Luxury buyers often spend considerable time researching properties before they ever schedule a showing. They review photos, study floorplans, compare locations, and evaluate features long before stepping through the front door. Yet despite all of that preparation, many buyers form their strongest impressions within the first few minutes of arriving at a property. That initial reaction is rarely about square footage or appliance packages. Instead, buyers are evaluating something much more difficult to quantify: how the home feels. In Bend's luxury market, that first impression often shapes the entire showing experience.
Not long ago, sellers in Bend rarely had to think twice about concessions.
Offers came in strong. Buyers competed. Terms were clean. In many cases, sellers dictated the structure of the deal and moved forward with confidence.
That is no longer the norm.
In today's market, concessions are back—and they are becoming a central part of negotiations. Buyers are asking for closing cost credits, rate buydowns, repairs, and in some cases, a combination of all three.
For s...
If you're asking whether now is a good time to buy or sell in Bend, you're asking the right question. But you need a direct answer—not a generic one. The Bend market in 2026 is not "hot," and it's not "down." Rather, it's selective.
Homes are selling every week. Buyers are still purchasing. But the days of automatic outcomes are behind us. Today, results depend on decisions.
The shift is straightforward:
Don't be scared of a tough listing — sometimes the biggest fright hides the brightest opportunity.
Every agent has that one listing that gives them chills. You know the type — the one that lingers on the market while others fly off the shelf, the one buyers love online but vanish after the showing. For one Bend agent, it felt like the house itself was haunted.
A Spooky Reputation
Perched on a quiet, tree-lined street, the craftsman looked perfect from the curb. But once inside, visitors whispered that "something felt off." Lights flickered during showings. The air felt drafty. Doors creaked when no one was near them. Word spread quickly — the house was haunted!
Before long, even seasoned buye...
A few years ago, inventory hit a record low. Just about anything sold – and fast. But now, there are far more homes on the market. Listings are up almost 20% from this time last year. And in some areas, supply is even back to levels we last saw in 2017–2019. For sellers, that means one thing:
Your house needs to stand out and grab attention from day one.
That's especially true when you consider why the number of homes for sale is up. Here's how it works. Available inventory is a mix of:
Data from Realtor.com shows most of the inventory growth lately is actually from active listings that are staying on the marke...