Selling property in Nuremberg: Why the first price is often the most important decision in the whole process

When a sale becomes bumpy later on, it is surprisingly often due to a decision made at the very beginning: the first price. Not the „price at the end“, not the „price after negotiation“, but the first price with which you enter the market in Nuremberg. When selling property in Nuremberg in 2025, the first price is the most important factor. It determines which buyers come forward, how quickly trust is established, how stable negotiations are - and whether you end up selling calmly or slipping into corrections.

In this article, I explain why the first price is so important, what typical mistakes owners make and how I, as a real estate agent in Nuremberg, derive the first price so that it is realistic and still remains strong.

Why the first prize has so much impact

The first prize influences three things at the same time:

Target group: Who is addressed and who is not?

Perception: Does the offer seem plausible or „strange“?

Dynamics: Is there speed or scepticism?

And these three factors determine the negotiating situation before anyone has even seen your front door.

Market value: The best first price is the one that meets the market

The market value is the price that can realistically be realised under normal market conditions. An initial price that is close to the market value is effective:

reputable

affordable

Comparable

Stable in negotiations

A price that deviates significantly from this almost always triggers problems - regardless of whether it is too high or too low.

I derive the market value:

Standard land value as location orientation

Market analysis in the neighbourhood

Reference properties with real realised sales prices

Material value method for houses

Income capitalisation approach for rented properties

So the first prize is a position, not an experiment.

Standard land value: Buyers use it as a plausibility anchor for the first price

The standard land value is not a price formula, but it does provide a framework. At the first price, buyers ask themselves: „Does this roughly match the location?“ If not, the price negotiation starts immediately.

Too high: „It only works if it goes down.“

Too low: „There's something wrong or you can press it.“

The first price should therefore not „stand out“, but „look coherent“.

Market analysis: Why the first price in Nuremberg is particularly sensitive

Nuremberg is not a homogeneous market. Prices can vary greatly even within a single neighbourhood. A market analysis shows:

In Gostenhof and Johannis it varies depending on the street, condition and house quality.

In Langwasser, it is often the investment, house money and action planning that decide.

In Eibach, Reichelsdorf and Katzwang, the condition and layout of the properties have a strong impact.

In Wöhrd and Tullnau, demand and lifestyle are often strong, but buyers expect clear processes and clean documentation.

If the first price ignores these differences, you will attract interest, but not the right buyers.

Reference objects: Why the first price is blind without real comparisons

Many owners are guided by adverts. Advertisements are a wish. Reference properties are reality.

Reference objects must be suitable for:

same micro-location

similar condition

similar year of construction and building type

for flats with similar house charges and reserves

comparable time of sale

Without suitable reference objects, the first price is more of a hope than a strategy.

What happens if the first price is too high

Few viewings, but lots of „I'll have a look“.

Buyers wait to see if you reduce.

Later, every reduction seems like „now he has to“.

Negotiating position decreases.

The price is not only „corrected“, it is devalued.

What happens if the first price is too low

Lots of enquiries, lots of viewings, lots of noise.

Many unsuitable interested parties and price hunters.

Suspicion: „Why so cheap?“

Tough negotiation because buyers suspect „still room for improvement“.

Paradoxically, a low first price can lead to poorer offers if it attracts the wrong buyers.

Asset value method and capitalised earnings value method: The first price must fit the logic of the property

Material value method: For houses, substance and condition are key. The first price must reflect investment requirements, otherwise financing or negotiations will fail.

Income capitalisation approach: For rented properties, income and cost structure count. A first price that does not match the income logic will deter investors or attract the wrong ones.

The right evaluation logic protects the first prize.

Incidental purchase costs: Why the first price must always be affordable

Incidental purchase costs such as land transfer tax, notary and land registry costs are fixed. Many buyers cannot „simply pay more“, even if they wanted to. If the first price is too high, some buyers will drop out immediately.

A first price that ignores affordability reduces the market - and that ultimately costs money.

Did you know: The first price decides whether you negotiate later or just react

If the first price is right, you are negotiating from a strong position. If it is not right, you are reacting to the market - and the market is rarely gentle in negotiations.

Step-by-step: How to set a stable first price in Nuremberg

  1. Property analysis: condition, floor plan, location, special features.
  2. Secure documents: for flats WEG, for houses modernisation and energy performance certificate.
  3. Classify standard land value: Location orientation, not price formula.
  4. Market analysis in the district: demand 2025, buyer groups, competitive offers.
  5. Check reference properties: real sales, truly comparable.
  6. Apply the method: Material value method or capitalised earnings value method appropriate to the property.
  7. Derive market value: comprehensible, stable in negotiations.
  8. Define pricing strategy: realistic, affordable, without „testing“.

Conclusion: Those who set the right first price sell more calmly and usually better in Nuremberg

When selling property in Nuremberg, the first price 2025 is the most important decision because it determines the target group, dynamics and negotiating position. If you use the market value, standard land value, market analysis and reference properties properly and apply the appropriate logic via the asset value method or income capitalisation method, you are not starting with hope, but with strategy.

If you want to sell your property in Nuremberg and want to set the first price in such a way that it attracts buyers and remains stable at the same time, I will accompany you as a real estate agent in Nuremberg with a well-founded valuation and a sales process that does not rely on corrections, but on a secure conclusion.

Christoffer Davis

Christoffer Davis

Real estate agent (IHK)
Property valuer (IHK)

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Please contact me

Real estate agent in Nuremberg

Davis & Partner

Rathsbergstr. 70
90411 Nuremberg

info@immobilienmakler-nuernberg.de

0911 88183996

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