Summer in London, Ontario is a quieter real estate season — and that quiet creates real opportunity for both sellers and buyers who know how to use it. According to current LSTAR data, the market sits at 5.0 months of inventory with homes selling at 97.4% of asking in a median of 26 days. Serious buyers are still active. Serious sellers are still transacting. The difference between a summer sale that goes well and one that doesn't comes down to preparation, pricing, and whether you have a plan before you start — not after. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has helped London sellers and buyers navigate every season of this market for 24 years.
For Sellers: The Summer Reality
What's working in your favour.
Serious buyers don't take the summer off. The buyers who are actively searching in July and August are there because they need to be — a job transfer, a closing date on a home they've already sold, a family change that doesn't wait for September. That motivation matters. A focused pool of serious buyers is often more productive than a large pool of casual ones.
Pricing is also holding. According to LSTAR data, London's average sale price is $633,844, with homes selling at 97.4% of asking — a 2.6% negotiating gap that has been consistent. Detached homes in established neighbourhoods continue to hold their value relative to the rest of the province.
What you're working against.
With 5.0 months of inventory currently sitting on the market, buyers have choices. Your home isn't competing against a handful of listings — it's competing against everything available in your price range, right now, on the same screen a buyer is scrolling at 10 PM. That means coasting, testing the market, or hoping someone overlooks a flaw isn't a strategy. It's a way to sit.
Days on market matter more in summer. A home that doesn't get traction in its first two weeks goes stale faster when the buyer pool is smaller. The first week of a listing is still your highest-traffic window, and wasting it on a price that doesn't hold up against the comparables is expensive.
Seller game plan: Price with the market — not ahead of it. Fix visible flaws before the listing goes live. Insist on a launch that creates real demand in week one: professional photography, accurate listing details, direct outreach to buyer agents actively working with qualified clients in your price range. The goal is showings in the first seven days, not hope.
For the complete seller framework: How Selling Your Home Actually Works in London, Ontario →
For Buyers: The Summer Reality
What's working in your favour.
Higher inventory means more choice and less pressure. The frantic bidding-war conditions of a few years ago are not the current reality. With 5.0 months of inventory, you have time to look carefully, compare properly, and negotiate thoughtfully — without the fear that every home you consider will be gone by morning.
Fewer competing buyers in summer means the sellers who are genuinely motivated are more reachable. A well-structured offer on a home that's been sitting for 30-plus days carries real negotiating room. That's the opportunity this market offers a prepared buyer.
What you're working against.
More choice creates decision fatigue. Buyers who arrive without a clear picture of what they actually need — as opposed to what would be nice — end up shopping forever, missing the right home while waiting for a perfect one that doesn't exist. Having your financing confirmed, your priorities ranked, and your threshold price set before you start looking is what prevents this.
Rate movements also matter. Mortgage affordability still depends on the Bank of Canada's policy backdrop, and rate changes ripple through your carrying costs faster than most buyers expect. A rate hold or pre-approval removes that uncertainty before you're sitting across from a seller with a deadline on the offer.
Buyer game plan: Get fully pre-approved — not just pre-qualified — before you look at a single property. Lock in your rate hold where possible. Focus on the fundamentals that actually hold value: location, condition, layout, and light. When the right home appears, act with confidence rather than hesitation. The buyers who do best in this market are prepared to move decisively when it's right — not rushed, but ready.
For the complete buyer framework: How Buying a Home in London Ontario Actually Works
Should You Act This Summer?
The case for acting now.
A smaller pool of active buyers means less competition for sellers who show well. For buyers, motivated sellers with homes that have been sitting since spring are the most negotiable they'll be all year. Both conditions are real, and both expire when the fall market picks up in September.
The honest caution.
If you're selling to buy simultaneously — which most move-up and downsizing buyers are — the timing coordination matters more in a slower market. Homes can take longer to firm up, which affects bridge financing timelines and the sequencing of your two closings. Having that plan mapped out before you list or offer protects you from making rushed decisions under deadline pressure.
The Bottom Line
Summer isn't the best time to sell or buy in London — and it isn't the worst. It's a season with specific conditions that reward preparation and punish guesswork. The sellers who do well price correctly, prepare thoroughly, and launch with a real strategy. The buyers who do well arrive informed, financed, and clear on what they're looking for.
Whether you're thinking about selling this summer, buying, or navigating both at once — the conversation worth having is the one that maps out your specific plan before anything is listed or offered.
Ready to turn this summer into a move that actually works for you? Reach out for a private conversation — no pressure, no pitch.
