
Days on market gets thrown around in real estate conversations constantly. Low days on market equals a seller’s market. High days on market equals a buyer’s market. That is the shorthand version – and it is incomplete.
If you are trying to make an actual decision about whether to buy, sell, or wait, you need to understand what this number really signals and what it does not.
Days on market – commonly referred to as DOM – counts the number of calendar days a listing is active on the MLS before the seller accepts an offer. The clock starts when the property goes live to the public and stops when it goes under contract.
In a balanced market, average DOM typically runs 30 to 60 days. In a strong seller’s market you will see averages in the 10 to 20 day range. In a soft market with excess inventory, averages push well past 90 days.
In Whittier, homes are currently averaging approximately 50 days on market – just under the national average of 52 days. That number tells you something specific about how buyers are behaving in this market and what sellers can realistically expect. It signals consistent, steady demand – not a frenzy, but not a soft market either. Well-priced homes here are moving, and they are moving predictably.
When days on market are consistently low, your approach as a buyer has to reflect that reality.
Waiting around to see if a price drops is a losing strategy for most listings in this market. If a property is priced correctly and shows well in Whittier, Pico Rivera, Hacienda Heights, La Puente, or West Covina, it will see serious buyer activity within days of hitting the MLS – not weeks.
Low DOM also means your financing needs to be in order before you find a home, not after. A pre-approval from several months ago that has not been updated is not the same as a current one. Sellers reviewing multiple offers pay close attention to how solid the financing looks – and in a competitive situation, a stale pre-approval can cost you the home.
It does not mean you should overpay or waive protections you need. But it does mean that sitting on a decision for two or three weeks while you think it over typically means watching that home close for someone else.
One more thing worth knowing: set up property alerts through your agent’s MLS feed rather than relying solely on Zillow or Redfin. Third-party sites frequently lag behind the MLS by 24 to 48 hours. In a fast-moving market, that lag matters.
Consistent low days on market is good news for sellers – with one important qualifier.
The averages reflect what is happening with well-priced, well-presented homes. The listings that are sitting well past 50 days in this market are almost always overpriced, have a condition issue, or have a presentation problem. Buyers in Southeast LA County and the eastern San Gabriel Valley are still selective. They move quickly when they find what they want – and they scroll right past what they do not.
Pricing correctly from day one matters more than almost any other decision you make as a seller. A home that sits even 20 to 30 days longer than the market average starts developing a perception problem. Buyers and their agents begin to wonder what is wrong with it – even when the answer is nothing except the price.
Relisting at a lower price after a stale listing does not fully reset that perception. The days on market history is visible to every buyer’s agent pulling comparable sales in your neighborhood.
The DOM picture is not identical across every community in Southeast LA County. Whittier’s established neighborhoods – particularly in the Uptown district and the hillside communities – tend to attract buyers who have done their research and move decisively when the right property appears. Pico Rivera, La Puente, and West Covina each have their own absorption patterns depending on price range and neighborhood condition.
As a general rule across this entire market right now: entry and mid-range price points are moving faster than upper price ranges. If you are buying or selling above $1,000,000, expect a slightly different dynamic with more negotiating room on both sides. If you are in the mid-range, the market is active and preparation on both sides matters significantly.
If you are a seller in Whittier or the surrounding communities with a home in good condition and realistic price expectations, the current market conditions are working in your favor.
If you are a buyer in this same market, preparation and the ability to make a clear-headed decision quickly are what separate the buyers who get homes from the ones who keep losing them.
Want a current days on market breakdown for a specific neighborhood in Whittier, Pico Rivera, Hacienda Heights, La Puente, or West Covina? I pull these numbers regularly and can walk you through exactly what the data means for your specific situation.
Reach out at xprtrealestate.com.
Edgar Cuevas Team is a licensed Broker in the
state of California and is a leading authority in Whittier, in Los Angeles County, California area real estate.
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Edgar Cuevas Team is a licensed Broker in the
state of California and is a leading authority in Whittier, in Los Angeles.
© 2026 XprtRealEstate.com. All Rights Reserved.
Meet The Team
Blog
Featured Listings
Sell Your Home
Buy A House
Search Homes





