Real Estate

    What Good Home Tour Preparation Looks Like (And Why Most Agents Skip It)

    The difference between agents who unlock doors and agents who arrive prepared. What buyers should expect before walking through any property.

    March 15, 2026
    5 min read
    What Good Home Tour Preparation Looks Like (And Why Most Agents Skip It)

    There are two kinds of home showings.

    In the first, your agent meets you at the property, unlocks the door, and follows you around while you explore. They read the listing sheet out loud. They point out the obvious. "This is the kitchen." "Looks like hardwood floors."

    In the second, your agent arrives having already done the work. They know the price history. They've pulled the comps. They checked whether permits were filed for that basement finish. They can tell you why the house has been on market for 47 days when similar homes sold in 12.

    The difference isn't enthusiasm or personality. It's preparation.

    What Prepared Agents Know Before You Arrive

    Good showing preparation isn't complicated. It just takes time that some agents don't invest. Here's what thorough preparation looks like:

    1. Price History and Days on Market

    Has this home been listed before? Did it fail to sell? Was there a price reduction? A prepared agent knows the full story before you walk in, because that history affects how you should approach your offer.

    A home that's been reduced twice and sat for 60 days signals differently than one that just hit the market yesterday.

    2. Recent Comparable Sales

    What did similar homes sell for in the last 90 days? Not just list prices — actual sale prices. A prepared agent has already run the comps and can tell you whether this home is priced aggressively, fairly, or optimistically.

    This matters because you shouldn't fall in love with a house before understanding whether the price makes sense.

    3. Property Records and Permits

    That beautiful finished basement — was it permitted? The addition that created the fourth bedroom — did it go through inspections? Colorado county records are public. A prepared agent checks them.

    Unpermitted work doesn't automatically kill a deal, but it affects value, insurance, and what you might face when you eventually sell.

    4. Neighborhood Context

    What's the HOA situation? Are there assessments coming? What's the rental ratio in the building? Is there construction planned nearby?

    These aren't things you can see walking through a house. A prepared agent researches them in advance.

    5. Questions the Listing Doesn't Answer

    Why are they selling? How flexible is the timeline? Have there been other offers? A prepared agent has already contacted the listing agent to gather intelligence that helps you compete — or walk away — more strategically.

    Why This Matters More Than "Good Vibes"

    Home tours are emotional. You walk in and imagine your life there. That's natural and fine.

    But emotion without information is how buyers overpay for houses, miss red flags, or lose deals they should have won. Your agent's job isn't just to open doors. It's to make sure you have context before you make decisions.

    When an agent shows up unprepared, you're essentially touring blind. You might love a house that's overpriced by $40,000. You might walk away from one that's actually a great deal because you didn't understand the market.

    What to Ask Your Agent Before Showings

    If you're working with an agent (or interviewing one), here are questions that reveal their preparation habits:

    • "What do you know about the price history on this one?"
    • "How does it compare to recent sales in the area?"
    • "Did you check whether the renovations were permitted?"
    • "Have you talked to the listing agent yet?"

    A prepared agent will have answers. An unprepared one will say "let's find out together" — which sounds collaborative but really means they didn't do the homework.

    The Showing Isn't Where the Work Happens

    The showing itself is the easy part. Any agent can unlock a door and walk through a house with you.

    The real work happens before you arrive: researching the property, understanding the market, identifying questions, and developing a perspective on whether this home makes sense for you.

    When an agent does that work in advance, the showing becomes a conversation instead of a guessing game. You're not just looking at a house — you're evaluating an opportunity with real information.

    That's the difference between touring homes and actually making progress toward buying one.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How do I know if my agent is preparing for showings?

    Ask them before you meet. A prepared agent can tell you about the price history, comparable sales, and any concerns about the property before you walk in. If they only know what's on the listing sheet, they haven't done the homework.

    Should I do my own research before showings?

    Basic research is smart — check the listing, look at photos, note your questions. But deep research on comps, permits, and market positioning is your agent's job. If you're doing all that work yourself, ask what value your agent is adding.

    What if my agent admits they haven't researched the property yet?

    One rushed showing happens. A pattern of unprepared showings is a problem. Your agent should be adding value through preparation, not just access. If preparation isn't happening consistently, it's worth a direct conversation about expectations.

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    what to look for in a showinghome showing tipsreal estate agent preparation

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