
Avoid phrases like:
“Motivated seller”
“Good buy” or “Great buy”
“Vacant”
Why?
These terms often signal urgency or weakness, which leads buyers to:
Expect price reductions
Push harder in negotiations
Delay offers altogether
A strong listing should communicate confidence, value, and demand—not pressure.
3. Choose Words That Frame Opportunity—Not Problems
Language matters more than most people realize.
Examples:
❌ “Fixer” → ✔ “Needs some TLC”
❌ “Repairs needed” → ✔ “Opportunity to update”
❌ “Outdated” → ✔ “Original charm” or “Ready for personalization”
Buyers don’t want to feel like they’re buying a problem—they want to feel like they’re buying potential.
4. Don’t State the Obvious (It Can Backfire)
One of the most common listing mistakes is stating things buyers already know—or can clearly see.
Examples to avoid:
“Good location”
“Close to shopping”
“Nice neighborhood”
Why this hurts:
Buyers assume location is already baked into the price
It raises subconscious questions: Why are they pointing this out?
It wastes valuable remark space that could be used for emotional triggers
Instead, focus on what makes the location special to live in, not what’s obvious on a map.
5. Sell the Lifestyle, Not Just the Structure
Homes don’t sell because of square footage alone—they sell because buyers imagine their life inside them.
Strong listings highlight:
Morning light in the kitchen
Indoor-outdoor flow
Quiet evenings or entertaining space
How the home lives day-to-day
When done correctly, buyers don’t compare your home as easily—they feel it.
That’s how you create urgency without discounting.

Final Thought: Marketing Matters as Much as Price
Pricing gets buyers in the door—but presentation gets offers.
The biggest mistake sellers make isn’t overpricing—it’s undervaluing professional marketing strategy and buyer psychology.
At San Diego 1 Percent Listing, we focus on:
Strategic language
Buyer behavior
Emotional positioning
Maximum exposure—without overpaying commissions
Because selling smarter doesn’t mean selling cheaper.
