Spring 2026 Seller's Guide — Mike Hughes Team Greater Boston

Spring 2026 Seller's Guide: Navigating the Greater Boston Market

May 26, 2026

Mike Hughes Team  |  Spring 2026

Spring 2026 Seller's Guide:
Navigating the Greater Boston Market

Everything you need to know to sell your home this spring — from reading the market to pricing right, preparing your home, and making the most of your equity.

Should You Sell Your House This Spring?

If you've been wondering whether this is the right window to list, here's your honest read on where things stand. Three questions sellers ask me most often right now:

Is there real demand for homes right now?

Yes. The average home for sale nationally is still receiving 2.2 offers according to NAR's March 2026 data. In Greater Boston, supply remains well below the 6-month balanced-market threshold in most counties, which means buyers are competing — not browsing. Homes priced correctly are not sitting.

Is it worth selling now, or should I wait?

The market data favors moving now. National home prices are up 1.7% year over year as of February 2026 (FHFA), and Greater Boston consistently outperforms the national average. Forecasters at Fannie Mae project 14.8% cumulative appreciation nationally through 2030. Waiting rarely produces a meaningfully better sale price — and the spring window of peak buyer traffic does not last indefinitely.

Are home prices going down?

No. There is no credible forecast for price declines in the Greater Boston market. Values continue to appreciate — modestly at the national level (1.7% YoY per FHFA) and more strongly in our local market. If anything, sellers who wait may find themselves competing against slightly more inventory as the year progresses.

Bottom line: demand is real, prices are stable to rising, and the spring window is your strongest annual opportunity to maximize your sale price and minimize time on market.

Greater Boston real estate — Mike Hughes Team

Why Do You Want To Move?

Behind almost every home sale is a life reason. The decision to sell isn't always purely financial — and it shouldn't be. Here are the most common motivations sellers bring to me, and why the market conditions this spring support each one:

  • Relocation. A job change, family move, or lifestyle shift is one of the most common reasons sellers list. Spring is the optimal timing — you capture peak buyer demand while family transitions align with the school calendar.
  • Upgrading. You've outgrown your current home and are ready for more space, a better neighborhood, or a different property type. Spring buyer competition works in your favor on the sale side and gives you motivated sellers on the purchase side.
  • Downsizing. The kids are gone, the house is too much to maintain, or you're ready to free up equity for the next chapter. With average homeowner equity at approximately $295,000 (CoreLogic, Q4 2025), most long-term owners have significant wealth to unlock.
  • Change in family situation. Divorce, the death of a spouse, a new relationship, or the addition of family members — life changes drive real estate decisions regardless of market conditions. A spring sale gets you to your next situation faster.
  • Health or accessibility needs. Single-level living, proximity to medical care, or moving closer to family are real and time-sensitive motivations. The right time to sell is when your needs change, not when rates hit a particular number.

"Deciding whether it's the right time to sell your home is a very personal decision. There are many factors to consider, including your family's needs, your financial goals, the local housing market and more."

Bankrate

2 Reasons Why Lower Mortgage Rates Are Good for Sellers

The 30-year fixed rate has pulled back to approximately 6.51% as of May 2026 (Freddie Mac) — the most favorable spring rate in three years. This is not just good news for buyers. Here is why it helps you as a seller:

01

The lock-in effect is easing

Homeowners who refinanced at 2-3% in 2020-2021 have been hesitant to sell because moving meant accepting today's higher rates on their next mortgage. As rates have gradually come down, the psychological barrier to selling is lower. More sellers are coming to market — and that means more buyers are chasing your listing, not just the handful of alternatives they had six months ago.

02

More buyers can qualify for your home

Each point drop in the mortgage rate meaningfully expands the pool of buyers who can qualify for a loan at your price point. At 6.51%, there are hundreds of thousands more qualified buyers nationally than there were at 7.5% or 8%. A larger buyer pool means more competition for your home — which directly supports your final sale price.

How Interest Rates Affect Your Buyer's Purchasing Power

When you set a listing price, you're also setting the bar for which buyers can qualify. Interest rates directly determine how large a loan a buyer can afford — which determines how many people can realistically make an offer on your home. With rates currently around 6.5%, here's what different loan amounts cost a buyer each month in principal and interest:

Loan Amount At 7.5% At 7.0% At 6.5% (Today) At 6.0% At 5.5%
$400,000 $2,797 $2,661 $2,528 $2,398 $2,271
$500,000 $3,496 $3,327 $3,160 $2,998 $2,839
$600,000 $4,195 $3,992 $3,792 $3,597 $3,407
$700,000 $4,895 $4,657 $4,424 $4,197 $3,975
$800,000 $5,594 $5,322 $5,056 $4,796 $4,543

Estimated principal and interest only. Taxes, insurance, and HOA fees are additional. Source: Freddie Mac, May 2026 (6.51% current rate).

