Every home listed for sale in the Massachusetts MLS carries a Days on Market counter. It starts at zero the moment the listing goes live and ticks upward, publicly, for every buyer, agent, and curious neighbor to see. In a market where perception shapes behavior, that number carries weight far beyond its literal meaning — and understanding what it actually signals, versus what people assume it signals, is one of the most practical advantages a buyer or seller can have on the North Shore.

This guide is a complete, honest breakdown of how DOM works in Massachusetts, what it means in the specific context of each community Susan Gormady serves, how buyers should use it when evaluating properties, and what sellers must understand about DOM before they set a price and launch a listing. There is a lot of received wisdom about DOM — some of it accurate, some of it outdated, some of it simply wrong. What follows is grounded in how this market actually behaves in 2026.

What Days on Market Actually Measures — and What It Does Not

Before interpreting DOM, it helps to understand exactly what it measures. In the Massachusetts MLS system, Days on Market is the cumulative number of calendar days a property has been in active status since it was first listed. The clock starts when the listing goes live and runs until the property goes under contract (status changes to “pending” or “under agreement”) or is withdrawn from the market.

What DOM does not capture is equally important to understand:

7–10Typical days on market for well-priced homes in competitive North Shore towns during spring 2026
21–30Days on market that generally trigger the first serious seller consideration of a price reduction
How much more likely a buyer is to make a below-ask offer once a listing exceeds 45 days on market, based on North Shore market patterns

The DOM Spectrum: A Practical Guide for North Shore Buyers

Not all DOM ranges mean the same thing. Here is a practical framework for interpreting DOM in the context of the North Shore Massachusetts market as it exists in mid-2026:

0–7 Days
Active Selling Season Standard — Move QuicklyIn a competitive community like Reading, Wakefield, Lynnfield, or Andover, a well-priced, well-presented home going under contract in fewer than seven days is entirely normal and expected from February through June. Zero to seven days does not indicate desperation or problems — it indicates the home was priced correctly and showed well. In these markets, buyers who need more than a week to make a decision on a home they genuinely want are routinely outcompeted.
8–21 Days
Normal Market Absorption — No Red FlagsEight to twenty-one days is the normal range for homes that received early interest but went through a standard offer, inspection, and due diligence cycle before going under agreement. It may also reflect a home at the higher end of a price range where the buyer pool is thinner and more deliberate. In most North Shore communities, a 14-day DOM is unremarkable. Buyers should evaluate these homes on their merits without reading significance into the number.
22–44 Days
Worth Understanding — Ask the Right QuestionsTwenty-two to forty-four days is the range where buyers should become curious rather than dismissive. In a market as competitive as Reading, Wakefield, or Lynnfield, a home in this DOM band has likely received traffic but has not converted that traffic into an accepted offer. The question is why. Common explanations include: the original list price was above market and the seller has not yet adjusted; there is a condition issue that buyers are discovering in showings; the home has a specific feature that limits its buyer pool (unusual floor plan, busy road, small yard for the price); or — and this is important — the home simply needs a buyer whose specific preferences match a property that is otherwise sound. Buyers should schedule showings and ask their agent to research the showing history and any price changes.
45–90 Days
Stale Listing Territory — Negotiating Opportunity or Caveat EmptorA home with 45 or more days on market in an active selling season on the North Shore has a story. In many cases, that story is overpricing: the seller launched at an aspirational price, received few or no offers, and has been sitting while the market moved on. In other cases, there is a material issue — inspection-related, title-related, or condition-related — that has caused buyers to pass. Buyers considering these properties should review the full listing history, request disclosure of any prior offers, and consider whether a professional pre-inspection before making an offer would help clarify risk. There are genuine opportunities in this range for buyers willing to do their homework.
90+ Days
Significant Overhang — Proceed with Professional GuidanceNinety or more days on market in the current North Shore environment is a meaningful signal. Properties in this range have typically been seen, evaluated, and passed over by a substantial number of serious buyers. The most common cause is persistent overpricing; a seller who has not adjusted to market feedback after three or more months is either not motivated to sell at market value, has a financial constraint that prevents them from accepting current pricing, or has a specific condition issue that has never been fully disclosed. Buyers who find value in these properties should negotiate with the full knowledge that the market has already rendered a verdict — and should be prepared for a longer, more complex transaction process.

Why DOM Benchmarks Differ by Community on the North Shore

One of the most common DOM interpretation mistakes is applying a single benchmark to all communities. The North Shore is not a single market — it is a collection of distinct hyperlocal markets, each with its own median DOM, its own absorption rate, and its own price-point dynamics. A 30-day DOM in Malden means something completely different from a 30-day DOM in Andover or Lynnfield.

Here is how DOM context varies across the communities Susan Gormady serves:

Reading and Lynnfield: Fastest-Moving Markets

Reading and Lynnfield consistently rank among the fastest-absorbing markets on the North Shore. The combination of top-tier school districts, strong community identity, and limited inventory creates a dynamic in which well-priced homes in the $700,000–$1.2 million range routinely generate multiple offers within the first week. In Reading and Lynnfield, a home with 20 or more days on market is genuinely unusual for the spring and early summer selling season. When it does occur, it demands investigation. The most common explanations are a list price above what the market supports at that specific address, a condition issue visible during showings, or a highly specific property configuration (no garage, limited yard, difficult floor plan) that narrows the buyer pool.

For buyers in these communities, the practical implication is clear: when a new listing appears in Reading or Lynnfield, scheduling a showing within 24 hours and being prepared to make a decision within 48–72 hours is not being rash — it is being competitive. The DOM clock in these markets moves fast.

Wakefield and Melrose: Competitive but Slightly Broader Ranges

Wakefield and Melrose share Reading and Lynnfield’s strong transit access and active buyer demand, but their housing stocks are somewhat more diverse in age, style, and condition. This diversity means that absorption rates vary more within each community than they do in the more uniform markets of Reading and Lynnfield. A turnkey renovated colonial in Wakefield’s lake district may go under contract in five days; a dated cape-style home on a busy road in the same town may sit for 40 days without a single offer. Buyers should calibrate their DOM expectations based on the specific property type and location within the community, not just the town average.

For sellers in Wakefield and Melrose, this diversity of absorption rates makes accurate, neighborhood-specific pricing especially critical. A broad town-level median DOM figure will mask the fact that homes in desirable pockets sell quickly while homes in less sought-after locations require more time, more marketing, and often more competitive pricing to attract offers.

Andover: Price-Tier DOM Variation

Andover’s market spans a wide price range — from entry-level condominiums and townhomes near the town center to luxury single-family estates on multi-acre lots in excess of $2 million. DOM benchmarks in Andover vary substantially by price tier, and buyers need to understand which benchmark applies to the segment they are shopping. In the $750,000–$1.1 million single-family range, Andover typically absorbs well-priced homes in 10–21 days. In the $1.5 million-plus range, however, a 30–60 day DOM is far more normal and does not indicate distress — it simply reflects a buyer pool that is smaller, more deliberate, and conducting more extensive due diligence before committing to a major purchase. Buyers in the upper tier of the Andover market should interpret DOM through the lens of what is typical for that price range specifically, not against the faster pace of the broader market.

North Reading and Stoneham: Move-Up and Transition Markets

North Reading and Stoneham serve partially overlapping buyer demographics: move-up buyers, growing families, and buyers who have been priced out of their first-choice communities. This means that demand is real but somewhat more price-sensitive and more deliberate than in the highest-demand communities. A well-priced home in North Reading or Stoneham in the $650,000–$850,000 range can still attract multiple offers and a quick sale — but the expectation should be that the process may take 14–25 days rather than the 5–10 days common in Reading or Lynnfield. DOM benchmarks of up to 30 days in these communities should not trigger alarm for buyers; anything beyond 45 days does merit the same investigative questions appropriate elsewhere.

Wilmington and Woburn: New Construction Context

Wilmington and Woburn both have active new construction pipelines that introduce a unique DOM dynamic: builder inventory. New construction units sometimes show extended DOM figures not because they are overpriced or problematic, but because builders list units early in the construction cycle and the DOM clock runs during the build period. A new construction home with 120 days on market that is nearly complete and ready for occupancy is a very different situation from a resale home with 120 days on market. Buyers evaluating new construction in these communities should look at the estimated delivery date and construction progress rather than DOM as the primary evaluation metric.

Malden: Transit Access Sustains Demand Across Price Points

Malden’s Orange Line connectivity sustains a level of buyer demand that is somewhat less seasonal than communities further from rapid transit. DOM in Malden tends to be moderately fast year-round, with the sub-$600,000 single-family segment consistently absorbing well-priced listings in fewer than 21 days. The multi-family investor market in Malden adds another layer of demand that keeps certain property types (two-family, three-family, larger lots) moving at a different pace from owner-occupied single-families. Buyers and sellers in Malden should understand which buyer pool their specific property appeals to most — owner-occupant, investor, or both — as this shapes the relevant DOM benchmark for their transaction.

Curious about where a specific property stands?

Susan Gormady can pull the full MLS history — including prior listing periods, showing activity, price changes, and expired or withdrawn listings — for any property you are considering. Understanding the complete picture before you make an offer is not optional in 2026; it is essential.

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What Elevated DOM Tells Sellers About Their Own Listing

For sellers with an active listing, DOM is not just a number to monitor — it is a direct market signal that demands honest interpretation. The Massachusetts real estate market does not lie. When a well-marketed home in a desirable community fails to attract offers within the first two to three weeks of listing, the market is communicating something specific. The most common message is that the price is wrong.

