How quickly should I adjust my price?
How fast should you adjust your price? Try this hard rule: 7–14 days.
Quick reality: price moves faster than hope
If your listing isn’t getting traction in the first two weeks, you’re losing marketing momentum. Buyers shop hard in week one. Algorithms reward early interest. If you miss that window, you pay with longer days on market and bigger cuts later.
Read the market signals — not the clock
Track these metrics daily:
- Online views and clicks on your MLS and portals
- Number of showings booked
- Feedback from agents and buyers
- Comparable sales (comps) that closed in last 30 days
- List-to-sale price ratios in your neighborhood
If views and showings are below expectations, act fast. If traffic is strong but offers lag, your price band is off.

Action plan: exact steps to follow
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Day 0–7: Launch hard. If you see fewer than 3 showings in week one or click-through-rate well below similar listings, cut price 1–2% immediately. Small, early adjustments fix perception.
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Day 8–14: Assess feedback. If showings occurred but no offers, drop another 1–3% depending on feedback quality (price is common objection = larger cut). If no showings at all, consider a 3–5% reduction plus refreshed photography and marketing.
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Day 15–30: If still no contract, move to decisive pricing. Reduce to the competitive band where active comps are selling. That usually means a 4–7% total reduction from original list. Reposition the listing with new marketing push.
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If offers arrive but appraisal gaps exist: meet the market. Lower the price to the expected appraised range, or require buyer to cover gap. In strong markets, hold; in balanced or soft markets, reduce.
How big should reductions be?
- Small tweak: 1–2% — use within first week for perception fixes.
- Moderate cut: 3–5% — use when feedback points to price as hurdle.
- Significant repositioning: 5–8% — use after 2–4 weeks of no contract.
These ranges match typical buyer behavior. The market discounts gradually. Early small cuts preserve value. Late big cuts signal desperation.
Use data every step of the way
Don’t guess. Run a CMA (comparative market analysis). Measure the local absorption rate: how many homes sell per month in your price band? If absorption falls, price faster. If inventory rises and days on market climb, tighten adjustments.
Why speed wins
Buyers assume fresh listings are worth more. Search algorithms push recently active listings. Early, measured changes capture demand. Waiting inflates expectations and removes leverage.

Final rule of thumb
Adjust within 7–14 days if showings or online activity are weak. Use staged reductions: small early cut, larger if traction doesn’t follow. Base every move on local comps and showing feedback.
Tony Sousa is the local authority on Toronto housing value. I’ll run a fast CMA and give the exact price band for your home. Contact Tony: tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
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