New York real estate is often analyzed through familiar signals such as pricing trends, inventory levels, and interest rate movements. But according to real estate attorney and broker Alexan...
House Hunting in a Hot Market? Know What You're Getting Into




For most of the country, buying a home in 2026 looks roughly like it always has: find a neighborhood, get pre-approved, make an offer, negotiate. Nationally, the housing market is projected to remain steady this year, with minimal price growth and slow sales. But in certain markets, the picture is much more dynamic.
In Hartford, Connecticut, housing supply sits roughly 63% below pre-pandemic levels, and more than two-thirds of homes sold above asking price last year. In Boston, limited stock and consistent demand have kept competition fierce. In Berkeley and the greater East Bay — where proximity to Silicon Valley, distinctive architecture, and cultural diversity drive relentless demand — homes routinely draw ten or more offers within days of listing, and almost nothing comes to market below $1.5 million.
Buying in one of these hot markets requires a fundamentally different kind of preparation than most people walk in with — something Victoria Bell, a realtor at Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate in Berkeley, California, has watched play out with client after client. “Our market does not reflect what most of the United States looks like,” Bell says. “And most buyers don’t realize that until they’re already in it.”
The New Terms of Buying
Speed is only part of the adjustment. What catches buyers off guard in markets like the East Bay isn’t just the pace — it’s how much the process has shifted in the seller’s favor, and how little room remains for the kind of deliberation most people expect.
Clean offers are now the baseline. Contingencies that once gave buyers standard protections — inspection periods, financing clauses — are largely off the table in competitive situations. A 3% deposit is expected within 24 hours of acceptance. Buyers are frequently asked to commit, financially and emotionally, before they’ve had time to think it through.
“You have to be able to make a decision very quickly to write the offer,” Bell says. “There’s no time to second-guess yourself once you’re in it.”
For buyers accustomed to negotiating, or even to sleeping on a decision, the adjustment is significant. The leverage that exists in slower markets — the ability to ask questions, request repairs, walk away without penalty — largely disappears. What replaces it is preparation: financial clarity, defined priorities, and a clear sense of what you’re willing to commit to before you ever walk through a door.
Hard Decisions
Speed changes the math, but it doesn’t fully explain why hot markets are so difficult to navigate. The deeper challenge is that buyers are being asked to make some of the most consequential decisions of their lives — decisions that will affect their finances, their children’s schools, their aging parents — with almost no time to process them.
Bell sees this play out in two patterns that have become defining features of today’s buyer. The first is families anchoring their search to school districts before they’ve even identified a neighborhood. The second is the growing number of households trying to solve multiple generational problems in a single purchase — finding a home that works for young children now and aging parents later.
“You’re not just buying a house,” Bell says. “You’re making a twenty-year decision in a twenty-four hour window.”
These aren’t impulse purchases. They’re complex, emotionally loaded choices being compressed into a timeline designed for transactions. And the stress of that compression doesn’t disappear just because the market demands it. It accumulates — in second-guessing, in family disagreements, in paralysis at exactly the moment when clarity is most needed. What makes this particularly hard to prepare for is that none of it shows up in the listing.
How Your Broker Can Help
Most people evaluate brokers the way they evaluate most service providers: reviews, referrals, track record. Those things matter. But in a high-velocity market, they don’t tell you what you most need to know.
What a competitive market actually demands from a broker goes beyond neighborhood expertise or negotiating skill. It requires someone who can help you make a sound decision under pressure — who understands not just the transaction, but the state you’re in when you’re making it. Someone who has seen family disagreements stall an offer, watched a client freeze at the moment of commitment, and knows how to move people through uncertainty without pushing them past their limits.
Bell’s path to real estate ran through crisis counseling, bereavement work, and years helping families navigate the logistics and emotions of placing aging parents in senior living. She didn’t bring that background into real estate by accident — the situations her clients face demanded it. “Every job I had before this has been similar,” she says. “You’re helping people find their place and adjust to significant change.”
That’s a value proposition that’s different from the one most broker profiles advertise. But in a market where the emotional and logistical complexity of buying has outpaced what most people are prepared for, it may be the most useful question a hiring client can ask: not just what does this broker know about the market, but what do they know about people — and what happens when the two collide.
How to Know If You’re Ready
Readiness in a hot market isn’t a feeling. It’s a set of conditions — and the buyers who fare best are the ones who have assessed them honestly before they start looking, not while they’re standing in a kitchen trying to decide in real time. The financial side is the most straightforward. In markets like the East Bay, where offers are expected to be clean and deposits due within 24 hours, financing needs to be not just approved but settled. There’s no room to discover a problem mid-offer.
But financial readiness is only part of it. Bell works with each client to assess what she calls their profile — a realistic picture of their priorities, their timeline, and their tolerance for the process itself. That means knowing which tradeoffs you’re actually willing to make, not which ones you think you should be willing to make. It means having the school district conversation before you fall in love with a house that’s in the wrong one. It means deciding, in advance, how you’ll handle a loss — because in markets with ten or more offers per listing, most buyers will lose before they win.
“Part of my job is to help people figure out what their profile is,” Bell says, “and how that measures up with how to get in or out of real estate the best way possible.”
The buyers who struggle most in competitive markets, Bell has found, are those who treat preparation as optional — who assume the right house will make the hard parts easier. It rarely does. What makes the hard parts easier is knowing exactly what you’re walking into, and having the right people around you when you get there.
About the Expert: Victoria Bell is a real estate agent at Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate in Berkeley, California, specializing in residential real estate in the East Bay. Before real estate, she built a career in crisis counseling, trauma advocacy, and senior living sales — a background in human behavior and life transitions that she brings directly to her work.
This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
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