Every half-point drop in rates reduces a buyer's monthly payment by roughly $130 to $260 depending on loan size. That expanded affordability directly grows your pool of qualified buyers. More qualified buyers competing for your home means stronger offers, faster timelines, and less negotiating room for the other side. Pricing your home in alignment with what today's buyers can actually carry is one of the most powerful levers in your strategy — and it's something I help every seller calibrate before they list.

Why It's Still a Great Time To Sell Your House

Some sellers hear "inventory is rising" and worry the advantage has shifted. Here is the full picture:

Homes priced right are still moving fast

The national median days on market for sold listings remains well below historical norms. Homes that are priced accurately from Day 1 are not sitting — they are generating showings within the first week and offers within the first two weeks in most Greater Boston markets.

Sellers still receive multiple offers in most markets

The average home nationally received 2.2 offers as of March 2026 (NAR). In Greater Boston, where supply remains tighter than the national average, that number is consistent with local experience. If you're priced correctly, you are not choosing between one offer and no offers — you are choosing between offers.

2.2
Average number of offers per home sold, Spring 2026 National Association of REALTORS | March 2026

Inventory is still below the 6-month threshold nationally

Total months' supply nationally stands at 4.4 months (NAR). Below 6 months is defined as a seller's market. In Greater Boston counties, supply is even tighter — between 1.8 and 3.0 months depending on the county (see the county market review below). You are still selling in a market that structurally favors sellers.

4.4
Months of housing supply nationally — still a seller's market National Association of REALTORS | Spring 2026 | Below 6 months = seller's market

Greater Boston County Market Review

Single-family homes only · 3-month data through May 2026 · Updated monthly · Source: MLS PIN Area Market Survey

This is the market your buyers are navigating. Low inventory across three of four counties means demand is outpacing supply — a structural advantage for sellers who list now.

Middlesex County
1,002
Active
1,620
Pending
1,606
Closed
$1.20M
Avg Price
1,002
1,620
1,606
ActivePendingClosed
38 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 1.87Strong Seller's Market
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Norfolk County
496
Active
874
Pending
820
Closed
$1.20M
Avg Price
496
874
820
ActivePendingClosed
40 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 1.81Strong Seller's Market
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Suffolk County
195
Active
205
Pending
195
Closed
$1.16M
Avg Price
195
205
195
ActivePendingClosed
47 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 3.0Balanced Market
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Essex County
488
Active
725
Pending
757
Closed
$907K
Avg Price
488
725
757
ActivePendingClosed
39 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 1.93Strong Seller's Market
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
All stats above are for single-family homes only. Area Market Survey reports can be run for any specific community, neighborhood, or property type, including condos and multi-family. If you want to see how the market looks specifically in your town or for your property type, I can pull a custom snapshot. Just ask.

Source: MLS PIN Area Market Survey (AMS), single-family homes, 3-month data through May 2026. Months of Supply = Active Listings ÷ (Closings ÷ 3 months). SP:LP: Middlesex 103% · Norfolk 103% · Suffolk 100% · Essex 102%.

Your Home Equity Can Be a Game Changer When You Sell

Before you can make your next move, it helps to understand what you're working with. For most Greater Boston homeowners, the answer is: more than you think.

43.3%
Of all mortgaged residential properties are equity-rich ATTOM Q1 2026 | Loan balance = 50% or less of estimated market value

The average homeowner with a mortgage carries approximately $295,000 in equity as of Q4 2025 (CoreLogic). In Greater Boston — where average sale prices range from $907K in Essex County to $1.20M in Middlesex and Norfolk Counties — long-term owners are sitting on substantially more.

That equity is not just a number. It is:

  • Your down payment on the next home
  • A payoff of your remaining mortgage at closing
  • The capital to fund a retirement relocation, a second property, or any major life transition
  • Generational wealth that can be passed to your family

"You may have more equity in your home than you realize — and that equity can fuel your next chapter, whether you're upgrading, downsizing, or moving across the country."

CoreLogic Homeowner Equity Insights Report, Q4 2025

Before you list, we can review what your home is likely worth in today's market and what your net proceeds would look like at various price points. That number often changes how sellers think about their next step.

