
You've done everything you thought you were supposed to do. You listed your flat, sat back, and waited. Weeks passed. Viewings trickled in, then dried up. The silence on the other end of your agent's phone started to feel very loud.
If this sounds familiar, you're not imagining things. Selling property nowadays can be challenging. The market has cooled from its fever pitch. Buyers have options again. And the old "price high and wait for offers" move is leaving a lot of homeowners stuck.
Let's talk about why your unit isn't selling, and more importantly, what you can do about it.
This is probably the number one reason properties sit unsold.

Many homeowners tend to price their property based on personal expectations, what they hope to achieve, what they feel the home is worth, or how much they've spent on renovations and improvements. Emotional attachment often plays a big part too.
But buyers come prepared. They have already checked recent transaction prices, compared similar listings, and researched the market before they even arrange a viewing.
When there are several similar units on the market, buyers rarely feel pressured to negotiate or persuade a seller to adjust their price. So if your asking price feels even slightly unreasonable, most buyers will not bargain. They will simply move on to the next listing that appears better priced.
That is why getting the pricing right from the start is one of the most important parts of selling your home.
Last year, the HDB resale market started to moderate, recording 0% price index growth in Q4 2025, the first flat quarter in five years. Q1 2026 followed with a slight dip of 0.1%. National Development Minister Chee Hong Tat even confirmed in Parliament this April that the government expects this moderation to continue, especially considering the increasing BTO supply.
This opens up an alternative option for buyers who might otherwise have turned to the resale market. When a young couple can ballot for a shiny new flat in a transforming estate, the pressure on them to take your 10-year-old unit off your hands is considerably reduced.
Adding to that equation, a large number of flats will reach their Minimum Occupation Period (MOP) this year, thus entering the resale market. Meaning? Supply will be plentiful, and competition becomes stiffer.

The private sector isn't immune either. Based on URA's report, the overall private residential price index rose by 3.3% in 2025, making it the smallest YoY growth since 2020. Adding on to that, developers launched 11,482 uncompleted private residential properties (excluding ECs), nearly 5,000 more than the previous year.
That's a lot of fresh inventory. If you're reselling a private unit that's 5 to 10 years old in the same vicinity as an attractive new launch, you're not just competing with other resale units. You're competing with developer stock that comes with fresh leases, modern layouts, and progressive payment schemes.
So it's not just "resale vs resale" but also "resale vs brand new".

Lease balance is a real issue for many homeowners in mature estates. As a property ages, it becomes less desirable causing a decline in value. This phenomenon is commonly illustrated using what's called the Bala's curve.

It also seems that lease decay affects private properties more than HDB. Based on past transaction trends observed in the market, after the 20-year mark, resale transaction price of private leasehold properties can depreciate by over 30%, whereas HDB flats only drop by 3%.

But the more immediate problem for sellers is that CPF and bank loan restrictions can kick in well before the lease hits concerning levels.
Both of these mean that a buyer would need more cash upfront, which many simply don't have, shrinking your buyer pool.
At a certain point, holding on to your property can be a liability, so it's important to have a clear exit strategy. And definitely pay attention to your remaining lease.
That said, properties with very short remaining leases can still attract buyers, but mainly those who demand affordability discounts as compensation for the restricted CPF and financing options.
We eat with our eyes first, and likewise, choose property units based on its presentation. Buyers forming their first impressions are heavily influenced by what researchers call "ambient cues": lighting, smell, cleanliness, and a sense of spatial flow.
Some properties are just at a disadvantage regardless of how strong the marketing is.
For example:
These are details buyers notice. And since buyers have plenty of alternatives to choose from in today's market, they are far less willing to compromise on these issues unless there's a discount.
It means that not all properties are equally liquid at every stage of their lifespan.
A home that felt like a strong asset when you bought it can become harder to exit years later. Not because the market is broken, but because buyer profiles, financing limits, and competing supply have shifted. There are plenty of factors that come into play, it's not random.
Here's the good news: none of these challenges are insurmountable, as long as you have the right approach.
Check resale transacted prices, not asking prices, in your block and estate over the last three to six months. This is your anchor, not the listing price you saw on a property listing last week.
If you're unsure where to find this information, feel free to speak to our agents. We have proprietary tools such as the PropNex Investment Suite, which provides real market data based on recent transaction prices, surrounding competition, and current market trends. These can help you price your property more accurately instead of relying on guesswork.
Work backwards from what your likely buyer can actually afford. If your price is pushing them into territory where cash savings become a constraint, you're already losing buyers.
If your flat is older, engage your agent in a frank conversation about how the remaining lease is affecting your potential buyer pool and their financing options. Price this proactively, rather than having it emerge as a sticking point after buyers fall in love and then can't get the numbers to work.
Good photography, a deep clean, minor touch-ups, and decluttering will make better first impressions. Plus it might help your unit stand out against other similar units.
If you can afford to wait for the right buyer rather than accepting the first lowball offer, a little patience is worth more than a hasty price cut.
Selling a home has always required strategy. The current environment rewards sellers who understand the data, price with discipline, present their unit properly, and genuinely empathise with the financial constraints their buyers are navigating.
The buyers are out there. But in today's market, they are more informed, more selective, and far less willing to stretch.
The sellers who succeed are not the ones who wait the longest, they are the ones who understand how their property fits into the market, and price it accordingly.