Selling a home is one of the largest financial transactions you'll make. This guide walks you through every step: from knowing your home's value to closing day. You'll learn pricing strategy, staging tips, marketing tactics, and what to expect from inspection to closing.
Here's exactly what happens from the moment you decide to sell until you hand over the keys and deposit the proceeds.
Before listing, you need to know what your home is worth in today's market. A Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) uses real, recent sales data to tell you what buyers are actually paying for similar homes in your area.
First impressions matter. Preparation focuses on making your home appealing to the widest pool of buyers without investing in expensive renovations.
Pricing is both art and science. You want to attract buyers without leaving money on the table. Here's the strategic approach.
Median home value: ~$769,500
Market absorption rate: ~95 days
Best season to sell: January–April (peak snowbird season)
A home priced right at $769K might sell in 30–45 days. The same home priced at $850K could sit 6+ months. Time on market is a killer — it signals to buyers that something is wrong.
A perfectly priced, perfectly prepared home means nothing if no one sees it. Modern marketing reaches buyers across multiple channels.
When offers come in, strategy matters. You're not just negotiating price — you're evaluating buyer strength, contingencies, and timeline.
In competitive Wellington markets (especially Jan–Apr), multiple offers happen. This is good — it drives price up. Your agent will analyze each offer on price, contingencies, pre-approval strength, and earnest money.
As a seller, you're not obligated to make repairs. Most Wellington homes sell AS-IS. This protects you from expensive repair demands. However, during the buyer's inspection period (usually 7–10 days), they may request repairs or credits for inspection findings. You can negotiate, deny, or meet them halfway.
Once you're under contract, the buyer has an inspection period (usually 7–10 days) and the appraisal happens. As a seller, you need to understand Florida disclosure laws.
Florida law requires sellers to disclose known defects via a Property Disclosure, Addendum, or Seller's Affidavit. This includes:
Failure to disclose can result in legal liability. Be thorough and honest in your disclosures.
During inspection period, the buyer may request repairs, credits, or price reductions. You can:
The lender's appraiser visits and values the home. If the appraisal comes in lower than your contract price, the buyer's lender won't fund the full amount. You may need to renegotiate or accept a lower sale price.
Closing day is final. You sign documents, verify numbers, and the deed transfers to the buyer. Typically takes 1–2 hours at a title company or attorney's office. Then the funds hit your account.
Typical seller closing costs range from 6–8% of sales price. Here's the breakdown:
Sale price: $769,500
Less agent commission (6%): -$46,170
Less title, attorney, recording: -$2,000
Less prorated taxes & fees: -$2,000
Est. Net Proceeds: ~$719,330
Wellington's market is influenced by seasonal demand (winter buyers), local amenities (equestrian communities, schools, golf), and Palm Beach County's broader economic trends. Pricing right and marketing aggressively during peak season (January–April) maximizes your sale price and minimizes days on market.
Request a Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) from a local agent. A CMA pulls recent comparable sales, active listings, and market absorption rate to recommend a pricing range. Price right (at or slightly below market) to attract multiple offers and sell faster. Price too high and your home becomes stale on the market. Online estimators like Zestimate are often inaccurate, especially in Wellington's unique market.
Wellington's market absorption rate is approximately 95 days. However, well-priced, well-marketed homes sell in 30–60 days. Overpriced homes sit 6+ months. Seasonal factors matter — January through April is peak (snowbird season) with faster sales. June through August is slower. Pricing strategy and marketing quality heavily influence days on market.
Focus on quick wins with high ROI: declutter, paint neutral colors, clean professionally, update light fixtures, landscaping cleanup, and fix obvious cosmetic issues. Skip expensive renovations like new kitchens or bathrooms — most buyers want to customize. Must-fix items: broken HVAC, roof leaks, plumbing issues, structural problems, pest infestations, and major water damage. Budget $1,500–$3,000 in prep for a $769K home.
Seller closing costs typically total 6–8% of the sale price. The largest cost is real estate agent commission (5–6%), plus title insurance, attorney fees, recording fees, HOA transfer fees, and property taxes (prorated). On a $769,500 sale, expect approximately $46,000–$62,000 in total costs. Some costs can be negotiated or split with the buyer, but commission is typically fixed by your listing agreement.
January through April is peak season in Wellington and Palm Beach County. Wealthy snowbirds and retirees migrate south, inventory is low, and buyer demand is highest. This leads to faster sales and often higher prices. May through December is slower. If you must sell in summer or fall, price competitively to overcome seasonal slowdown. Avoid late November through December (holiday season) when buyer traffic drops significantly.
Share a few details and I'll provide a free home valuation and personalized selling strategy for your Wellington home.