I'm thinking of moving and saw a nice looking house at a good price, then looked at the details. It shows as having sold on 10/30/25, then on 11/3/25 it was listed again for $7,000 less than the selling price. Is this some sort of listing trick to show it as being on the market for less time, or did someone buy it and then discover something? Should I take a look or forget it? I don't want to ask the realtor because I'm not in a hurry and don't want to be bombarded with emails from someone wanting to sell me something ASAP.
Sold and Relisted in 4 Days??
byu/Green_Sweatshirt inRealEstate
Posted by Green_Sweatshirt
9 Comments
The selling agent won’t typically bombard you. If you use one of the tricky forms like on Zillow etc that try to give your info to a buyer agent (instead of contacting the selling agent directly although a lot of the sites have been trying to make it harder and harder to find the seller agent info) that is when you get bombarded.
I’ve sometimes called the listing realtor. Usually I see that with a price increase, not a decrease, and I assume an increase is because someone needed to sell and someone else thought they could hold for a profit reselling.
Maybe in this case they closed and something came up where they aren’t moving anymore. Regardless, sometimes the selling agent with give some reason if you ask. I like calls as they aren’t as likely to be added to some spam list, though it still happens sometimes.
When I have seen something like that, I have thought it was likely that the first transaction was an asset transfer ( like in a divorce for example). Then the new owner just put the house up for sale on the market immediately.
Sometimes they withdraw and re-list.
Thank you, everybody. It’s less than a 45 minute drive away and I have a friend who lives near there, so I may just go and take a look at it from the outside before calling the realtor.
There are some possibilities here. It might have been a family transfer, to settle an estate or a divorce sale. Or it could be that some buyers regret happened, but unlikely they bailed on it that fast.
They were disturbed when Evelyn, the house’s original owner who was tragically murdered there in 1957, made repeated visits to the baby’s room during those four nights.
Probably didn’t actually sell. Deal didn’t close. Back on the market for less.
Likely the person who bought it financing fell through. They may have listed it for 7k less to attract a quicker sell.