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List smart. Sell faster.

I’m Eddie Weir, REALTOR® with REMAX Signature in Greater Houston. Every listing I take runs through the same five-phase sequence — pre-launch prep, contract, the Texas option period, financing, and closing — on a written timeline you can plan the move around. Memorial estates to Heights bungalows: same discipline, same standard.

7–10 days
Pre-Launch Prep
7–10 days
Texas Option Period
30–45 days
Contract to Close

Why a Written Sequence

Houston Listings That Sell Are Run, Not Hoped

The Houston market does not reward improvisation. Listings that go live with rushed photos, no pre-launch marketing, and a vague timeline lose days on market — and days on market translate directly into price reductions. The disciplined alternative is to plan the listing on a written timeline before the agreement is even signed, then execute that timeline on schedule. That’s what I do on every listing I take, regardless of price point or ZIP.

Pre-Launch Wins

The 7- to 10-day pre-launch window before a Houston home goes live on HAR.com is where listings either set up to sell strong or set up to sit. Photography, walkthrough notes, marketing prep, and mailers all happen here.

Texas-Specific Timing

The TREC option period — a paid 7- to 10-day window during which the buyer can terminate for any reason — is unique to Texas real estate. Houston sellers who don’t plan around it get blindsided. Sellers who do, negotiate from a position of strength.

A Predictable Close

From accepted offer to funded close, a typical Houston transaction runs 30 to 45 days. I confirm the closing date in writing before the contract is executed so you can plan the move, the next purchase, or the rental bridge around it.

The Houston Listing Sequence

Five Phases. One Written Timeline.

Each phase has its own checklist, its own Texas-specific milestones, and its own dedicated guide on this site. Read the linked spoke for the full detail; the summary below is what every Houston seller should know before signing the listing agreement.

  1. i

    Phase One · Pre-Listing Prep

    Walkthrough, repairs, staging tips, and photo-ready prep.

    I walk every Houston home before listing day to flag deferred maintenance, landscaping touch-ups, and room-by-room presentation moves. Staging tips happen during this walkthrough — if the home warrants more, services range from a one-hour staging consultation all the way to renting a full house of furniture for the duration of the listing. Then the professional photo shoot, drone if the lot warrants it, and the marketing build.

    Read the Houston photo prep checklist
  2. ii

    Phase Two · Listing Live & Showings

    HAR.com goes live, syndication starts, and the showing service opens.

    Listing day is the day the home publishes to HAR.com and syndicates to Realtor.com, Zillow, Redfin, and Trulia. The dedicated property website goes live, the just-listed mailer drops to the surrounding subdivision, and paid social begins. The showing service handles agent verification through Supra®. Texas Penal Code §16.02 makes audio recording the buyer’s-agent conversation during a showing a felony — sellers with security cameras should disable the audio mic or disclose recording in the showing instructions.

    Read the Houston showing process guide
  3. iii

    Phase Three · Offer & Texas Option Period

    The TREC contract clock starts the day the last party signs.

    Once an offer is accepted, the option fee and earnest money must be delivered within three days of the effective date. The Texas option period typically runs 7 to 10 days — during this window the buyer can inspect the home, request repairs, or terminate for any reason. I prep every Houston seller for likely inspection findings before the report ever comes in, and I negotiate inspection-driven repair credits as the listing agent.

    Read the full Houston listing timeline
  4. iv

    Phase Four · Appraisal & Financing

    Lender orders the appraisal; loan moves through underwriting.

    After the option period closes, the buyer’s lender orders the appraisal from a licensed Texas appraiser. If the appraisal comes in below contract price — not uncommon in fast-moving Houston ZIPs — I negotiate the gap: price reduction, buyer covers the difference, or a split. Most Texas contracts give the buyer 15 to 21 days from the effective date to obtain final loan approval.

    Read the appraisal & financing guide
  5. v

    Phase Five · Closing Day

    Sign at the title company, fund, hand over keys.

    1 to 2 days before closing, the buyer’s final walk-through confirms condition and that any agreed repairs were completed. The seller should have the home empty (or vacant per arrangement), broom-clean, with all keys, garage remotes, and gate fobs ready to convey. Seller and buyer typically sign at the Houston-area title company on different days; once funded by the lender, the seller receives proceeds (wire or check) and the buyer receives the keys.

    Read the seller closing guide

Why Work With Eddie

Same Discipline. Every Price Point.

I list and sell across the Greater Houston area — Harris, Brazoria, Fort Bend, and Montgomery County. Top 1% REMAX, ABR and LUXE certified, over ten years of Houston transactions. The credentials matter, but the part that actually moves the needle is process. Every listing runs the same sequence.

