November carried more movement than many would expect.
Forty-four homes sold.
The average days on market was just under four weeks at 27 days.
Eighteen homes were active at month’s end, with seven pending and three option pending.
For a month that sits just before the holiday season, that level of activity is notable. It wasn’t frenzied. But it was active.
November showed the highest volume of the three months we’ve reviewed so far (November, December, January). Buyers were still participating. Sellers were still entering the market.
The average list price among sold homes hovered just above $509,000, but as we’ve seen consistently, final sale prices settled within a realistic band of negotiation.
Across the most common layout - four bedrooms, two and a half baths - eighteen homes closed.
- Average sold price: ~$406,883
- Range: $312,500 – $467,000
- Average DOM: 20 days
Some sold immediately. Others stretched past the 90-day mark.
That wide range tells the same story we continue to see: alignment determines speed.
November felt balanced. There was enough inventory to create choice. Enough buyers to create movement.
But pricing still mattered. The consistent 3–8% adjustment trend from original list to final sale remained intact. Homes priced in rhythm with current data moved efficiently. Homes testing aspirational pricing often required reductions to re-engage attention.
This was not a market being driven by urgency. It was a market being driven by discernment, buyers assessing maintenance and overall condition of the home.
Historically, March through September carries the strongest seasonal momentum in Nottingham Country. November often functions as a checkpoint.
Some homeowners choose to wait until spring. Others move forward with clarity before the year ends.
The data suggests that if a home was well prepared and thoughtfully positioned, November provided opportunity, even without peak-season energy. For homeowners watching from the sidelines, November reinforces a steady theme:
The market is functioning.
It is not stalled.
But it rewards preparation over optimism.