By Gary Lanham | Contributing Columnist
What determines your home’s value in 2026? In Pompano Beach, Fort Lauderdale, Wilton Manors, and Oakland Park, the answer is clear: disciplined pricing based on current market data – not past peak prices and not instinct.
The South Florida real estate market is not declining – it is normalizing.
Inventory remains elevated compared to prior peak years, giving buyers more choice and stronger negotiating leverage. Interest rates have moderated from recent highs, improving buyer confidence. However, pricing discipline – not rate movement – is what determines whether a home sells quickly, sits, or requires reductions.
In my experience reviewing pricing strategies across Broward County this year, the difference between strong outcomes and prolonged listings is almost always established before launch.
Buyers are forming value conclusions early
Today’s buyers are analytical – and they are forming pricing opinions before they ever request a showing.
They are:
Comparing recent similar sales.
Tracking price reductions.
Calculating insurance premiums and wind mitigation credits.
Reviewing roof age and flood zone designation.
Estimating total monthly ownership cost.
By the time a showing is scheduled, much of the pricing decision has already been made.
In neighborhoods such as Coral Ridge Isles, Imperial Point, and The Corals of Oakland Park – all west of Federal Highway – I am seeing measurable differences in buyer response based on roof age, flood zone designation, and wind mitigation documentation alone, even when square footage and condition are nearly identical.
In several recent comparisons, homes just streets apart have generated materially different levels of offer activity based on insurance exposure and documentation strength.
The first 14 days establish leverage
The first two weeks on market represent the highest visibility window in today’s digital real estate ecosystem, including AI-powered search platforms.
Pricing a home in 2026 is less about choosing a number and more about setting a launch trajectory. If the angle is wrong at lift-off, correcting course later typically requires price reductions, extended days on market, and weakened negotiating position.
When pricing aligns with current market data, well-positioned homes in Pompano Beach and Fort Lauderdale are still selling – often within the first few weeks.
When pricing exceeds defensible market value, activity slows and leverage shifts to the buyer.
What strategic pricing requires in 2026
Strategic home pricing in South Florida now requires disciplined analysis of:
Hyper-local comparable sales.
Absorption rates by neighborhood.
Insurance impact and documentation strength.
Competitive positioning against active inventory.
Data-supported pricing – not reliance on outdated peak comps.
Effective marketing must match pricing precision.
Today’s exposure includes professional photography, video, and AI-enhanced digital distribution designed to reach buyers where they are actively searching.
Pricing is a signal. It communicates whether a seller understands present market conditions. In this market, leverage is earned at pricing – not recovered during negotiation.By the time a home goes live, its pricing outcome is often already set.
Gary Lanham, Coldwell Banker Realty, is a South Florida listing specialist with over 20 years of experience in residential real estate. A longtime contributor to The New Pelican, he integrates data-driven pricing strategy with AI-powered marketing and neighborhood-level analysis across Broward County to help sellers protect leverage and maximize value. He can be reached at 954-695-6518.