The cost of waiting, and when waiting wins
No honest agent should tell you to sell if selling is the wrong move for you. Sometimes the smartest decision is to hold, refinance, rent, or simply wait for a better moment. The point is to wait on purpose, with the numbers in front of you, not by default.
What waiting actually costs, and earns
Holding a home is never free, and it is never pure loss either. On the cost side you carry the mortgage interest, property taxes, insurance, and upkeep for every month you wait. On the other side, in a market that is appreciating, the home may gain value faster than those costs add up, and you keep collecting the benefits of ownership in the meantime.
The right question is the gap between those two. If your home is projected to appreciate more than it costs you to hold, waiting can pay you. If carrying costs are climbing faster than value, especially with rising insurance premiums in parts of Southern California, waiting can quietly cost you. You cannot know which without running your specific numbers.
Waiting is a real strategy, not a non-decision. Done with the numbers, it can be the most profitable of the three. Done blindly, it is the most expensive.
When waiting is the right call
- The market is moving in your favor and projected appreciation outpaces your carrying costs.
- A small window changes your taxes. Holding to a specific date can shift your capital gains exposure or qualify you for an exemption.
- Light improvements would meaningfully lift your sale price, and you have the time to make them before listing on the open market.
- Renting bridges the gap. If you do not need the equity now, the right tenant can cover your costs while the asset keeps working.
The Prop 19 timing most owners over 55 never hear
If you are 55 or older in California, Proposition 19 lets you carry your current property tax basis to a new home, even a more expensive one, anywhere in the state. For a longtime owner whose tax basis is far below today's value, that can be worth thousands of dollars a year for as long as you own the next home.
The catch is timing and sequencing. The transfer has rules about when you buy and sell, and how many times you can use it. Get the order right and you take a low tax base with you. Get it wrong and you leave that benefit on the table permanently. This single detail can change whether waiting, or selling now, is the better financial move, and most homeowners never have it explained to them. This is general information, not tax advice, so confirm the specifics with a qualified professional before you act.
The numbers favor holding, a tax or Prop 19 window is in play, or time and light improvements would raise your eventual sale price.
Carrying costs are outrunning appreciation, you need the equity now, or the home is becoming a burden to maintain.
The only way to know which side of that line you are on is to see your real numbers: your value today, your carrying costs, and what waiting is projected to cost or earn you.