Category: Seller Tips | Reading Time: ~5 min
Selling a home is not as simple as putting a sign in the yard and waiting for the offers to roll in. Most sellers only do it a handful of times in their life — which means the learning curve can be costly if you're not prepared. The good news is that the most common seller mistakes are entirely avoidable once you know what to watch for.
Here are the seven I see most often, and what to do instead.
Mistake #1: Pricing Based on Emotion Instead of the Market
Your home means something to you. The years you spent there, the improvements you made, the memories you built — all of it has real value to you. But buyers aren't paying for your memories. They're paying based on what comparable homes in your neighbourhood have actually sold for.
Overpricing is the single most damaging thing a seller can do. It kills the momentum of your early days on market, draws the wrong comparisons, and often results in price reductions that leave you worse off than if you'd priced it right to begin with.
Trust the data. Price for the market you're in, not the one you wish you were in.
Mistake #2: Listing Before the Home Is Ready
In an ideal world, you list when the market is hot. But listing before your home is properly prepared because you don't want to "miss the market" usually backfires. First impressions in real estate are formed fast — and they stick.
A home that hits the market before repairs are done, before it's properly staged, before professional photos are taken — that home is at a disadvantage from day one. Give yourself the runway to do it right.
Mistake #3: Being Home During Showings
This one comes up more than you'd expect. Sellers who stay home during showings — even with the best intentions — create a fundamentally different experience for buyers.
Buyers cannot relax, explore, or have honest conversations with their realtor when the seller is present. They rush. They feel like they're intruding. And they leave without getting the emotional connection to the home that often drives an offer.
Vacate for every showing, take the pets with you, and let buyers fall in love without an audience.
Mistake #4: Taking Offers Personally
Negotiation is a normal, expected part of the selling process — and yet it can feel deeply personal when someone low-balls your home or comes back with a list of repair requests after the inspection.
Here's a reframe that helps: a buyer who submits a low offer is still a buyer who walked into your home and saw enough potential to put something on paper. That's not an insult — it's an opening.
The goal is to get to the best possible result, not to win on principle. Stay objective, lean on your realtor's guidance, and keep your eye on the outcome you actually want.
Mistake #5: Neglecting the Outside
Curb appeal is the original first impression — and it matters more than most sellers give it credit for. Buyers form an opinion about a home before they even walk through the door.
Peeling paint on the front door, an unkempt lawn, a cracked pathway, dead plants — these things signal neglect before a buyer has seen a single room inside. Conversely, a well-maintained exterior, fresh front door, and tidy landscaping invite buyers in with confidence.
Before your listing goes live, walk out to the street and look at your home the way a buyer driving past for the first time would. Then act accordingly.
Mistake #6: Skimping on Marketing
Not all listing exposure is equal. Some sellers focus only on list price and expect the market to do the rest. But the quality and reach of your marketing directly impacts how many buyers see your home — and how many of those buyers get excited enough to book a showing.
Your marketing should include, at minimum: professional photography, a compelling listing description, broad MLS exposure, and a strong social media presence. In higher-price ranges or unique properties, video tours, drone photography, and targeted digital advertising can make a meaningful difference.
Ask your agent specifically what their marketing plan looks like before you sign a listing agreement. It's a fair question and a good one.
Mistake #7: Choosing an Agent Based on Commission Alone
I'll be straightforward here: commission matters, and it's completely reasonable to factor it into your decision. But choosing your listing agent solely based on who charges the least is a bit like choosing a surgeon based on who offers the best discount.
The agent who negotiates aggressively on their own commission may not be the same agent who negotiates aggressively on your behalf when the stakes are highest. What matters is the full picture: their track record, their market knowledge, their marketing approach, their communication style, and the results they get for their clients.
The right agent costs less than the wrong one — every single time.
The bottom line: Selling your home well isn't about luck. It's about preparation, strategic pricing, smart marketing, and having the right person in your corner. Get those pieces right, and the rest tends to follow.
Ready to talk about selling? I'm here for it. — Cassie Schellenberg, Personal Real Estate Corporation | Helping sellers get the best possible result with the least possible stress.
