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The questions sellers actually ask. Answered honestly.

Direct answers to the questions sellers ask before they list.

Category 01

Getting Started

The questions that come up before you have even decided to list.

The honest answer: nobody can time the market perfectly, and most people who try end up waiting too long. The better question is whether selling now lines up with your personal situation. Are you trying to move up, move out of state, cash in on equity, or simplify? Each of those has different timing dynamics. On our first call, I'll walk you through where the Irvine market is, what comparable homes are doing right now, and what selling in the next 30 to 90 days would realistically look like for your home specifically. You leave the call with clear numbers and an honest read on whether to list.
The Zillow Zestimate is a starting point, not an answer. Real home valuation comes from analyzing three things: recently sold comparable homes, currently active listings, and your home's specific condition and features. I'll run a full comparative market analysis (CMA) for you before we even meet in person. That report will give you a realistic price range, not the inflated number some agents throw out to win your listing.
Sometimes yes, often no. Over-improving before a sale is one of the most common ways sellers burn money. A fresh coat of paint, minor landscaping, and a deep clean almost always return more than they cost. A full kitchen remodel almost never does. When I walk your home, I'll tell you the three highest-leverage improvements and the three things not to bother touching. Being honest about what not to do is part of the service.
In a balanced Irvine market, a well-priced home typically sells within 14 to 30 days. Overpriced homes sit for 60+ days and then sell for less than they would have if priced correctly on day one. Speed is a function of pricing strategy, preparation, and marketing. I build a timeline with you upfront so you know exactly what to expect at every stage.
An off-market sale means your home is sold without being listed publicly on the MLS. It can be faster and more private, but it almost always costs you money because you lose competitive tension between buyers. I'll explore off-market options for clients who genuinely need privacy or speed over price, but I'll be upfront that for most sellers, going to market publicly nets more.

Category 02

Working With Joshua

What to expect when you hire me and how we will work together.

I give you three things most agents don't. First, negotiation skill trained in the most adversarial sales environment in the country (I averaged 20 units a month selling cars before I moved into real estate, which means I learned to close hard deals with hostile buyers). Second, responsiveness. I answer texts and calls fast, because deals die in silence. Third, documentation. Every deal I close becomes a case file with real numbers and real outcomes. You can read them at Testimonials before we even talk. Most agents ask you to trust them. I show you the receipts first.
Fair question, and I'd rather you ask it than wonder. I'm licensed, I'm closing deals, and I'm backed by a full brokerage with decades of collective experience behind me. What I lack in years I more than make up for in responsiveness, work ethic, and negotiation track record. Newer agents often outperform veterans on communication and hustle because we have to. Read the case files. The work speaks for itself.
I'll always be transparent about what I charge and what you're getting for it. My commission reflects the quality of the marketing, negotiation, and service I deliver, and I'll walk you through exactly what that includes on our first call. If another agent is quoting you a lower rate, ask them what they're cutting to get there. It's usually the marketing budget, the photography, or the hours they'll actually spend on your listing. You get what you pay for in this business.
More than you expect. My rule is simple: no client of mine ever waits more than a few hours for a response during normal hours. During active listing periods, expect regular updates even if there's nothing dramatic to report. I'd rather over-communicate than leave you wondering. Silence is where trust dies.
We talk about it immediately. I'd rather have an uncomfortable conversation in week two than discover in week six that you've been unhappy the whole time. Every listing agreement I do includes a clear structure for how we course-correct if things aren't working, whether that means adjusting price, adjusting strategy, or (rarely) parting ways. I don't hold clients hostage to contracts.
I work directly with you. You'll never get passed off to an assistant or a junior agent for the important moments. Behind the scenes, I have a brokerage, lending partners, inspectors, photographers, and a transaction coordinator I work with, but you deal with me for everything that matters.

Category 03

Pricing & Offers

How pricing actually works and what to do when offers come in.

