
Is Now a Good Time to Sell Your Home in Bloomington, Indiana?
This is the question I am hearing more than almost any other right now. Sellers who bought 5 or 10 years ago and have watched their equity grow. People who need to right-size. Homeowners who have been watching prices soften and wondering whether they missed the window.
The honest answer is more nuanced than a yes or no. But after 20-plus years in this market, I can tell you what the data shows, what I am seeing in actual transactions, and what that means for you if you are thinking about listing.
What the Numbers Show Right Now
The most recent Indiana Regional MLS data for Monroe County, through May 7, 2026:
•Median sale price: $323,698, flat month-over-month, down 10% year-over-year
•Sale-to-list ratio: 95.5%, meaning sellers are getting close to asking price on well-priced homes
•Median days on market: 28 days, down 36% year-over-year
•Active inventory: 594 homes, up 10% year-over-year
•Months of supply: 4.9 months
•Closed sales: 142 homes
I want to spend a minute on what these numbers actually mean, because raw stats without context can send you in the wrong direction.
The median price being down 10% from a year ago is real, and sellers need to know it. If you bought in 2020 or 2021, you still have significant equity. If you were expecting to net what your neighbor got in the spring of 2024, that number has moved.
But here is what the doom-and-gloom reading misses. Homes are selling in 28 days. A year ago that number was around 44 days. The market is moving faster, not slower. And the 95.5% sale-to-list ratio means that correctly priced homes are not sitting through round after round of price reductions. They are closing near asking price.
4.9 months of supply puts Bloomington in balanced market territory. Not a seller's market like 2021 and 2022, but not a buyer's market where sellers are desperate either. The shift is real. The floor has not fallen out.
What Does 'Priced Correctly' Actually Mean in This Market?
This is where I see sellers run into trouble. The instinct is to list high and see what happens. In 2022 that worked. In this market it backfires.
Buyers in Bloomington right now are doing their homework. They know what sold in your neighborhood, they know what is currently active, and they have seen enough price reductions to recognize an overpriced listing immediately. An overpriced home does not get low offers. It gets no offers. Then it sits. Then the price drop signals to the market that something is wrong, even when nothing is.
I wrote about this dynamic in detail in How to Sell a Home in Bloomington Without Guessing on Price. The short version: pricing to the current market is not leaving money on the table. It is the strategy that actually gets you to the closing table.
The Preparation Gap Is Bigger Than Most Sellers Expect
Lower prices have not made buyers less demanding. If anything, the opposite. Buyers who are stretching to afford a home at today's rates are scrutinizing everything. Inspection requests are more detailed. Repair negotiations are sharper.
The sellers who are doing well right now are the ones who did the work before they listed. Fresh paint, cleaned-up landscaping, minor deferred maintenance addressed. Not a full renovation. Just a home that presents well and does not give a buyer a reason to walk or ask for a credit.
The most common mistakes I see sellers make all come back to the same thing: underestimating how much condition matters when buyers have more options than they did two years ago.
Should You Wait for the Market to Come Back?
People ask me this constantly. My answer has not changed in 20 years: I do not know when the market will shift, and neither does anyone else.
What I do know is that waiting has a cost. Every month you hold a home you need to sell is another month of carrying costs, maintenance, and opportunity cost. And if rates drop and prices recover, more inventory typically enters the market at the same time, which means more competition for your listing.
Timing the market is harder than it looks from the outside. Preparing your home well, pricing it accurately, and marketing it properly is something you can actually control.
What About the Local Economy?
There was a lot of noise earlier this spring about job cuts in Bloomington, and it warranted attention. Any time a major employer reduces headcount, it affects real families and it affects the housing market.
But Bloomington's buyer pool is more diverse than a single employer story. Cook Medical is headquartered here. Crane Naval Surface Warfare Center draws defense professionals from across the region. IU Health, Simtra BioPharma, and Indiana University itself all feed steady demand. Monroe County unemployment was 2.4% as of late 2025. Demand has softened from the peak, but it has not evaporated.
If you want the full picture of what the job situation actually means for the local housing market, I covered it in depth in this post from May.
So Is It a Good Time to Sell?
For sellers who price accurately, prepare their home, and work with someone who knows this market: yes, it is a workable market. Homes are moving. Buyers are active. The 28-day median means you are not looking at a 90-day slog if you do your part.
For sellers who want 2022 prices with 2026 inventory levels: that combination does not exist right now. The market has recalibrated. Working with it gets you to the closing table. Fighting it costs you time and money.
If you want to understand what buyers are doing and thinking right now, this look at the summer market outlook gives you the full picture from the other side of the transaction.
If you want to know what your home is worth in this market and what it would take to sell it well, that conversation starts with a call. I will give you a straight answer, not a number designed to win a listing.
Call or text me at (812) 360-3863.
Source: Indiana Regional MLS, Monroe County Single-Family Data, through May 7, 2026.
Lesa Miller, Broker | REALTOR®
Lesa Miller Real Estate
RE/MAX Acclaimed Properties
Serving Bloomington, Bedford and the Surrounding Indiana Communities
(812) 360-3863
[email protected]
https://LesaMillerRealEstate.com
