Why the Agent Who Quotes the Highest Price Often Costs You the Most

Quick answer: When you interview listing agents, the one who quotes the highest price is often the one who costs you the most money. The tactic is common enough that it has an industry name — “buying the listing” — and it usually ends with your home sitting on the market, a price reduction, and a final sale at or below the number the honest agent gave you on day one.

How “buying the listing” works

You interview three agents. Two show you comparable sales and land in the same range. The third quotes a number $40,000 higher. It feels great to hear — so they get the listing.

The problem: buyers don’t pay for optimism. They compare your home to every other option in Clinton, Flemington, or Tewksbury, and they know the market as well as anyone — because they’re living in it every weekend.

What overpricing actually costs you

You waste your most valuable window

Your listing gets its most attention in the first two weeks. That’s when every serious buyer saved-search alert fires. Overpriced, you burn that window on showings that go nowhere — and that first impression never happens twice.

The price-reduction spiral

A few quiet weeks later comes the call: “The market is telling us something — we need a reduction.” Now your home carries two red flags buyers can see: a high days-on-market count and a price cut. Both invite lower offers and tougher negotiations.

You often net less than the honest number

I’ve watched Hunterdon County homes list high with another agent, sit, reduce, and close at — or below — the price I recommended in the original listing consultation. The seller didn’t get a higher price. They got a longer, more stressful sale and the same outcome.

How to protect yourself when hiring an agent

Ask every agent the same question: “Walk me through the comparable sales behind your number.” An honest price recommendation comes with addresses, sale dates, and adjustments you can follow. If one agent’s number is dramatically higher than the others, don’t ask yourself which agent is smartest — ask which sales support that number. Usually, none do.

Then ask what their plan is if the home doesn’t draw offers in the first three weeks. An agent who priced honestly has a marketing answer. An agent who bought the listing has a price-reduction schedule.

Where I stand

I’ll tell you the truth about your price even if it costs me the listing — and sometimes it does. But my sellers get their strongest offers while the listing is fresh, keep their negotiating leverage, and skip the reduction spiral. Combined with designer staging and preparation, honest pricing is how you actually maximize your net.

FAQ

Shouldn’t I just try a higher price first, since I can always reduce it?

“Testing the market” costs more than it sounds like it should. The buyers most likely to pay top dollar see your listing in week one; by the time you reduce, they’ve moved on, and the buyers who remain use your days-on-market against you.

How do I know if an agent’s price recommendation is honest?

Ask to see the comps — specific addresses, sale dates, and how the agent adjusted for differences. An honest recommendation is a walkthrough of evidence, not a single flattering number.

What will my Hunterdon County home actually sell for?

Call or text Amy Roth at 732-735-0535 for a free comparative market analysis. You’ll see every comp behind the number — the honest answer, even when it’s not the biggest one you’ll hear that week. More questions? Read the Hunterdon County real estate FAQ or how to vet any Hunterdon County agent.

Amy Roth is a Realtor with Haven Real Estate Collective, 19 Main Street, Clinton, NJ, and a Berkeley-trained interior designer with 20+ years of design experience.

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