A well-prepared home in the Philadelphia suburbs ready for listing

Selling a Home in Montgomery County: A 2026 Market Playbook

The Montgomery County real estate market in 2026 remains active — but selectively so. The homes that are performing at or above list price share a common set of characteristics. The homes sitting with repeated price reductions share a different, equally consistent set of mistakes.

This is a practical guide for sellers in Montgomery County. It covers what is actually driving outcomes in this market right now, and what you need to do before the first showing.


The State of the Market: What the Data Shows

Inventory remains historically low across most of Karen’s active Montgomery County markets. That supply constraint benefits sellers — but it does not eliminate the need for preparation or accurate pricing. Buyers in 2026 are better-informed than at any point in the last decade, and they have access to the same data you do.

The homes that go under agreement in the first week have three things in common: accurate pricing, excellent presentation, and a coordinated launch. The homes that linger have typically failed on at least one of these dimensions, often all three.

Absorption rates vary significantly by community. Blue Bell and Horsham continue to turn over at higher rates than the county average, driven by school-district demand and highway access. For Blue Bell sellers specifically, the pricing and preparation factors that determine whether a home moves in the first week are covered in detail in what makes a home sell quickly in Blue Bell. The Abington and Cheltenham corridors in eastern Montgomery County have seen increasing buyer activity from buyers priced out of the Main Line. Lansdale and North Wales at the northern end of the Route 309 corridor are attracting significant first-time and move-up buyer interest, in part because they represent the most accessible price entry into North Penn and Central Bucks school districts.


Pricing: The Single Most Important Decision

The price you set on day one determines whether your home sells in the first week or the eighth.

Sellers frequently ask whether they should “test the market” at a higher price and reduce if necessary. The data argues against this approach consistently. A home that sits for three weeks with no offers and then reduces price signals to buyers that something is wrong — with the home, the seller’s motivation, or both. That perception is difficult to reverse even when the reduced price is accurate.

The correct approach is to enter the market at a price that reflects current comparable sales, the specific condition and features of your home, and the current absorption rate in your immediate neighborhood. That analysis is what Karen prepares in the complimentary comparative market analysis (CMA) she provides before every listing engagement. It is built from closed sales in the last 90 days, active competition, and a careful read of buyer demand in your specific community — not from a number chosen to make you feel good about listing, and not from an algorithm that does not know your kitchen was renovated last year.

Price tier dynamics in Montgomery County:


Preparation: Where Sellers Lose Money

Most sellers underinvest in preparation relative to the return it generates. The following improvements consistently produce measurable value in Montgomery County markets.

What pays:

What does not pay:


The Launch: Why the First Week Determines Everything

The single most consequential period in a listing’s life is the first seven days on market. Buyer attention is highest, showing activity peaks, and motivated buyers move quickly. A well-executed launch is designed to concentrate that activity within the first weekend.

Karen’s listing launch process:

  1. Pre-listing preparation walk-through. Karen conducts a detailed walk-through before photography to identify what needs to change and what does not. This step prevents the all-too-common situation where a photographer arrives at a home that is not ready.

  2. Professional photography. Every listing Karen takes receives professional photography. The meaningful work happens before the photographer arrives.

  3. Listing day and time. Thursday late afternoon is Karen’s default for new listings. This positions the home to appear in Friday-morning Zillow alerts and gives buyers Friday and Saturday to schedule showings before the Sunday open house.

  4. Open house scheduling. A Sunday open house in the first week is standard. It concentrates foot traffic, creates a social proof signal (other buyers seeing a busy open house are more motivated), and provides a natural deadline for buyers who want to see the home before making a decision.

  5. Network distribution. As a partner at Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Fox & Roach — the largest BHHS affiliate in the country — every listing Karen takes is distributed to the full BHHS agent network on day one. This network includes thousands of buyers’ agents across the Philadelphia region who are actively searching for qualifying properties for their clients.


Communication During the Listing Period

Sellers hear directly from Karen. Every showing, every piece of buyer feedback, and every meaningful market shift is relayed promptly. The goal is informed decision-making at every stage of the process, without unwelcome surprises.

If a home is not performing — if showing traffic is lower than expected or feedback is consistently critical of a specific issue — Karen addresses it directly and provides a recommendation for how to respond. A price adjustment, a specific improvement, or a change in marketing approach may be warranted. The recommendation comes with data, not instinct.


Getting Started

The first step for any seller is a complimentary comparative market analysis for your specific property. Karen prepares these personally, typically within two business days of the request, with no obligation to list.

For sellers thinking through when to list, the guide to the best time to sell in the Philadelphia suburbs covers seasonal dynamics, school-district timing effects, and how to map preparation work to a target launch date.

To request a CMA for your Montgomery County home, visit the home valuation page or reach Karen directly at (215) 495-2914.

Questions about your market?

Karen provides a current read on any community she serves — for buyers evaluating options or sellers considering a listing.