Greater Boston home exterior with spring landscaping — real estate selling timeline

How Long Does It Actually Take to Sell a House in Greater Boston?

April 24, 2026

If you're thinking about selling a home in Middlesex County or Greater Boston, the first question is almost always the same: how long is this going to take?

The honest answer depends on where you live, what your home looks like today, and how you price it. But there's a realistic range most sellers can plan around, and a short list of factors that genuinely control where you land inside it.

The real timeline, end to end

For a typical mid-market home in towns like Waltham, Watertown, Newton, or anywhere else in Middlesex County, plan on roughly two to three months from the day you decide to list to the day you hand over the keys.

That breaks down into three phases:

  • Prep (2–4 weeks): decluttering, minor repairs, staging, photography, and marketing prep. This is where good sellers either set themselves up to win or leave real money on the table.
  • Active on market (1–3 weeks to an accepted offer): most well-prepared, well-priced homes in Greater Boston are under agreement inside three weeks. Some go faster. Some take longer. Both are normal.
  • Under contract to close (30–45 days): inspection period, appraisal, buyer financing, attorney review, and closing day.

Luxury and highly unique homes sit on the active market longer by design. The buyer pool is smaller, the decision is slower, and the right buyer is worth waiting for. Budget an additional 30–90 days on the active phase for these properties.

What the Middlesex County numbers say right now

Recent Redfin data puts the average days on market for Middlesex County homes at around 29 days, compared to roughly 22 days a year earlier. The median sale price is sitting close to $737,000, a few points softer than last year.

Translation for sellers: the market is still moving, but it's not the frenzy of a couple years ago. Buyers have a bit more room to negotiate, and homes that are overpriced or underprepared are the ones sitting. Homes that are priced correctly, look great online, and show well are still getting competitive attention quickly.

Four factors that actually control your timeline

Most of what happens between listing day and closing day comes down to four levers. You control all of them.

1. Pricing accuracy

Nothing moves a timeline more than the first list price. Price it where the comps support, and you'll often see offers inside the first week or two. Price it 5–10% above where the data lands, and you'll typically sit for a month, then cut, then sell for less than you would have at the original number.

Buyers pay attention to how long a home has been on market. A home listed for 45 days carries a different psychological weight than the same home listed for 7 days — even if the price is identical.

2. Condition and presentation

The gap between a home that photographs well and one that doesn't is enormous in 2026. Buyers do almost all their initial filtering online. If your hero photo — typically the front of the house — doesn't stop the scroll, the rest of the listing rarely gets opened.

You don't need to renovate. What you need is: clean, decluttered, neutral, well-lit, and photographed by a professional with the right lens. Every dollar spent on prep and photography comes back several times over, and usually on a shorter timeline.

3. Season and local rhythm

Spring and early fall are the strongest seller windows in Greater Boston. Inventory is higher, but so is buyer demand. Summer and the end of the year slow down. If your timing is flexible, listing inside the Mother's Day-through-June window or the Labor Day-through-mid-October window usually produces faster offers and stronger bidding.

That said, the right home priced and prepped correctly will sell in any season. Waiting is rarely worth what you give up.

4. Marketing quality

The listing agent you work with controls this more than any other single factor after you sign. Photography, video, copy, the hero image you lead with online, the pre-list buzz, the broker outreach, and the way the first open house is run — all of that is either creating momentum in the first 72 hours or costing you momentum.

Ask any agent you're interviewing how they plan to market your specific home, not just homes in general. A specific, written plan is the tell.

What to expect on the buyer side

Once you accept an offer, the buyer's timeline drives the close. In Massachusetts, a typical path looks like:

  • Days 1–10: inspection, buyer decides whether to move forward
  • Days 10–21: purchase and sale agreement signed, deposit delivered, financing application in motion
  • Days 21–35: appraisal, loan underwriting, title work
  • Days 35–45: final walkthrough, clear-to-close, closing day

Most of this is paperwork and waiting. The biggest risks to the timeline are appraisal gaps and buyer financing surprises — both of which a good listing agent can see coming early and help navigate.

The biggest mistake sellers make

The most common mistake we see is starting the process three or four weeks before you want to list. The sellers who net the most start planning three to six months out — because the small-dollar, high-impact prep work happens at their pace rather than under deadline, and they can stage and photograph in the right season.

A better starting point

The Mike Hughes Team offers a complimentary Pre-Listing Staging Report for sellers in our service area. We walk through your home room by room and give you a written, prioritized plan for what to do before listing photos — with no pressure to list with us.

If you're planning to sell in Middlesex County or anywhere in Greater Boston, we'd be glad to help you think through the timeline for your specific home. Call or text us at 617-433-9225, or visit mikehughesteam.com.

Mike Hughes is a real estate broker with over 20 years of experience in residential real estate.

Mike Hughes

Mike Hughes is a real estate broker with over 20 years of experience in residential real estate.

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