Courtesy of Dawn Thomas
The Dawn Thomas Team is experts in Luxury Real Estate in Silicon Valley and one of our specialty areas is Menlo Park. We have written about the Real Estate market and the decline in inventory and the drop in the days that homes stay on the market. Last year we wrote imploring people thinking about selling their homes to do so; luckily in the beginning of 2013 the Real Estate Market here in the Silicon Valley and Menlo Park, particularly, has stayed the same (on the incline). If you?re thinking about selling your home contact the Dawn Thomas Team and look at these statistics of what?s been going on in the Menlo Park Real Estate Market in terms of Sold home price averages and days they?ve stayed on the market!
When analyzing the statistics for Menlo Park we chose to break down the average home sale price between 2011-2012 and compared that to the same parameters in 2010. We also did the same thing with the Days on Market.
Average Sold home prices in Menlo Park 2011-2012 rose 5% while Days on Market went down 31%.
So what do the numbers above mean? During and soon after the housing calamity that started in 2007, but culminated in 2010, home prices were higher and the days that the homes were offered on the market? until they sold. In the last 2 years the days on market has gone down 31% which is great for Sellers as the longer a home stays on a market the harder it gets to sell. We?ve also seen that this low inventory has been hard on buyers, especially first time buyers, as the competition for these homes are very fierce. The low inventory, struggles for buyers and home values coming back up combined with the location?Menlo Park?makes it a great climate for Sellers.
While a 5% average sold home price increase doesn?t seem like much, it is a step in the right direction considering where we were at the complete bottom of the housing crisis in 2010. But shouldn?t the average sale of homes going up be a bad thing? Not for Sellers or Buyers actually; when the home prices bottomed out those that owed a significant amount of money on their homes found that while they hadn?t lost their homes (foreclosure) they were underwater on their loans (owed more than it was worth). With the average sales prices going up Sellers did/do get closer to the real value for their homes. It also makes it easier for Buyers to borrow; if the home was appraised and it came in?for example? at $5,000,000 yet a Buyer had offered $5,750,000 the Buyer would have to come up with the difference.
The numbers before the housing crisis were greatly bloated and while it hit many hard, even in Menlo Park, there has been quite a recovery in California but especially the Silicon Valley. Just recently we wrote about how San Francisco and the Bay Area is #2 out of the Top 10 healthiest housing markets in the country!
This blog is courtesy of The Dawn Thomas Team who is an award-winning Real Estate Agent team at Intero Real Estate Services in Los Altos 650-701-7822. We help nice people with selling and buying homes from Palo Alto to West San Jose!
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