A property for sale that sits on the market for six months or more loses value in ways that go beyond the price tag. Buyers notice listing age. Agents start discounting their advice based on it. And the carrying costs — service charges, security, maintenance, and opportunity cost on the capital tied up — compound silently while the price sits unchanged.
Most prolonged time-on-market outcomes in the Nigerian property market trace back to identifiable pricing mistakes made at or before listing. These are the most common ones, and how to avoid them.
1. Pricing Based on Capital Appreciation Expectations Rather Than Current Market Evidence
Property sellers in Nigeria often approach pricing from a capital growth mindset: "I paid X, I have held for Y years, therefore I should achieve X plus an appreciation premium." The market does not validate this logic automatically. Achieved sale prices are determined by what qualified buyers are willing and able to pay right now — not by how long you have held the asset or what you believe it should be worth.
In segments that experienced rapid appreciation between 2020 and 2023 — certain Lekki estates, Ikoyi, and parts of Abuja's premium zones — some sellers are still pricing against the 2022–2023 high-water mark in a market that has since been affected by mortgage cost increases, purchasing power compression, and new competing supply. The result is a listing that sits at an aspirational price while comparable properties transact below it.
Fix: Build your asking price from completed comparable sales in the last 90 days, not from your acquisition cost, not from a neighbour's asking price, and not from the value an agent quoted two years ago. Agents who know the current market will show you transaction evidence. Agents who cannot are guessing.
2. Ignoring the Full Cost Burden Buyers Are Financing
Nigerian property buyers — particularly those buying with any form of financing or savings plan — are not just evaluating your asking price. They are calculating the total cost of completing the transaction: stamp duty (typically 1.5% in Lagos), legal fees (1–3%), agency commission (typically 5–10% of sale price), and potentially a capital gains tax liability on your side that may affect your net proceeds and therefore your flexibility on price.
A ₦120,000,000 asking price with ₦1,800,000 in stamp duty, ₦2,400,000 in legal fees, and ₦10,800,000 in agency fees is a ₦135,000,000 total transaction cost for the buyer. If a comparable property in the same estate is asking ₦115,000,000 — even with similar transaction costs — the buyer's all-in number is more than ₦7,000,000 lower. That gap matters, especially when buyers are stretching to a budget ceiling.
Fix: Understand the full cost of your transaction from the buyer's perspective. If your property is priced at or near a buyer's budget ceiling, the transaction costs alone may price them out. Build modest flexibility into your asking price to accommodate this reality, or be prepared to negotiate on the headline figure.
3. Anchoring to the Highest Comparable Asking Price, Not the Highest Completed Sale
One of the most damaging inputs to a seller's price expectation is a browse through active listings showing what other properties in the area are asking. Asking prices are not transaction prices. In a market with elevated supply in certain estate tiers, a significant portion of the "comparable asking" evidence is simply other sellers making the same mistake you are being advised to avoid.
The meaningful data is what has actually transacted — properties that went from "listed" to "sold" within a reasonable timeframe. In most Nigerian estates, this data is accessible through agents who have been active in that location for multiple years. It is the only reliable anchor for a listing price that will attract serious buyers.
Fix: Ask your agent specifically: "What has sold in this estate or on this road in the last 90 days, and what did it actually transact at?" If they cannot answer with specifics, get a second agent opinion from someone who can.
4. Treating the Asking Price as a Fixed Position From Day One
Some sellers — particularly those who are not under time pressure — list at an aspirational price with the private intention of waiting for the right buyer. This approach works in very thin, tightly constrained supply markets. In most Nigerian urban property markets right now, where motivated sellers are competing for a pool of qualified buyers with credit or liquidity constraints, it typically produces months of low-quality inquiry followed by a price reduction that happens too late to benefit from fresh listing traffic.
The first two to three weeks of a sale listing generate the highest buyer interest. This is when the property is new, when agents are active with it, and when it sits prominently in search results. A price that is too high in this window misses the buyers who would have moved quickly at a realistic number — and those buyers rarely come back after the listing ages.
Fix: Set a pre-agreed reduction schedule before you list. If you receive fewer than three genuine buyer inquiries — not agent fishing calls, but documented buyer interest — within the first 10 days, drop to your secondary price point. The cost of acting early is far lower than the cost of an aged listing.
5. Confusing "Price on Application" With Exclusivity
Withholding the asking price from a sale listing does not signal a premium property. In the Nigerian market, where buyers — particularly diaspora purchasers and corporate buyers — are doing initial screening remotely and across multiple platforms, an unlisted price is an invitation to move to the next listing. The premium properties in Banana Island and Ikoyi that genuinely sell through a POA process do so through established agent relationships, not through passive listings.
For the vast majority of sale listings, hidden pricing reduces inquiry volume from qualified buyers and attracts speculative inquiries from parties who have no intention of proceeding at any realistic figure.
Fix: Publish your asking price. If you are open to negotiation, price at a level that invites serious interest and leaves room to discuss. The buyers you want are not going to call to find out whether your property is in their range — they will move to the next listing that shows one.
6. Not Accounting for Holding Costs When Evaluating a "Below Asking" Offer
Sellers who reject an offer that is 5–8% below asking — believing they will achieve closer to asking from the next buyer — often fail to account for the monthly holding cost of waiting. If the property is currently vacant, those costs include service charge, security levy, basic maintenance, and the opportunity cost on the capital that remains tied up in the asset.
A ₦5,000,000 per year service charge burden on a property that sits unsold for an additional four months represents a ₦1,666,000 holding cost against a ₦6,000,000–₦8,000,000 "gap" the seller was trying to close by rejecting the offer. When the next offer comes in at a similar level — or lower, as the listing ages — the net position is almost always worse than accepting the first realistic offer.
Fix: Calculate your monthly holding cost before deciding on any offer. A realistic offer from a documented, qualified buyer with confirmed financing or verified funds is worth more than an aspirational asking price with no buyer in sight.
The market does not wait for your price to become right
The buyers who are active in your price segment right now are making decisions now. They are comparing your property against alternatives, doing their own transaction cost calculations, and moving to well-priced properties quickly. A price that the market consistently rejects does not eventually find a buyer — it finds a buyer only after a reduction that arrives later than it should have, at a negotiating disadvantage created by listing age.
The sellers who achieve the best net outcomes in the Nigerian market are the ones who price with current evidence, set a clear review trigger before listing, and respond to market signals without ego. The asking price is not the goal. The completed sale, at a good net figure, in a reasonable timeframe, is.
