Edmonton's seller's market has created a specific problem for homeowners: you're being approached with private offers before you've even thought about listing.
On the surface, it sounds convenient. No staging, no showings, no uncertainty — just a number and a signature. But the more I see of these transactions, the more I want sellers to slow down and ask a harder question: is that offer actually a reflection of what your property is worth, or is it a reflection of what someone else wants to pay in a vacuum?
Let me give you the framework I use when clients come to me having been approached off-market.
The off-market math almost never works in a seller's market. When buyer demand is high and inventory is constrained — which describes Edmonton right now — the competitive tension created by a proper MLS listing is the mechanism that drives your price up. Multiple buyers competing for your home is not a hypothetical. It's a predictable outcome of correct exposure in the right conditions. Remove that competition, and you're negotiating against one party who knows you haven't tested the market. That's an inherent disadvantage.
I've seen this scenario play out too many times to count. A seller accepts what feels like a fair private offer to avoid the hassle of the process, and later discovers through a neighbour's sale or their own research that they left six figures on the table — often more than the commission they thought they were saving. The math on that trade is almost never favourable.
City assessments are not market value. Online tools are not market value. These are the two benchmarks most sellers reach for when evaluating an off-market offer, and neither one reflects what competing buyers are willing to pay in a live market. Assessed values lag actual conditions significantly. Automated valuation tools like HonestDoor work off algorithm-derived estimates that can't account for micro-market dynamics, recent renovations, lot position, or the specific depth of buyer demand in your price range and neighbourhood at this moment.
What you need is a current comparative market analysis done by someone who is actually active in your submarket — not a number generated by a computer or set by a municipality 12 months ago.
There are legitimate scenarios where off-market makes sense. I want to be clear about that. If you require absolute privacy around your sale — and there are situations, particularly in the luxury segment, where that matters — an off-market or discreet listing process may be appropriate. If you need a specific closing timeline that a conventional listing can't guarantee, a targeted off-market approach with a qualified buyer may serve you. If the market is soft and buyer competition is genuinely limited, the calculus changes.
But those are specific circumstances. In a seller's market with active demand and low inventory, the strategic move for most sellers is full MLS exposure, proper preparation, and a structured launch that generates competitive pressure from day one.
The question I'd encourage every seller to sit with is this: if you accept an offer today without testing the market, will you be confident six months from now that you captured the true value of your asset? If the answer is anything other than a clear yes, it's worth having a proper conversation before you sign.
If you're being approached with an off-market offer or are thinking about your selling options in Edmonton, I'm happy to run the numbers and give you a straight read on where your property sits in the current market. That conversation costs you nothing and could be worth considerably more than you'd expect.
Get Expert Analysis for Your Situation
Contact Ryan McCann and Real Living today for a no-obligation consultation about your home sale options. We'll provide a comprehensive comparative market analysis showing what your home could realistically sell for, explain exactly what services we provide and how they add value to your transaction.
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