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Blog Post

What Sellers Need to Know About Summer Buyers

If you're listing your home in June or July, the buyers walking through your door are a different group than the ones who...

  • Erin Brumleve
  • June 15th, 2026
  • 5 min read

 

If you're listing your home in June or July, the buyers walking through your door are a different group than the ones who were shopping in March. They're motivated, they're often working against a real deadline, and they have less flexibility on timing than spring buyers typically do. Understanding who's actually in the summer market, and what they need, gives you a meaningful advantage when it comes to pricing, negotiating, and getting to the closing table without surprises.

Who's Actually Buying in Summer

Summer buyer activity is driven by a few distinct groups. Families with school-age children are the most time-sensitive. They need to be in their new home before the school year starts, which puts a firm ceiling on how long they can search and negotiate. If you can offer a closing date that gives a family time to get settled before fall, that's a concrete advantage over a competing listing that can't or won't accommodate that schedule.

The second major group is relocating buyers. Corporate moves and employer-driven relocations tend to cluster in summer, and these buyers are often operating on compressed schedules with a fixed start date at a new job. They typically can't afford to lose a week on a slow negotiation. They're serious from the first showing, and they're often purchasing from out of town with limited opportunities to tour a property more than once or twice.

Rounding out the summer pool are buyers who were active in spring and didn't land anything. They're still searching, still motivated, and in many cases more decisive than they were a few months ago.

Lower Volume, Higher Intent

Overall showing traffic tends to drop from spring to summer as families vacation and attention shifts away from the market. What that actually means for sellers is that the buyers scheduling tours in June and July are more serious than the casual browsers who show up in April just to see what's out there. Fewer showings doesn't mean weaker demand from the buyers who are still actively searching.

Treat every showing request with that in mind. A buyer who schedules a tour in late June is not window shopping. Keeping the home accessible, responding to requests promptly, and making sure the property is consistently well-presented will matter more than it might seem with lighter traffic volume.

Showing Accessibility Matters More in Summer

Summer buyers, particularly relocating purchasers visiting from out of town, may have a narrow window to tour homes. If your property is difficult to show on short notice, or only available during a limited set of hours, you risk missing buyers who can't reschedule around your availability.

Flexible showing access over weekends and across a broader window during the week gives your listing a real edge over comparable homes that are harder to get into. It's one of the lower-effort adjustments sellers can make, and it has a direct effect on how many qualified buyers actually see the home.

Summer Presentation Is Different Than Spring

A home that photographed beautifully in April may look noticeably different in July. Harsh summer light, heat stress on plants, and a lawn that's gone from spring green to late-summer brown can change how a listing presents online before buyers ever schedule a showing.

If your exterior photos were taken months ago and conditions have changed, updated photos are worth the investment. Keeping outdoor spaces maintained throughout the listing period, including anything the listing photography showed at its best, ensures buyers arrive with accurate expectations. Inside the home, keeping it comfortably cool during showings is a small thing that makes a meaningful impression. A buyer who walks in from 90-degree heat and spends 20 minutes in a sweltering house is not forming a positive first impression, regardless of the finishes.

Less Competition Can Work in Your Favor

In most markets, summer brings fewer active listings than spring. Sellers who prepared their home, priced it accurately, and entered the market in June often face less direct competition than they would have two months earlier. When inventory is lower and motivated buyers are still active, a well-positioned home has more room to hold on price and negotiate from a stronger position.

This dynamic is market-specific, so it's worth understanding the inventory picture in your area before you list. Your agent can give you a clear read on how many comparable homes are currently active and what that means for your pricing strategy.

What Summer Sellers Do Well

The sellers who move through the summer market efficiently tend to share a few common traits. They're accessible and responsive throughout the process, so their agent can act quickly when a serious offer comes in. They've thought through their own move far enough in advance that they can offer closing flexibility to buyers who need it. And they've kept the property in consistent, showing-ready condition from listing day forward rather than letting things slide after the first week.

None of that requires major effort. It mostly comes down to being prepared before you list and staying attentive once you do.

Summer is a real market with real buyers who are ready to act. The sellers who do best are the ones who understand what those buyers are working with and position accordingly. If you're thinking about listing this summer, we can help you understand exactly what to expect, from the buyer profile in your area to the right price and the right terms to attract serious offers.

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About the author

Erin Brumleve

303-681-7913
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Erin Brumleve has spent over 20 years guiding people through life transitions—first as a licensed professional counselor and art therapist, and for the past 11 years as a trusted Denver Realtor. Her career is distinguished by consistent recognition at the highest levels of the Denver Metro Association of Realtors, including Diamond Level honors from 2020 through 2024 and Diamond Status in partnership in 2020 and 2022. She is a Certified Luxury Home Marketing Specialist (CLHMS). Erin holds a Master’s degree in Counseling and a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Art (Painting), bringing a rare blend of strategic insight, emotional intelligence, and aesthetic expertise to her work. A Colorado resident of 19 years, she is constantly studying local market trends, architecture, and neighborhood nuance. Known for her concierge-level service and strategic negotiation skills, Erin is passionate about giving back and has held leadership and volunteer roles both within her company and within the community. She currently serves on her neighborhood’s HOA Board in Greenwood Village. Outside of work, Erin finds joy in her daily run or ride, a semi-consistent yoga practice, and soaking up art, design, and foodie culture. And of course spending time with her two cat babies—Lucy and Lloyd. “We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act but a habit.” – Will Durant, The Story of Philosophy (1926)

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