Selling a home in Jacksonville, FL in 2026 looks different than it did two years ago. Inventory is up, buyer competition has cooled, and getting the price and presentation right matters more than ever. Here's exactly what to expect and how to navigate it.
Step 1 — Price It Right From Day One
The biggest mistake Jacksonville sellers make in today's market is pricing based on what homes sold for in 2022. That market is gone. Buyers today are doing their research, and an overpriced home will sit — and a home that sits loses negotiating leverage fast.
A good agent will pull a proper comparative market analysis looking at sold homes in the last 60–90 days, not 6 months, and price your home where buyers are actually writing offers — not where you hope they will.
Step 2 — Prepare the Home Before It Hits MLS
In a competitive market, preparation mattered less — buyers were waiving inspections and ignoring deferred maintenance. That's changed. In 2026, buyers are doing full inspections and negotiating credits for anything they find. Get ahead of it.
- Deep clean and declutter every room
- Fix anything obviously broken — leaky faucets, broken fixtures, damaged flooring
- Fresh paint in neutral tones goes a long way
- Professional photography is non-negotiable — the first showing happens online
Step 3 — Marketing Beyond MLS
Most agents list your home on MLS and call it done. The best agents in Jacksonville go further — social media targeting, email lists of active buyers, private networks, and agent-to-agent outreach. At Momentum Realty, our agents have access to a private listings network that gets your home in front of qualified buyers before it even hits the public market.
Step 4 — Negotiate Like You Understand the Market
Buyers in 2026 are asking for more — repairs, closing cost credits, rate buydowns. Know your bottom line before you get an offer, and work with an agent who knows what's reasonable in today's market versus what's a lowball negotiating tactic.
Step 5 — Understand Your Net
Your sale price isn't your net. Factor in agent commission, closing costs (typically 1–3% for sellers in Florida), any negotiated credits, and your mortgage payoff. A good agent walks you through a net sheet before you list so there are no surprises at the closing table.
Current Jacksonville Market Conditions
As of 2026, Jacksonville inventory is up significantly from pandemic lows. Homes are taking longer to sell, and price reductions are more common. That doesn't mean it's a bad time to sell — it means pricing, preparation, and marketing matter more than ever. Sellers who get those three things right are still closing at strong numbers.
Ready to buy or sell in Northeast Florida? Momentum Realty serves Jacksonville, Ponte Vedra Beach, St. Augustine, Orange Park, and beyond. Find your agent →