Most homes that struggle to sell in London, Ontario have one or more of the same identifiable problems: condition, pricing, marketing, communication, or curb appeal. None of these are mysteries, and none of them are unsolvable — but they require an honest assessment before the sign goes up, not after the listing has been sitting for 60 days. Every home will sell. The question is at what price, in what timeframe, and whether the result reflects what it was actually worth. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has spent 24 years telling sellers the truth about what's standing between their home and a sale — before it costs them.
Many homeowners in London, Ontario worry they may have difficulty selling their home. Usually, they're right to wonder — and almost always, there's a specific, identifiable reason. Here are the most common ones, and what to do about each.
Older Home Without the Features Today's Buyers Expect
Older character homes have real appeal — roughly 20% of buyers actively seek them out for location, lot size, or architectural character. But many older homes also carry features the other 80% of buyers will quietly pass on: small bedrooms, no walk-in closet, no primary ensuite, a single-car garage. These issues can eliminate a listing from a buyer's consideration before they ever book a showing.
It's worth noting the flip side: sometimes a well-built character home with genuine features is easier to sell than a newer home built with contractor-grade materials that shows its shortcuts under close inspection.
The solution: identify which features of your home don't meet today's buyer expectations. Sometimes a targeted renovation makes sense. Sometimes the right approach is precise marketing to the specific buyer who values what your home actually offers. And sometimes the answer is to adjust the price to honestly reflect the gap rather than pretend it doesn't exist.
Visible Maintenance Issues
Many buyers walk away from homes that appear to need work — even when the work is minor. Flaking paint, a tired lawn, worn carpets, broken fixtures: individually small, collectively they send a signal that the home hasn't been cared for. Larger issues — awkward layout, outdated plumbing or electrical, deferred maintenance — can make selling genuinely difficult regardless of price.
The solution: don't bury your head in the sand. Walk through comparable homes listed in your price range and look at what you're competing with. Or work with a broker who will tell you the truth about what a buyer will see — not what you want to hear.
Price
Overpricing a property deters qualified buyers and leaves the listing sitting on the market, at which point every subsequent showing comes with the question already in the buyer's mind: "What's wrong with it?" For condos specifically, high monthly fees or pending special assessments compound the pricing challenge by directly affecting what a buyer can afford to carry each month.
The solution: price correctly the first time. For condos, consider whether offering a concession toward condo fees makes the monthly cost of ownership more competitive. A strategically priced home from day one almost always nets more than one that starts high, sits, and reduces.
All Homes Will Sell — On These Conditions
Every home will sell. It comes down to price, condition, the buyer's financial position, their comfort with the location, and occasionally third-party noise — fear-mongering from people who've read one too many doom-and-gloom headlines.
I tell every client the same thing: I have no control over the market. But I have complete control over understanding it, positioning your home correctly within it, and taking consistent, appropriate action until the result is achieved.
Poor Communication
Lack of communication is one of the most common — and most preventable — reasons a listing stalls. You and your realtor should not be operating like you're in the witness protection program.

The solution: weekly feedback between you and your broker, minimum. If the same issue keeps surfacing — whether it's a pricing objection, a condition concern, or something specific that buyers mention after every showing — address it. Letting the same problem repeat itself week after week without adjusting is how listings go from stale to expired.
Poor Marketing
If your home isn't getting showings, marketing is the problem. But here's the important qualifier: if the home is overpriced, in poor condition, or poorly located, no marketing can fix that. The outcome will be diddly-squat regardless of how good the photos are.
That said, when the other factors are right, marketing matters enormously. Cell phone pictures won't compete. Professional photography, video, and floor plans outshine the competition nine times out of ten — and reaching the right buyer means knowing who they are, where they search, and how they make decisions, not just blasting a listing at everyone.
The solution: accurate information, no embellishment, and marketing built around the specific buyer your home is actually right for.
Curb Appeal
You have ten seconds — sometimes less — to make a first impression. I've shown hundreds of homes where a buyer lost interest within the first minute of arriving at the property. Whatever happens inside is irrelevant if the outside doesn't invite them in.
For practical guidance on which improvements actually pay off before selling — and which ones quietly cost you money — I have a report that covers exactly that.
The Three Ps That Replace "Location, Location, Location"
That old real estate tagline has had its day. The three things that actually determine whether your home sells — and for how much — are Price, Product, and Promotion. You control the first two. A good broker delivers the third.
If you're thinking about selling in London and want an honest assessment of where your home stands on all three before you commit to anything, that's the conversation worth having first.
Want the honest read on what might be standing between your home and a sale? Reach out for a private conversation — no pressure, no pitch.
For the complete selling framework: