
The South African property market is in a dynamic state. Buyers are active, banks are lending and well-positioned homes are changing hands. But not every seller is benefiting, and in most cases, the reasons have nothing to do with the market itself. They come down to three mistakes that are quietly costing sellers time, money, and momentum.
According to Michelle Cohen, Principal at Leapfrog Johannesburg North East, these patterns come up again and again in listing conversations. “The good news is that none of them is permanent. Once a seller understands what is working against them, they can fix it, and often quickly.”
Mistake 1: Overpricing (and paying for it slowly)
Overpricing is the most common mistake, and the most expensive. It feels like a low-risk move, as the thinking is that you can always come down. In practice, however, it sets off a chain reaction that is hard to reverse.
Buyers in 2026 are well-informed: they have access to comparable sales data, are watching the market carefully, and notice when a listing is out of step with the evidence. An overpriced home attracts the wrong kind of attention as buyers start to wonder what is wrong with it.
When a price reduction eventually comes, it rarely generates the same energy as a correctly priced launch. The moment of maximum buyer interest is the first two to three weeks on the market. If you miss that window, you are playing catch-up.
“The sellers who achieve the best results are almost always the ones who trusted the valuation process from the start,” says Cohen. “Correct pricing does not mean undervaluing. It means arriving at a number the market will respond to, and then letting buyer competition do the rest.”
Mistake 2: Waiting for the perfect time
Some sellers are sitting on the sidelines, holding out for a better interest rate environment, a stronger economy, or simply a moment that feels more certain.
The reality is that there is no perfect time to sell in any market, including this one. What does exist right now is a window that is meaningfully better than the one sellers were navigating eighteen months ago. Rates have eased. Banks are actively competing for bond business. The buyer pool has deepened, particularly among first-time buyers who have been waiting for exactly this kind of stabilisation.
Waiting also carries its own costs, such as bond repayments, maintenance, rates and taxes, and the opportunity cost of capital tied up in a property you have already decided to sell. The longer a motivated seller delays, the more those costs compound.
The more useful question is not “is this the perfect time?” but “is this a workable time?”
Mistake 3: Not adapting to how buyers actually behave
The buyer of 2026 starts their search online, forms an opinion within seconds of seeing a listing, and walks away from viewings if the property does not match its photographs.
Poor photography, that is dark, cluttered, or low-resolution images, kills enquiries before a buyer ever sets foot through the door. A property that has not been decluttered or lightly refreshed before viewings creates friction at exactly the wrong moment. And sellers who are inflexible about viewing times or slow to respond to offers risk losing buyers with other options.
“Meeting buyers where they are is not about compromising,” Cohen explains. “It is about removing the reasons they have to say no. The sellers who think carefully about presentation, timing, and flexibility tend to attract better offers and close faster.”
The common thread
Each of these three mistakes shares the same root: approaching the market on yesterday’s terms. The sellers who are succeeding right now are the ones who have updated their assumptions, listened to the data, and worked with agents who can translate market conditions into a clear plan.
The market will not wait for a seller to get comfortable; it will reward those who are ready to engage honestly.