A Written Timeline

Every Houston seller gets the listing on a written calendar before we sign — pre-launch milestones, listing day, weekly seller updates, expected closing date. No surprises, no silence.

Vetted Vendors

Houston-area photographers, inspectors, lenders, title officers, and stagers I’ve worked with for years. They show up on time, communicate well, and know the Texas contract.

Weekly Updates

Every seller gets a weekly written update — showings booked, agent feedback, online traffic, comparable activity, and a price or marketing recommendation if the data calls for it.

A — Z · Houston Seller Glossary

The Texas-specific vocabulary every Houston seller should know before signing.

Option period. IABS. TREC. CDA. Earnest money vs. option fee. Seller's disclosure notice. Survey affidavit. Closing disclosure. The full A–Z plus 12 featured Houston-specific terms with definitions.

Open the Glossary

Houston Seller FAQ

What Houston Sellers Ask Before Signing

How long does it take to sell a house in Houston?

For a well-priced, well-marketed Houston listing, the full timeline runs roughly 7 to 10 days of pre-launch prep, days to weeks on market depending on price range and ZIP, plus 30 to 45 days from accepted offer to funded closing. A typical end-to-end Houston sale lands between 60 and 90 days from signing the listing agreement to keys handed over.

What does it cost to sell a home in Houston?

The big line items are the cooperating agent commission negotiated in the contract, title and closing fees, any seller-paid concessions or repair credits negotiated during the option period, prorated property taxes, and your existing mortgage payoff. I run a written net-sheet for every Houston listing before the agreement is signed so you see the full picture — not just gross sale price.

Do I need to make repairs before listing in Houston?

It depends on the home and the price range. Major systems — roof, HVAC, foundation, electrical — should be in working order before the photo shoot because Houston buyers will lean on inspection findings during the option period. Cosmetic work is judgment-call territory; some pays back at offer time, some doesn’t. I walk every home before listing and tell sellers honestly which repairs are worth the spend and which aren’t.

Can I sell a home in Houston while it’s vacant?

Yes — I list vacant homes regularly in Greater Houston. Keep utilities on through closing so showings, inspections, and the appraisal go smoothly. Confirm the homeowner’s insurance vacancy clause (most policies treat vacancy beyond ~30 days differently). Plan for weekly landscaping and an interior check, especially during Houston’s rain and storm seasons. Empty rooms photograph small, so virtual staging or renting a few key pieces is worth considering. Security cameras work the same as occupied homes — just disable the audio mic per Texas Penal Code §16.02 or disclose recording in the showing instructions.

What happens during the Texas option period?

The buyer pays a non-refundable option fee directly to the seller in exchange for a short window (typically 7 to 10 days) during which they can terminate the contract for any reason. They schedule inspections, request repairs, and decide whether to move forward or back out. Most Houston renegotiation happens in this window. I prep every seller for likely inspection findings before the report ever comes in, so we’re not negotiating from surprise.

Will I get feedback from buyers and their agents?

Sometimes yes, sometimes no. A recent shift in the industry, including litigation involving a buyer’s agent over showing feedback, has made formal feedback rarer than it used to be. When I receive it from the showing service or the buyer’s agent, I forward it the same day. Treat any feedback you get as a bonus — not a guaranteed deliverable — and read the data instead: showings booked, online traffic on HAR.com, comparable activity in the same ZIP.

Can a Houston seller back out after accepting an offer?

No. The Texas option period is the buyer’s right to terminate, not the seller’s. The only way a Texas seller can back out of a fully executed TREC contract is if the buyer fails to deliver the earnest money to the Houston-area title company by the third day after the effective date. Once the seller signs and the buyer delivers earnest money on time, the seller is bound to the contract.

What happens if the appraisal comes in low?

The buyer’s lender will only loan against the appraised value, not the contract price. A gap creates three options: the seller reduces price to the appraised value, the buyer covers the gap with cash, or the parties split the difference. I negotiate the resolution as the listing agent and protect as much of the original contract price as the situation allows. In some cases, ordering a second appraisal or formally challenging the first is the right move.


More for Houston sellers

The full seller-cluster of guides.

Pricing strategy, staging vendor tiers, property tax protest math, and the track record that backs every listing recommendation. Each page goes deep on the one decision in the title.

Plan the listing on your calendar.

One short call. I’ll walk through the 10-day pre-launch window, the Texas option period, and your target closing date — then send a written timeline you can plan the move around. No obligation, no pressure to list before you’re ready.

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