Fernando
Elite Member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2016
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- Certified Residential Appraiser
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Bidding wars and lucky numbers: the secret home pricing strategies of San Francisco
Understanding the psychology behind the price pumping strategies.

Pricing a home in San Francisco is a mind game. Here’s how to win it
When Michelle Balog of Christie’s International thinks about pricing a home in San Francisco, she relies more on experience than on algorithms. “There is no 100% formula,” she said. “You have to be able to feel into the market.”Most San Francisco buyers, especially those bidding on homes priced at less than $2 million, have been confronted with the uber-popular strategy of underpricing. That means the home comes on the market at an artificially low price to bring in a bevy of bidders. An offer date is traditionally set for one or two weeks later, thereby creating a mini auction where the home is going, going, gone.
Sometimes buyers scarred by earlier bidding wars will make a pre-emptive offer, hoping to entice the seller to accept the deal before seeing any others.
Underpricing is far more common for single-family homes than for condos. In the latter case, uniformity between units translates to easily comparable sales, and more inventory means less competition. Even before the current downturn, the percentage of condos sold over asking price trailed single-family homes by double digits.
In the last year, 70% of houses in San Francisco went for more than the asking price, compared with 25% of condos, according to Compass data. Houses sold for an average of 11% more than asking, while condos sold for just under asking.
The underpricing strategy typically tops out at a list price of $5 million, where the percentage of sales over asking drops precipitously.
In neighborhoods where underpricing is the norm, even pricing a home at market value can throw off the game. Buyers will just assume the sellers want hundreds of thousands over that higher asking price and the home will sit on the market.