Estimate how many days your home will take to sell based on list price vs. comps, market supply, seasonal factors, and property condition scoring.
Days on Market (DOM) is one of the most watched metrics in real estate. It measures how many days a property sits listed before going under contract. For sellers, DOM directly impacts carrying costs, negotiation leverage, and final sale price. Homes that sell quickly typically sell closer to asking price, while extended DOM signals to buyers that the price may be negotiable.
This estimator uses five key factors to project your likely DOM: the ratio of your list price to comparable sales, local market supply (months of inventory), seasonal timing, property condition, and the base DOM for your market area. Each factor either accelerates or delays the expected selling timeline.
Understanding your likely DOM helps you plan financially. Each month on market costs mortgage payments, taxes, insurance, and utilities. It also helps set realistic expectations and determine when a price reduction might be warranted if the home isn't attracting offers within the expected window.
Knowing your estimated selling timeline helps with financial planning, moving logistics, and pricing strategy. If the estimator projects a long DOM, you can proactively adjust your price, staging, or marketing before listing rather than reacting after weeks of inactivity. Instant recalculation lets you compare scenarios side by side, so every buying, selling, or investment decision is grounded in solid financial analysis.
Price Factor = (List Price / Comp Avg) − 1.0 DOM Adjustment = Base DOM × (1 + Price Factor × 2.5 + Supply Factor + Season Factor + Condition Factor) Estimated DOM = max(7, adjusted DOM)
Result: 27 estimated days on market
With a base DOM of 30, listing at 2.5% above comps adds ~2 days, but strong spring seasonality (−5 days), good condition (−3 days), and a balanced 3-month supply keep the estimate around 27 days.
The five primary factors are price positioning, market conditions (supply), seasonal timing, property condition, and marketing quality. Of these, price is by far the most impactful — a well-priced home in poor condition will sell faster than an overpriced home in perfect condition.
Every month on market costs you in mortgage payments, property taxes, insurance, utilities, and lawn care. For a $400,000 home, carrying costs easily reach $2,500–4,000 per month. Extended DOM also signals to buyers that the home may be overpriced, leading to lower offers and tougher negotiations.
If your DOM exceeds the market average by 50%, it's usually time to reduce. A meaningful reduction (3–5%) creates a fresh wave of interest. Small reductions (1%) often go unnoticed by buyer search filters. Track your showing-to-offer ratio: if you're getting showings but no offers, price is likely the issue.
DOM measures the number of days between when a property is listed on the MLS and when it goes under contract (accepted offer). It's a key indicator of market demand and pricing accuracy. Lower DOM suggests strong demand or competitive pricing.
It varies by market, but in a balanced market, 30–60 days is typical. In a seller's market, homes may sell in under 14 days. In a buyer's market, 60–120+ days is common. Compare your DOM to the local average for context.
Pricing is the single biggest factor. Homes priced at or slightly below market value sell fastest. Each 1% above comp value can add 5–10 days to DOM. Significant overpricing (10%+) can result in the home going stale, where buyers assume something is wrong.
Months of supply indicates how long it would take to sell all current listings at the current sales pace. Under 4 months is a seller's market (faster sales), 4–6 months is balanced, and over 6 months is a buyer's market (slower sales). This metric directly impacts DOM.
Yes, significantly. Spring (March–May) typically has the shortest DOM due to families wanting to move before school starts, better weather for showings, and homes showing their best with green lawns and flowers. Winter typically has the longest DOM but can attract more serious buyers.
First, review listing photos and marketing quality. Then check showing feedback for common objections. If the issue is price, consider a meaningful reduction (3–5%) rather than small incremental cuts. Also evaluate whether staging, repairs, or a new agent strategy might help.