Friction: The One Thing Every Listing Agent Should Understand (But Many Don’t)
- Ryan Palardy,
- January 16, 2026
Most agents think homes sell because of price.
That’s only partly true.
In practice, homes sell because buyers feel confident enough to act. And confidence is rarely about price alone.
It’s about friction.
A common assumption in real estate is that the market works like this:
Price → Demand → Offers
But that’s not how buyers actually behave.
What really drives outcomes looks more like this:
Friction → Buyer Confidence → Action → Final Price
When friction is low, buyers move quickly and decisively. When friction is high, even a “well-priced” home can stall.
Friction is anything that creates hesitation or uncertainty for a buyer. Often, it’s subtle. Sometimes it’s invisible to the seller. But buyers feel it immediately.
Common sources of friction include:
– Confusing or incomplete seller disclosures
– Inspection questions that aren’t addressed upfront
– Poor photos or unclear floor plans
– HOA documents uploaded late (or not at all)
– Vague timelines or unclear offer instructions
– Sellers who “might need flexibility on a rent back” but haven’t decided what that means
None of these things change the intrinsic value of the home. But they absolutely change how safe it feels to move forward.
Here’s the counterintuitive part:
A home listed at $1.1M with low friction will often sell faster—and for more—than a similar home listed at $1.05M with unresolved issues.
Why?
Because buyers don’t stretch when they feel risk.
They stretch when the process feels clear and predictable.
Low friction leads to:
– Stronger offers
– Fewer contingencies
– More competitive behavior
– Buyers willing to push past their initial comfort zone
Not because the home is “worth more,” but because the deal feels easier to say yes to.
The best listing agents aren’t fixated on constant price reductions. They’re focused on removing friction before the home ever hits the market.
That usually means:
– Pre-inspections or clear repair strategies
– Clean, complete disclosure packages
– HOA documents available on day one
– Clear showing schedules and offer deadlines
– Simple, transparent offer instructions
None of this is flashy. All of it works. Buyers respond to clarity. And clarity creates momentum.
The same principle applies when writing offers.
Winning offers are not always the highest offers. They’re often the offers that feel easiest for the seller to accept.
Reducing seller-side friction can look like:
– Clearly explaining the buyer’s financing strength
– Tightening timelines to reduce uncertainty
– Solving a seller problem that has nothing to do with price
– Removing unnecessary contingencies when appropriate
The goal is not just to compete. The goal is to make the seller feel comfortable choosing you.
Homes don’t sell simply because they’re cheap. They sell because they feel safe, simple, and inviting.
Agents who understand friction:
– Get better results in slower or shifting markets
– Create multiple offers without risky underpricing
– Win deals that look unwinnable on paper
This is one of those concepts that quietly compounds over time. Once you start looking for friction, you see it everywhere—and you stop making decisions that accidentally create it.