Should I relist if my home expired?
Relist or Walk Away? The Smart Play When Your Home Listing Expires
Is relisting an expired home the right move? Short answer: usually yes — if you change the game plan.
Why listings expire
Most listings don’t sell because of one of three failures: price, presentation, or promotion. The market won’t punish a great house that’s priced right, staged well, and marketed aggressively. It will, however ignore a good house that looks average, is overpriced, or is invisible online.
Direct, proven checklist before you relist
- Audit the old listing: compare to recent solds within 1 km and 30 days. If your price sat outside market comparables, you know why it expired.
- Fix the product: hire a pro stager, declutter, and get new high-resolution photos and a 3D walkthrough. Bad photos kill interest instantly.
- Reset the price with strategy: price to generate multiple offers inside the first 14 days. That often means pricing at or slightly below the top comparable — not a random number.
- Upgrade marketing: targeted social ads, email blasts to buyer agents, boosted MLS exposure, and a virtual tour. Track impressions and showings as KPIs.
- Improve access: make showings easy. More access = more offers.
- Consider an agent change if your previous agent didn’t hit KPIs (photos, ad spend, showings booked).
Timing: when to relist
- Immediate relist (0–14 days): if market comps haven’t changed and the fixes are simple (new photos, price adjustment, better marketing). Don’t wait — momentum matters.
- Short pause (2–4 weeks): if you need staging, repairs or a fresh visual campaign. Use the pause to create scarcity: “back on market” messaging can re-ignite interest.
- Seasonal timing (best in many markets): relist in spring/early summer for most suburban homes. If the local market is hot now, relist immediately regardless of season.
Pricing specifics that work
- Target list price to fall into the active buyer price bands in your market. That often moves a home from “above market” to “within search filters.”
- Use a small, strategic drop (2–5%) on day 10–14 if showings lag. Buyers react to movement.
- Offer limited-time incentives (closing credits, flexible closing) rather than cutting base price deeply.
Marketing tactics that convert
- Pro photos + 3D tour + floor plan = immediate trust.
- 7–10 day high-intensity launch: open house, targeted Facebook/Instagram ads, broker preview, email to agents.
- Track and adapt: if impressions are high but showings are low, it’s a presentation problem. If showings are high but no offers, it’s pricing.
Final call: relist with a plan
Relisting is almost always the right choice when you implement a better plan. Don’t relist to restart the same campaign. Relaunch with improved price strategy, pro presentation, and measurable marketing.
Need help relisting the right way? Work with a local expert who turns expired listings into sold signs. Contact Tony Sousa — tony@sousasells.ca | 416-477-2620 | https://www.sousasells.ca
Act now: fix the core issues, relist with a launch strategy, and force the market to pay attention.



















