A Price Cut Does Not Mean Every Seller Is Desperate and Here Is How Smart Buyers Use That Data

June 09, 20264 min read


A Price Cut Does Not Mean Every Seller Is Desperate and Here Is How Smart Buyers Use That Data

The Misread That Is Costing Buyers Good Deals Right Now

The data on seller price reductions is real and meaningful. A record number of sellers have been cutting their asking prices and that shift genuinely creates more negotiating room for buyers than has existed in years. Buyers who understand how to interpret that data correctly are capturing real deals on real properties right now.

But there is a consistent pattern of mistakes showing up among buyers who have heard the price reduction headlines and drawn the wrong conclusion from them. They assume that because sellers broadly are cutting prices every individual listing they encounter is open to a lowball offer. That assumption is not only inaccurate it is actively costing buyers opportunities and goodwill in negotiations that could have gone very differently with a better-informed approach.

What a Price Reduction Actually Means and What It Does Not

A price reduction is a signal. But like all signals it requires context to interpret accurately and acting on it without that context produces results that range from rejected offers to damaged negotiating relationships before any productive conversation can begin.

A home that launched significantly overpriced and has since taken a modest reduction may still be well above where the market will transact. The reduction moved it in the right direction without necessarily making it a value at the new number. A buyer who throws out a dramatic lowball on that property based purely on the fact that a reduction occurred is guessing rather than negotiating.

On the other side a home that is accurately priced from the start in a desirable neighborhood with strong recent sales activity can still attract multiple competitive offers in the current market. The broad price reduction data describes market trends and averages. It does not describe every individual property and conflating the two leads to offers that do not match the actual competitive situation of specific transactions.

Three Factors to Evaluate Before Writing Any Offer

As Tim Windhorst explains the buyers who are winning real deals right now are the ones who do the analysis before they write the offer rather than after they receive a rejection. Three specific data points reveal where actual leverage exists on any given property.

Days on market is the first and most revealing factor. A home that has been sitting for 60 or 90 days without generating an accepted contract exists in a fundamentally different negotiating environment than a fresh listing. Extended market time creates real seller motivation that manifests as flexibility on price, terms, and concessions that simply does not exist when a property is new to the market and generating active interest from multiple buyers.

The second factor is how the current asking price compares to recent comparable sales in the immediate area. A home priced above what similar properties have actually been selling for has a vulnerability that an informed and well-supported offer can address constructively. A home priced at or below recent comparables has limited room to move lower and the seller is fully aware of that position.

The third factor is whether the seller has already reduced the price at least once. A seller who has already demonstrated willingness to move off the original number has recalibrated their expectations at least partially. That recalibration creates a meaningfully different negotiating dynamic than a seller who has been holding firm despite extended market feedback.

When all three factors align together a home that has been sitting for an extended period with no offers, priced above recent comparables, and with at least one prior reduction already on record is exactly where genuine buyer leverage exists in the current market.

Why the Best Offer Is Not Always the Lowest Number

This is the insight that consistently separates buyers who win deals from those who keep losing them on negotiations that could have gone their way. The best offer is not automatically the one with the lowest purchase price. Sometimes it is the one with the cleanest terms.

A seller who has been dealing with market uncertainty for two months is not only looking for a lower number. They are looking for certainty that the transaction will actually close. A thoroughly reviewed pre-approval that gives them confidence in the buyer's financing. A reasonable and professional inspection process rather than an adversarial one designed to find reasons to renegotiate. A closing timeline that accommodates their situation. Terms that reduce the uncertainty that has been making their experience of selling difficult.

An offer that comes in at a reasonable price but delivers everything the seller needs from a reliable and clean transaction can outperform a lower number attached to financing uncertainty, difficult contingency terms, and an adversarial tone. Understanding what the seller actually needs from the transaction and structuring the offer to deliver it is what closes the gap between an accepted offer and a rejected one.

Tim Windhorst works with buyers to analyze specific properties accurately and build offers that are calibrated to the actual leverage available rather than to the general narrative of a shifting market. Follow along for more smart homebuying strategies and reach out to Tim Windhorst to find out how to approach your next offer the right way.


Sources

NAR.realtor Realtor.com MortgageNewsDaily.com Zillow.com Forbes.com

Back to Blog
company logo
The High Desert Group Logo

State Licenses

ID #MLO-11046

CA #CA-DFPI51277

OR #51277

MT #51277

AZ #LO-2005462

WA #MLO-51277

Social Media Links

Facebook

Instagram

YouTube

Contact Us

(509) 599-3095

1227 N Argonne Rd Ste B Spokane Valley, WA 99212

Copyright 2026. All rights reserved. Tim Windhorst NMLS #51277 | | Equal Housing Opportunity | Equal Housing Lender

Canopy Mortgage DBA HHL Group
Canopy Mortgage, LLC | 360 Technology Court, Suite 200 Lindon, UT 84042 | 877-426-5500 | NMLS Consumer Access #:1359687. All loans subject to credit and property approval. Our privacy policy is here and our terms of use are here. State License Data: Here