All throughout real estate history, we have had value differences due to location. Similar houses in the best locations got top dollar and the less desirable locations were worth less.
Except for the COVID era market.
During the pandemic, supply was so short and demand was so strong that pretty much the same house would sell for the same price regardless of things like what part of town it was in, what school district it was in, and even what condition the house was in.
This was especially true for the more affordable houses. Back then, a small 3 bedroom, 1 bath house without a garage was going for about $200k regardless of whether it was in a Grade A, Grade B or Grade C location. That was because the market was so tight that people didn’t have a choice in location. Buyers were shopping all over town, looking at any house in their price range. There were so many buyers doing this that location didn’t seem to matter much. It was about getting a house, not getting a house where you want it to be.
We’re not wearing masks. Rates aren’t 3%. That crazy market is in the past now.
Now that we are starting to see some houses staying on the market for more than a few hours, it’s back to location being important. As this happens, I think we will see the Grade A neighborhood prices remain stable. The Grade B and Grade C locations that recently had been getting the Grade A money…..well, they aren’t any longer. That is one reason we are seeing so many price reductions now. It just shows that the market is returning to normal. It isn’t crashing.
Back during the pandemic, I would have people ask me what a house was worth. I would tell them I can easily determine what it is worth, but the value and the sale price were not related for that brief time. I would tell my Buyers to view the sale price as paying what the house was worth plus a “Convenience Fee” for winning the house in multiple offers. Now that we aren’t seeing multiple offers on every single new listing, we are back to a house’s value and its sale price being the same.