I build a comparative market analysis using three inputs: recently sold homes similar to yours (within 90 days, within a tight geographic radius), currently active listings you'd be competing against, and expired listings that failed to sell. Then I factor in your home's specific condition, features, and any unique value drivers. The result is a price range, not a single number, with a recommended strategy for where in that range to list.
Pricing high almost always hurts you. Homes that sit on the market get stale, and buyers start asking "what's wrong with it." The data is clear: homes priced right on day one sell faster and often for more money than homes that are initially overpriced and then reduced. I'll never recommend a listing price designed to make you feel good on day one if it'll cost you on day thirty.
We structure a clear process to evaluate them. Price matters, but so do contingencies, financing type, down payment size, closing timeline, and buyer seriousness. A $5,000 higher offer from a buyer with weak financing can easily be worse than a slightly lower cash offer that closes in two weeks. I walk you through each offer side by side so the decision is clear.
Absolutely. You're in control of your listing at every stage. I'll give you my honest read on every offer (whether I think it's strong, weak, or negotiable), but the final decision is always yours.
A seller credit is money the seller contributes toward the buyer's closing costs or rate buy-down at the close of the transaction. It doesn't reduce your proceeds in the same way a price reduction does because it's structured differently in the deal. Smart agents use seller credits as negotiation leverage to keep the headline sale price high while giving the buyer what they actually need. You can see an example of this at this case file where we structured a $23,250 seller credit that paid for closing costs and bought down the buyer's rate.
First, we don't let it get to that point without course-correcting. If a listing isn't getting showings or offers in the expected window, we adjust (price, photography, marketing strategy, or staging). If after all adjustments the home still doesn't sell, we have an honest conversation about whether the timing is wrong or whether your goals have changed. I don't leave clients stuck.

Category 04

The Process

Timelines, inspections, escrow, and what actually happens between listing and closing.

A typical Irvine home sale breaks down like this: 1 to 2 weeks of prep and staging, 2 to 4 weeks on market, 30 to 45 days of escrow after accepting an offer. Total: roughly 6 to 10 weeks from first conversation to keys exchanged. I'll build a specific timeline for your situation on our first call.
Three things. Declutter aggressively (most sellers underestimate how much). Deep clean every surface. Handle obvious cosmetic issues like scuffed paint or burnt-out bulbs. I'll send you a detailed prep checklist after our first meeting, including which rooms to prioritize.
Yes, every time. Buyers don't open closets or discuss their real reactions when the owner is home. A 30 to 60 minute window is all we usually need, and I coordinate scheduling so it's as painless as possible.
The buyer will typically order a home inspection as part of their due diligence. You don't pay for it, but you do respond to any issues it uncovers. Some sellers also choose to get a pre-listing inspection so we can address problems before they become negotiation points. I'll recommend whether that's worth it based on your home's age and condition.
Escrow is the 30 to 45 day period between the buyer's offer being accepted and the sale closing. During this window: the buyer does their inspections, the buyer's lender orders an appraisal, both parties handle contingency removals, the title is cleared, and the final paperwork is prepared for signing. I manage the day-to-day coordination and keep you informed of every milestone.
It happens, especially in a fast-moving market. If the appraisal comes in below the agreed sale price, there are three paths: the buyer makes up the difference in cash, we renegotiate the price to match the appraisal, or we cancel the deal and relist. Most appraisal issues can be resolved with good negotiation, which is where having an experienced advocate on your side matters.
Sellers typically pay the agent commissions, title and escrow fees, any agreed-upon credits to the buyer, and prorated property taxes and HOA fees. On a typical Irvine home, seller closing costs run roughly 7 to 9 percent of the sale price when commissions are included. I'll give you a detailed net sheet showing exactly what you'll walk away with before you sign any listing agreement.

Category 05

After the Sale

What happens once the deal is done and how we stay connected.

In California, sale proceeds are wired to you on the day escrow closes or the following business day, depending on the time of day the closing is recorded. I walk you through the wire process in advance so there are no surprises on closing day.
There can be, especially if your home has appreciated significantly. The IRS allows a capital gains exclusion of up to $250,000 for single filers and $500,000 for married filers on the sale of a primary residence (with conditions). Investment properties and second homes are treated differently and may be eligible for a 1031 exchange. I am not a tax professional, but I'll point you to trusted CPAs I work with who specialize in real estate transactions.
Yes, and most of my clients choose to work with me on both sides. If you're selling and buying in the same window, we coordinate the timing carefully, using contingencies, bridge financing, or rent-back agreements to make the transition smooth. Selling and buying at the same time is one of the most complex things you can do in real estate, which is exactly why you want the same person managing both sides.
I work with a trusted network of agents nationally, so if you're moving to Texas, New York, or anywhere else, I can connect you with an agent I've personally vetted in that market. You get a referral I stand behind, and I stay in the loop to make sure your relocation goes smoothly on both ends.
Yes. Most of my clients become long-term relationships, not one-time transactions. I check in a few times a year, keep you posted on market conditions, and am always available if you have questions about your home, your next move, or a friend's situation. I'm not going anywhere.

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  • A real CMA, not a Zestimate.

    Comparative market analysis pulled from active, pending, sold, and expired comps inside your specific submarket. Price range with a strategy, not a single number.

  • A prep plan that doesn't burn your money.

    The three highest-leverage improvements and the three things not to touch. Over-improving is one of the most common ways sellers burn cash before listing.

  • One agent. One phone. Same-hour replies.

    Every offer, escrow question, and timeline shift routes through me on the same number.

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