Pricing a home for sale in London, Ontario is the single most consequential decision a seller makes — and it has to be right on day one. Price it correctly, and your home sells faster, attracts more qualified buyers, and nets more money. Price it too high and the consequences compound quickly: fewer showings, stale-listing stigma, price reductions that signal desperation, and a final sale price below what the home was worth when it first hit the market. In London's current market, where buyers are informed and have choices, there is no such thing as "leaving room to negotiate" — there is only priced correctly or priced wrong. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, has spent 24 years helping London sellers understand the difference before it costs them.
Deciding what to list your home for in London, Ontario is one of the most important financial decisions you'll make in the entire selling process. Get it right, and everything that follows goes more smoothly. Get it wrong and the consequences stack up faster than most sellers expect.
Here's what the data shows — on both sides.
What Happens When You Price It Right
Your home sells faster. The right price attracts the right buyers immediately — which means fewer weeks paying mortgage, property tax, insurance, and utilities on a home you're trying to leave. Every extra month on the market is money leaving your pocket before the sale even closes.
Fewer showings, less disruption. Preparing your home for showings — keeping it clean, arranging for children and pets, adjusting your daily routine — takes real energy. Accurate pricing shortens the time you live under those conditions. A well-priced home in London's current market is moving around the 24-day median. An overpriced one can sit for 60, 90, or more.
Better agents bring better buyers. When a home is priced correctly, buyer agents are motivated to show it — because they know their clients will take it seriously and they won't waste a showing. An overpriced home gets quietly deprioritized. Agents know before they arrive that their buyer won't be interested, so they don't go.
More qualified buyers come through the door. Pricing at market value attracts buyers who have been pre-approved at that level — buyers who can actually close. Overpricing attracts curiosity seekers and filters out people with the means to buy.
Higher inquiry conversion. When price isn't a deterrent, buyer inquiries turn into showings. Buyers today know the market. They've seen the comparables. If your price looks out of step, they don't call — they scroll to the next listing.
Stronger offers. Buyers are far less likely to make a low offer on a home that's priced correctly, because they know other buyers can see the same value. The fear of missing out is real — but it only works when the price earns it.
What Happens When You Price It Too High
Activity stops almost immediately. Buyers and their agents compare your home against everything else available in its price range. If yours offers less for the money, they move on. You don't get low offers — you get silence.
Your competition looks like a bargain. Every overpriced listing is a gift to the neighbours who priced correctly. Buyers who might have considered your home instead visit the one down the street that offers more for the same money — and often buy it.
You lose the buyers who could actually afford it. Serious, pre-approved buyers at your target price point expect a certain level of home for that number. If yours doesn't match what they can get elsewhere, they feel they're being asked to settle — and they don't.
Price reductions signal trouble. When a home drops its price after weeks on the market, buyers notice. They don't think "opportunity" — they think "what's wrong with it?" and "how low will they go?" The negotiating leverage you were trying to preserve by pricing high is exactly what you lose when the reduction hits.
Appraisal problems can kill the deal. Even if a buyer agrees to an above-market price, their lender's appraiser may not. If the appraisal comes in below the agreed purchase price, the lender won't fund the full mortgage — and the deal either falls apart or you reduce the price anyway, under far worse conditions than if you'd priced correctly on day one.
You net less money. This is the one that matters most. An overpriced home almost always sells for less than it would have if priced accurately from the start — and incurs extra costs for every week it sat. The "room to negotiate" strategy consistently produces a lower final number, not a higher one.
The One Decision That Drives Everything Else
Every other variable in your home sale — the marketing, the photography, the timing, the negotiation — depends on the price being right. A well-marketed, beautifully presented home at the wrong price still sits. A modestly presented home at the right price still moves.
If you're thinking about selling in London and you want a straight, data-backed read on what your home is actually worth in today's market — before you commit to a number — that's the conversation to have first.
Price it right before the sign goes up. Reach out for a private conversation about what your home is worth in today's London market — no pressure, no pitch.
For the complete selling framework: