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Pricing Your Austin Luxury Home 2026 - Keenan Group Austin Real Estate

Pricing Your Austin Luxury Home 2026

Seller Guides

#1 ABoR Team 2024$1B+ Career Sales1,000+ Homes Sold

Expert pricing strategies for Austin's luxury market. Comparative analysis methods, pricing psychology, market timing, and common mistakes that cost sellers.

Joe & Cara Keenan, Keenan Group at CompassUpdated June 20266 min readSeller Guides

The Art and Science of Luxury Pricing

Price an Austin luxury home off live comps, not what you spent or hope to net. At $2M+ a 5% miss is $100K, and overpriced homes stall past the 14-day window when buyer interest peaks. KLMI Q2 2026 puts the $2-3M band at $602/sqft and $3-5M at $782/sqft. Keenan Group listings carry a 13-day median DOM versus the market's 90-120 days.

Why Pricing Luxury Is Different

Based on the Keenan Group's 25 years pricing Austin luxury homes, this process is not like pricing a mass-market property. At $500K, there are dozens of comparable sales within a few miles. At $2M+, you might find three or four in the last six months - and none of them are truly comparable because every luxury home has unique characteristics that standard adjustments struggle to capture.

The margin for error is also amplified. A 5% mispricing on a $500K home is $25K - noticeable but recoverable. On a $2M home, that is $100K, and on a $4M home it is $200K. At these levels, pricing errors do not just slow down a sale - they can fundamentally change the outcome.

Luxury buyers are data-informed. They track days on market, watch price reductions, and draw conclusions. An overpriced home that sits for 60+ days develops stigma that no price cut fully erases. The first 14 days on market generate the most buyer interest, and you only get that window once.

The CMA for Luxury Properties

A standard comparative market analysis looks at recent sales of similar homes. In luxury, "similar" requires much more nuance. Here is how we approach it:

Step 1: Recent sales (last 6 months) - Same neighborhood, similar size (within 15%), comparable condition. We adjust for lot size differences ($5-$15 per square foot of lot in most Austin luxury neighborhoods), pool presence ($50K-$150K depending on quality), view premiums (5-15% for Hill Country or lake views), and quality of custom finishes.

Step 2: Active listings - What buyers are seeing right now. This is your direct competition. If three comparable homes are priced at $2.4M and you list at $2.8M, you are not "testing the market" - you are making those other three homes look like great deals.

Step 3: Pending sales - Properties under contract indicate current buyer behavior and pricing momentum.

Step 4: Expired/withdrawn listings - What did not work, and why. This data is just as valuable as closed sales.

One important note: appraisals often undervalue luxury homes. Appraisers are bound by recent comparable sales, and when comps are sparse, they tend to be conservative. If your home has a $200K custom kitchen, the appraiser might give it $50K in adjustment value. This is normal, and your agent should prepare the buyer's side for this reality with a strong comp package.

Price-Per-Square-Foot: Useful but Limited

Price per square foot is the most common metric buyers use to compare homes. But it breaks down in luxury for a simple reason: a 6,000 sq ft home does not price at 2x a 3,000 sq ft home in the same neighborhood.

In most Austin luxury areas, price per square foot decreases as home size increases. A 3,000 sq ft home in Westlake might trade at $550/sq ft while a 6,000 sq ft home on the same street trades at $425/sq ft. The land, location, and first 2,000 sq ft carry the most value per foot. After that, each additional square foot contributes less.

Use price per square foot as a starting point, not an answer. It is one data point among many.

Common Pricing Mistakes

Pricing based on renovation cost. You spent $300K on a kitchen and bath remodel. The market might give you $150K-$200K of that back. Renovations rarely return dollar-for-dollar, and the more personal the choices (bold tile patterns, unusual layouts), the less the market rewards them. Price based on what comparable finished homes sell for, not what you invested.

Pricing based on neighboring sales that are not truly comparable. Your neighbor's home sold for $3.2M, but it had a pool, sat on a larger lot, and was fully updated. Adjusting for those differences might put your realistic value at $2.7M. Ignoring those adjustments and listing at $3.1M will cost you months.

Emotional pricing. You raised your kids here. You built the treehouse. You watched sunsets from the back porch for 20 years. None of that has market value. Buyers are purchasing a home, not your memories. The most successful sellers separate emotion from pricing early.

Strategic Pricing and Search Brackets

Online search portals organize results by price brackets. Buyers searching $2M-$3M will never see your home if it is listed at $3.1M, even though they might have stretched for the right property. The "search bracket" effect is real and costs sellers exposure every day.

Pricing at $2.995M instead of $3.1M is not a gimmick - it is strategic. That $105K difference in list price might double your buyer pool. Similarly, $1.995M captures the entire $1.5M-$2M search range while $2.05M excludes those buyers entirely.

Round numbers ($3,000,000) signal negotiation room. Precise numbers ($2,875,000) signal a data-driven approach. Both have a place depending on your strategy.

When to Adjust Price

The market gives you clear signals if you pay attention.

No showings in 14 days: The price is too high. Buyers and agents are screening your listing out before they even visit. A meaningful reduction (5%+ minimum) is needed to re-enter the consideration set.

Showings but no offers after 30 days: The price might be close, but something is off. It could be condition versus price expectations, terms that are too rigid, or how the home shows in person compared to photos. This requires honest feedback analysis, not just a price cut.

When you do reduce, make it count. Small reductions ($25K on a $2M home) signal indecision. A meaningful reduction paired with refreshed marketing and new photography (if the home has been improved) can restart buyer interest.

Market Timing in Austin

Austin seasonal patterns:

  • January-April: Peak buyer activity, especially relocation season
  • May-August: Slower showings, but active buyers are serious
  • September-October: Fall resurgence, second-best selling window
  • November-December: Fewer showings, more motivated parties on both sides

Interest rates, tech industry health, and stock market performance all affect the luxury buyer pool. Corporate relocation cycles (which peak in spring and early fall) bring motivated, well-funded buyers who need to close on a timeline.



Ready for Your Pricing Strategy?

The Keenan Group provides complimentary home valuations and strategic pricing consultations. Our 25+ years of Austin luxury data informs every recommendation.

Contact us: 512-415-7653 | keenan@compass.com




Frequently Asked Questions

How do I price my Austin luxury home correctly?
Start with a comparative market analysis using closed sales from the last 6 months in your neighborhood, then adjust for lot size, condition, views, and custom finishes. The Keenan Group uses 25+ years of Austin luxury transaction data to build pricing strategies that account for micro-market conditions in neighborhoods like Tarrytown, Westlake Hills, and Barton Creek, where comparable sales can vary by $500K+ based on street position alone.

FAQ

What is the right price per square foot for an Austin luxury home in 2026?

It depends on the band and neighborhood. KLMI Q2 2026 reads $602/sqft for $2-3M homes, $782 for $3-5M (up 5% year over year), and $1,000 for $5-10M. By neighborhood over 24 months: Lake Austin $1,002, Rollingwood $897, Tarrytown $781, Pemberton Heights $751, Barton Creek $672, Westlake Hills $655, Spanish Oaks $629.

Why do appraisals come in below contract on luxury homes?

Appraisers are bound to recent comparable sales, and luxury comps are thin. When only three or four similar homes have sold in six months, the appraisal skews conservative and backward-looking. A $200K custom kitchen might earn $50K in adjustment. The fix is a strong comp package prepared for the buyer's lender before the appraisal is ordered.

When should I cut my list price?

No showings in 14 days means the price screened you out before buyers visited; a 5%+ reduction is needed to re-enter consideration. Showings but no offers after 30 days points to condition, terms, or how the home shows versus photos. When you reduce, make it meaningful: a $25K cut on a $2M home reads as indecision.

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Written by the Keenan Group - Joe Keenan and Cara Keenan, Austin's #1 real estate team (Austin Board of Realtors 2024). 25+ years, 1,000+ transactions, $1B+ career sales.

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