A Checklist for Selling Your House

Spring buyers are active, but they are also selective. The homes that generate the most activity and the strongest offers are prepared homes. Here is what that preparation looks like across three areas:

Make It Inviting
  • Declutter every room — less is more
  • Depersonalize: remove family photos and personal collections
  • Deep clean from top to bottom
  • Neutral decor to let buyers project their own vision
  • Fresh flowers or plants in key rooms
  • Light and bright: open blinds, replace dim bulbs
Show It's Cared For
  • Address any visible deferred maintenance
  • Touch up interior paint (neutral tones)
  • Fix dripping faucets, squeaky doors, sticking drawers
  • Clean or replace HVAC filters
  • Service the furnace if it hasn't been recently
  • Clean grout lines, caulk showers and tubs
Boost Curb Appeal
  • Fresh mulch in beds, trim shrubs and trees
  • Power wash driveway, walkways, and siding
  • Repaint or replace the front door if needed
  • Update exterior hardware (knocker, mailbox, numbers)
  • Clean gutters and downspouts
  • Plant seasonal flowers at the entry

You don't have to do everything on this list. But the homes that sell fastest and for the most money look like they've been loved. Buyers can tell the difference between a home someone cared for and one that was just cleaned for showings.

Get a Custom Staging Report — At No Cost. Before you list, let's walk through your home together. I'll put together a personalized staging report that tells you exactly what to address, what to skip, and how to present each room for maximum buyer appeal. It's one of the highest-return steps you can take before going to market — and it costs you nothing. Reach out and we'll get it on the calendar.

2 Must-Do's When Selling Your House This Spring

  1. Keep your emotions in check. You're not selling your home — you're selling an asset. The memories you made there are yours to keep. But when a buyer submits an offer that feels low, or requests repairs during the inspection, the sellers who respond with data instead of emotion are the ones who close. Your job during the sale is to think like a business owner, not a homeowner. That's exactly what your agent is there to help you do.
  2. Stage it so buyers can see themselves there. Buyers make emotional decisions. They are not evaluating square footage and mechanical systems in isolation — they are imagining their lives in the space. A staged home helps buyers picture where their furniture goes, how Sunday mornings feel in that kitchen, and whether their family fits in the backyard. That emotional connection is what drives offers. Homes that feel lived-in but not personalized sell faster and for more.

Why Working with a Real Estate Agent May Beat Going Solo

Every spring, some sellers consider listing without an agent to save the commission. Here is what the data and the experience of those transactions actually looks like:

Pricing a home is harder than it looks

Pricing is not about what you paid, what you've put into it, or what your neighbor got six months ago. It requires real-time comparable sales analysis, an understanding of active competition, and knowledge of what buyers in your price range are actually responding to right now. A mispriced home — high or low — costs you money.

Massachusetts disclosure requirements are substantial

MA requires specific disclosures and documentation in any residential sale. Missing or incorrect paperwork can delay or derail a closing and expose sellers to legal liability. Your agent ensures the transaction is documented correctly from day one.

Buyers' agents negotiate against FSBO sellers routinely

When a buyer is represented by an experienced agent and you are not, the negotiation is not between two equals. The buyer's agent knows what levers to pull on price, contingencies, and closing terms. FSBO sellers typically give back more in concessions than they save in commission.

FSBO homes typically sell for less

According to NAR's 2024 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, the median FSBO sale price was $380,000 — compared to $435,000 for agent-assisted sales. The commission savings rarely offset the difference in net proceeds. In the Greater Boston price range, the gap can be substantial.

Key Reasons To Hire a Real Estate Agent When You Sell

In a market this competitive, the difference between a good sale and a great one is almost always the quality of the representation. Here is what a skilled seller's agent brings to the table:

Industry Experience

Your agent knows how to handle inspection negotiations, buyer cold feet, appraisal gaps, and closing-day surprises. This is not their first transaction. It's your most important one.

Expert Pricing

Accurate pricing is the single highest-leverage decision in a home sale. Your agent analyzes recent closed comps, active competition, and current buyer behavior to land at a number that maximizes both offers and final price.

Contracts and Disclosures

Purchase and sale agreements, lead paint disclosures, septic certifications, and other MA-specific paperwork — your agent ensures nothing is missed and the timeline is protected.

Marketing and MLS Exposure

Professional photos, MLS listing, syndication to Zillow/Redfin/Realtor.com, social media promotion, and agent network outreach. Your home gets maximum exposure to qualified buyers.

Skilled Negotiation

When multiple offers arrive, your agent knows how to structure the response to maximize your net. When a single offer comes in under asking, they know whether to counter, when to hold, and how to read the buyer's situation.

Net Proceeds Focus

The goal is not just a sale — it's the right sale. Your agent keeps their eye on your bottom line through every stage: pricing, offer selection, inspection negotiations, and final closing credits.

In Massachusetts, seller representation is what protects your interests from the day you sign the listing agreement to the day you hand over the keys. It is not a service you want to go without in a transaction this size.

Ready to Talk About Selling This Spring?

Whether you want to know what your home is worth, understand what preparation makes sense, or you're ready to set a list date, I'm here. A conversation is always the right first step.

Mike Hughes

Mike Hughes

Broker Associate  |  Mike Hughes Team  |  eXp Realty

617-433-9225
[email protected]
mikehughesteam.com
Send Me a Message Call 617-433-9225
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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