Here is the timeline of DOM-related seller decisions that experienced agents understand and frequently have to navigate:

  1. Days 1–7: Maximum Market AttentionA new listing generates its highest volume of buyer attention in the first week. Buyers who have been searching in a community for months have their search alerts set up and respond to new listings within hours. The first open house and the first round of scheduled showings carry the most serious, most motivated buyer traffic of the entire listing period. This window is irreplaceable — once it passes, it cannot be recreated.
  2. Days 8–21: Feedback AssessmentIf a listing has not received acceptable offers by day 14, the seller’s agent should be conducting a frank assessment of buyer feedback, showing traffic volume, and any emerging patterns in why buyers are not proceeding. Common feedback themes include price concerns, specific condition issues identified in showings, and comparable properties that are perceived as better value. This is the window for honest evaluation, not for dismissing feedback or waiting for the “right buyer.”
  3. Days 21–30: Price Decision WindowBy day 21, a North Shore listing that has not attracted offers in a competitive community should be evaluated for a price adjustment. This does not mean panicking or accepting a dramatic reduction — it means taking market feedback seriously and determining whether the current price accurately reflects what the current buyer pool is willing to pay. A modest, well-timed price reduction at day 21 can reinvigorate buyer interest; a series of small, incremental reductions over 60 days signals weakness and encourages low-ball offers.
  4. Days 30–45: Re-evaluation of StrategyA listing beyond 30 days in a community where median DOM is under 15 days is carrying a stigma in the buyer community. Every agent whose clients have seen the home is now telling them that it has been on the market for a month without offers — and in a competitive market, that observation shapes buyer behavior. At this stage, sellers need to consider not just price but presentation: professional staging, updated photography, revised marketing, or addressing visible condition issues that may be creating hesitation.
  5. Days 45+: Fundamental Reset RequiredA listing with 45 or more days on market in a North Shore community with a 10–15 day median DOM requires a fundamental reassessment. The seller and agent should revisit the original pricing analysis, review all feedback received from showings, determine whether there are condition issues that should be disclosed and addressed proactively, and make a clear decision: reduce price to a level that accurately reflects the home’s value in its current condition, make substantive improvements to the property before relisting, or withdraw and plan a fall campaign with a fresh start.

The Psychology of DOM: Why Buyers React the Way They Do

Understanding buyer behavior around DOM is as important for sellers as understanding the mechanics of the number itself. Buyer psychology around Days on Market is deeply, sometimes irrationally, influenced by social proof — the sense that a home others want is more desirable than a home others have passed over.

In practical terms, this means:

Using DOM as a Buyer’s Negotiating Tool: What to Look For and How to Act

For buyers who are active in the North Shore market right now — in mid-June, as the spring selling season transitions toward summer — stale listings represent one of the most underutilized opportunities available. Here is a practical framework for identifying and acting on DOM-driven opportunities:

Is there a stale listing you have been watching?

If you have seen a North Shore property that has been on the market for a while and you are wondering whether it represents an opportunity, Susan Gormady can pull the full history, assess the likely cause of the extended DOM, and help you determine whether and how to approach it. These conversations are free, and the intelligence they produce is valuable.

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DOM in the Context of Mid-June 2026: What Buyers and Sellers Are Facing Right Now

As of mid-June 2026, the North Shore market is at an interesting inflection point with respect to Days on Market dynamics. The spring selling season has produced its characteristic pattern: a wave of fast-absorbing listings in March, April, and May, followed by a cohort of properties that did not sell quickly and are now accumulating days on market as summer begins.

This means that right now — today — the North Shore MLS contains two meaningfully different categories of active inventory:

For sellers in either category, the message is clear: mid-June is not a comfortable time to be carrying elevated DOM. The school-year buyer window closes in the next two to three weeks, and the buyer pool actively narrowing means that a home with 60 days on market today that does not attract an offer by mid-July is facing a summer of reduced traffic, thinner buyer competition, and the prospect of a fall re-list if the fall market does not arrive with the pricing expectations the seller has been holding since spring.

For buyers, the mid-June moment is one of the better times of the year to be looking at stale listings precisely because spring buyers have largely made their decisions. The properties that did not sell in the spring are still available, their sellers are increasingly motivated as summer approaches without a sale, and the competition from other buyers for these specific properties is lower than it was in April or May.

The Seller’s DOM Checklist: Preventing a Slow Start Before It Happens

The single most effective DOM management strategy for sellers is prevention. A listing that launches correctly — with the right price, the right preparation, and the right timing — will not accumulate concerning DOM in the first place. Here is what prevents a slow start:

Thinking about listing? Let’s get the pricing right before day one.

Susan Gormady provides complimentary, detailed Comparative Market Analyses for North Shore homeowners considering a sale. The analysis includes neighborhood-level comparable sales, active competition, absorbed days on market for recently sold homes, and a frank pricing recommendation based on what buyers are paying right now — not in April.

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The Educational Takeaway: DOM as a Real Estate Literacy Skill

Real estate literacy on the North Shore means being able to read the market signals that are available to anyone with MLS access — and interpreting them with nuance rather than reacting to the surface number. Days on Market is one of the most visible and most misread of those signals.

The key framework to carry forward from this guide:

Susan Gormady works in the North Shore market every day. That daily engagement means she knows what is happening with active listings, what the real story is behind homes that have been sitting, and what a correctly priced, well-prepared home should realistically achieve in each of the communities she serves. If you are a buyer trying to navigate a confusing inventory landscape, or a seller trying to understand why your listing has not performed as expected, a direct conversation is the fastest path to clarity.