When selling a home, an open house is a tool in the toolbox of marketing the property to attract buyers, with the goal of receiving offers.
As a quick definition of an open house – an open house is an event that is scheduled in the MLS (so that it syndicates out to all the online outlets like Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com, etc) where anyone and everyone is invited to tour the home for a set period of time (usually 2 hours), without needing to have an appointment, and without having to be accompanied by a buyers agent.
This article explains the “why,” “when,” and “how” to host an open house.
Before getting into the details of open houses, let’s begin with the main take-aways of open houses.
The main concern of open houses is that there will likely be people walking through your home unsupervised.
As the goal of an open house is to draw lots of people into your home to find a buyer – there is usually the situation where there are multiple groups of people in your home at the same time, and only one real estate agent to supervise the groups – thus during an open house it is likely that, people will be walking around your home unsupervised.
Open houses are publicly advertised, so “anyone and everyone” is invited – there’s no vetting or screening of who may be walking through your house. So, if someone attends with intent to steal items, or other ill intentions – there will likely be minimal supervision of such people.
There are two times in a listing period when an open house can be a good fit:
Generally speaking, open houses do not bring buyers that would not have already otherwise tour your home. A 2024 survey from the National Association of Realtors reported that 100% of buyers used the internet in their home search – indicating that buyers find homes from viewing the online portals (the local MLS, Zillow, Realtor.com, etc), or from their saved home searches in these portals. The main way that open houses can help sell a home is (as discussed above in this article), that buyers considering submitting an offer on your home may see the scheduled open house and get concerned that the open house may bring other offers, and this concern can prompt buyers to submit an offer sooner than later.
There are 2 main elements of an open house: