The Open House Myth: Why Most Homes Don’t Sell on Sunday Afternoons
Ask ten sellers how they plan to sell their home, and at least half will say, “We’ll do an open house — that’s how you get buyers in the door.”
It sounds logical. People walk in, fall in love, and write an offer before dessert. But here’s the truth: open houses rarely sell the house they’re hosted in.
The Hype
Open houses feel productive. There’s movement, conversation, cookies on the counter, and maybe a nosy neighbor or two peeking in. Sellers love the energy — it feels like marketing in motion.
The myth dates back to the pre-internet days when open houses were one of the only ways buyers could actually see what was on the market. But times — and buyer habits — have changed.
The Reality
In today’s market, most serious buyers have already viewed your listing online — in high resolution, from their couch, often days before the open house even happens. By the time they’re scheduling showings, they’re booking private appointments with their agent, not waiting for Sunday at 1 p.m.
That doesn’t mean open houses are useless — just misunderstood. They serve three legitimate purposes:
- Exposure and accessibility. They make your home easy to see for unrepresented buyers or curious neighbors who may spread the word.
- Feedback. They can help gauge how your home stacks up against current competition.
- Networking. They give agents a chance to meet potential clients — which helps the agent’s pipeline more than your sale price.
The reality is this: according to NAR research, less than 3 percent of homes nationally sell directly from an open house visit. In most cases, the buyer who ends up purchasing your home viewed it privately through their agent, not while juggling shoe covers on a Sunday afternoon.
Local Perspective
In the St. Louis metro area, open houses still draw traffic — but not always buyers. Especially in areas like Kirkwood, Crestwood, and Webster, many attendees are neighbors, future sellers, or casual browsers looking for ideas.
The true selling happens long before the sign goes in the yard: high-quality photos, digital marketing, pricing strategy, and proactive outreach through the MLS and buyer networks. That’s what generates the calls and private showings that actually close deals.
If your agent recommends an open house, that’s fine — it can be one piece of a larger marketing plan. Just know it’s not the silver bullet. The goal isn’t to fill your foyer with foot traffic; it’s to reach qualified buyers where they’re already looking — online, through their agent, or via targeted marketing.
Think of an open house as a bonus, not a strategy. It’s frosting — not the cake.
Selling Soon?
Let’s build a marketing plan that goes beyond cookies and sign-in sheets. I’ll show you what really works in the real St. Louis market — digital strategy, staging impact, pricing precision, and presentation that pops online and in person.
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.


