By Bryan Crabtree

The Charleston-area real estate market has shifted sharply. Inventory has risen, buyer urgency has cooled, and many homes that once sold quickly are now sitting for months. In this environment, success is no longer about timing or optimism — it’s about strategy, execution, and adaptability.

One of the biggest risks sellers face today is hiring an agent who is unprepared for difficult conditions or unwilling to confront what isn’t working.

The Market Reality Sellers Can’t Ignore

Across the region, competition has intensified:

At one point, there were 35 active homes for sale in Dunes West

In Cane Bay, inventory exceeded 300 active listings

Downtown Charleston saw extended days on market and shrinking buyer pools

These conditions expose weak listing strategies quickly — and reward agents who understand how to differentiate homes when buyers have choices.

Dunes West Case Study: Selling in a Saturated Market

When I listed and sold 3601 Colonel Vanderhorst Drive in Dunes West, the neighborhood was experiencing unusually high inventory, with dozens of similar homes competing for attention.

What allowed this home to stand out was not aggressive price cutting, but intentional differentiation. From day one, the listing focused on:

Professional photography that emphasized light, layout, and livability rather than just rooms

A clear, buyer-oriented narrative that explained how the home fit lifestyle and use — not just features

AI-optimized language designed to surface the home in modern search and conversational discovery

Pricing strategy tied to absorption rates and buyer behavior, not outdated peak sales

While many competing listings blended together, this home sold while others remained on the market, illustrating how preparation and positioning matter most when inventory rises.

Cane Bay, Summerville: 304 Competing Homes — One Sold in 8 Days

In Cane Bay, I listed and sold two separate homes in a market with 304 active listings.

One of those homes had previously been listed for over a year with another agent, unsuccessfully.

When I listed the property, the issues were clear:

Flat, poorly composed photography

A generic, builder-style description with no buyer context

No consideration for AI-driven search or digital discovery

Pricing presented without explanation or strategy

After launching the home with professional visuals, a fully rebuilt digital narrative, and disciplined pricing aligned with current buyer behavior, I sold the home in just 8 days — in one of the most oversupplied segments of the Summerville market.

Downtown Charleston: Selling Through Noise and Resistance

At 20 Poulnot Street in downtown Charleston, I personally listed and sold the property under challenging conditions.

A competing downtown broker publicly criticized the listing and claimed the home could not be sold. Rather than react, I stayed focused on:

Clear market positioning and realistic buyer expectations

Accurate, concise storytelling across all platforms

Eliminating confusion and misinformation

Maintaining pricing discipline without chasing the market

The result: I sold 20 Poulnot Street in under two months, just under full price, at a time when many downtown listings stalled.

Red Flags Sellers Should Watch For When Interviewing Agents

These listings highlight recurring warning signs sellers should take seriously:

Poor or amateur photography in prior listings

Generic descriptions that list features without explaining value

No understanding of AI-driven search and buyer discovery

Pricing advice based on hope rather than market data

Blaming the market instead of adjusting strategy

In difficult markets, weak agents explain why homes aren’t selling. Strong agents explain what to do differently — and then execute.

What Still Works, Even in a Tough Market

Buyers continue to respond to:

Clear value narratives

Accurate, defensible pricing

Professional presentation

Listings that are easy to understand online

Confident, data-driven guidance

What has changed is that mistakes are punished faster, and poor marketing is no longer hidden by demand.

Final Thought

In markets like Mount Pleasant and Summerville, sellers don’t need reassurance — they need competence.

When inventory is high and attention is scarce, the right agent doesn’t just list a home. They differentiate it, control the narrative, and adapt faster than the competition.

That is how homes sell — even when conditions are working against them.

Bryan Crabtree

Luxury Real Estate Advisor

Christie’s International Real Estate

Charleston Luxury Listing Agent · Mount Pleasant & Summerville Real Estate Expert · AI-Optimized Home Marketing · Strategic Repositioning · Seller Representation · Market Cycle Expertise · South Carolina Lowcountry Real Estate

Bryan Crabtree personally listed and sold each of the properties referenced above using aggressive, AI-driven marketing and strategic positioning. In the past year, he sold 12 homes in under 30 days that had previously sat on the market for months with other agents, delivering results in some of the most competitive conditions Charleston County has seen.