Real Estate Mythbusters: “Spring Is the Only Time to Sell” — Debunking the Market-Timing Obsession


The Spring Real Estate Market Myth

Every year, right around Valentine’s Day, someone says it: “We’ll wait until spring to list — that’s when everyone buys.”

It sounds logical. The grass is greener, flowers bloom, and families want to move after the school year.
But in reality, this well-worn belief doesn’t hold up in the St. Louis market.
Spring might be busy, but it’s not the only season that sells homes — and in many cases,
it’s not even the best one.

The Hype

For decades, national media and marketing campaigns have painted spring as the holy grail of home-selling.
It’s easy to see why: curb appeal peaks, buyers feel energized, and listings flood the market.

But that surge is a double-edged sword. When everyone lists at once, inventory balloons — and your home
competes with dozens of others. The result? Buyers have more choices, sellers have less leverage,
and “perfect timing” can start to look pretty average.

The Reality

In St. Louis, housing activity runs on local rhythms, not the national script.

Data from MARIS (Mid-America Regional Information Systems) shows that homes listed
in late summer or early fall often sell faster and closer to asking price than spring listings.
Why? Less competition, more serious buyers, and fewer “let’s-just-see” showings.

Winter can also surprise sellers — especially in markets like Kirkwood, Webster, and Maplewood where
low inventory creates pent-up demand. Motivated buyers are still out there, scrolling listings in
December with hot cocoa in hand. If your house shines online, season matters far less than presentation
and pricing.

And here’s something even seasoned homeowners forget: relocation moves, job changes, downsizing,
and new construction timelines happen year-round. The market never really “closes.”

Local Insight

In neighborhoods like Glendale, Crestwood, and St. Charles County,
well-priced homes have been known to spark bidding wars in February — and sit quietly in April
when the crowd gets noisy. I’ve seen sellers who waited for “spring magic” end up chasing price
reductions while their neighbor’s February listing closed with multiple offers.

The Takeaway

Timing helps, but strategy wins. The best time to sell is when your home looks
its best, inventory in your area is light, and your personal timeline aligns — not when the
calendar says tulips should bloom.

If your home is photo-ready in January, list in January. If it takes until June, great.
What matters most is preparation, pricing, and positioning — not superstition.

Thinking about Selling?

Let’s build your custom strategy around your goals — not a myth about the calendar. I’ll analyze your neighborhood’s seasonal trends, study buyer activity, and help you decide when your home will make the biggest splash (and profit).

Karen Moeller, REALTOR®
MORE, REALTORS®
📞 314-960-1951 c    314-678-7866 o
📧 Karen.Moeller@STLRE.com
🌐 STLKaren.com

About the Author:
Karen Moeller is a St. Louis–based REALTOR® with MORE, REALTORS®, known for her blend of insight, humor, and heart.
A Kirkwood local, data nerd and design enthusiast, she helps buyers and sellers make smart, confident moves across the metro area—always with a touch of humor and humanity.


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