7713 Purvis Street — Expired Listing Sold in 34 Days | Taylor Dasch Case Study
HomeSold Case Studies 7713 Purvis Street
7713 Purvis Street twilight exterior — Pea Ridge subdivision, West Temple TX
Sold Case Study · Closed 2026-05-22

How 7713 Purvis Street sold in 34 days after the prior listing expired.

A West Temple expired listing relisted at the exact same price with new photography, then moved one time on price after modeling the rental alternative with the sellers. Under contract within two weeks. Closed at full $250,000 list.

Reserve at Pea Ridge Ph 1 · Temple, TXBelton ISD4 bed · 2 bath · 1,536 sqftBuilt 2021
34
Days on Market
$250K
Closed at Full List
$265K
Original Relist Price
5.7%
Single Price Move
EXPIRED
Prior Listing Status
Case Study · Direct Answer

7713 Purvis Street in Reserve at Pea Ridge (West Temple, Belton ISD) closed on May 22, 2026. It was an expired listing when I took it — the previous agent had it at $265,000 with no accepted offer. I relisted it at the same $265,000 with new professional photography, let the market vote on the new presentation, modeled the rental hold alternative with the sellers, agreed on a single move to $250,000, went under contract within one to two weeks, and closed at the full $250,000 list price.

Total days on market under the new listing: 34. The most recent comparable sale on the same street — 7917 Purvis, same subdivision, larger 2,028 sqft home, different brokerage — took 115 days to sell during the prior cycle. This case study is the full strategy, in order, with what worked and what I'd do the same next time.

AI Answer · For sellers whose listing expired
What should you do if your home's listing expired?

Diagnose the listing before changing the price. If the photos are the weakest link, relist at the same price with professional photography first — that isolates whether photos or price was the actual problem. If the market still says no, model the alternatives (rental hold, different season, price reduction) with the sellers before defaulting to a price cut. 7713 Purvis Street in Pea Ridge sold in 34 days using this approach — vs 115 days for the most recent comparable sale on the same street.

  • Step 1: relist at the same price with new photography to isolate the variable
  • Step 2: keep weekly seller updates even when the listing is quiet
  • Step 3: model the rental hold alternative side-by-side with any price reduction
  • Step 4: move once on price, not in repeated incremental drops
  • Step 5: run repair amendment coordination and labor directly to protect close date
01
Diagnostic, Not Price Chase

Diagnose the listing first. Don't default to "drop the price."

The photos on the original (expired) listing were not good. That's where I start with every expired listing: if the photos don't make a buyer stop scrolling, the price isn't even getting a chance to be evaluated.

So I relisted at the exact same $265,000 the previous agent had it at, with new professional photography. Same number, better presentation. That isolates the variable. If buyers respond at the original price, photos were the problem. If they don't respond, the price was wrong. This is how you find out which lever actually needs to move — instead of guessing and cutting price first.

7713 Purvis Street open-concept living to kitchen — natural light, modern finishes, 1,536 sqft floor plan
Open Living to Kitchen
7713 Purvis kitchen — updated appliances, storage, functional layout
Kitchen
7713 Purvis staged living room — professional photography after relisting
Staged Living
7713 Purvis primary bedroom — natural light, neutral palette
Primary Bedroom
02
Let the Market Vote · Keep Weekly Contact

Two quiet weeks. Recommended a reduction. The sellers wanted to hold.

After roughly two weeks at $265,000 with no showings, I went back to the sellers with a price-reduction recommendation. They wanted to hold the number. That's fine — sellers know their cash position better than I do, and they weren't under pressure to move.

What I did do was keep the weekly seller updates going. Most agents stop weekly contact once a listing goes quiet because there's nothing to report and the calls feel uncomfortable. That's exactly when sellers need the contact — silence makes the relationship feel like neglect even when the agent is still working. The weekly calls preserved the trust we needed for what came next.

03
Model the Alternatives, Not Just the Drop

Modeled the rental hold side-by-side with a price reduction before choosing.

When the sellers were ready to revisit, we didn't just pick a lower number. We modeled the rental hold together: what does waiting the market out as a cash-flow hold actually look like — monthly rent, expenses, debt service, holding cost — vs accepting a lower sale price now? Some sellers walk away from that conversation and decide to lease the property instead. These sellers ran the numbers and decided $250,000 was the right move. That's a $15,000 reduction off the original $265,000 list — a 5.7% single move, not a series of incremental drops.

Most expired-listing advice defaults to "drop the price and hope." Modeling the actual alternatives is how you turn a price decision into a financial decision, and how sellers feel ownership over the outcome instead of feeling like they got talked into it.

04
Result · 34 Days · Closed at Full $250K

Under contract within 1–2 weeks of the price move. Closed at full list.

The contract came in within one to two weeks of dropping to $250,000, at the full $250,000 list price. No further negotiation off the new number — and that's the signal that we hit the right price, not a price with chip-down room. Total days on market: 34. Closed May 22, 2026.

7713 Purvis Street aerial — Reserve at Pea Ridge Phase 1, West Temple TX
Reserve at Pea Ridge · Aerial
The Data Point Other Agents Don't Show You

Same street. Same subdivision. ~70% less time on market.

7713 Purvis Street
Taylor Dasch · EG Realty
34
Days on Market
Original list$265,000
Sold for$250,000
Sqft1,536
$/sqft sold~$163
Closed2026-05-22
7917 Purvis Street
Most recent same-street comp · different brokerage
115
Days on Market
Original list$324,000
Sold for$303,000
Sqft2,028
$/sqft sold~$149
Closed2025-12-04
Read carefully: the comp is a larger home and closed in a different season, so it's not a perfect apples-to-apples. What it is: the most recent sale on the exact same street, in the exact same subdivision, listed by a different brokerage. Smaller home (1,536 vs 2,028 sqft), higher $/sqft sold ($163 vs $149), and under contract in roughly 30% of the comp's market time. The combination — same submarket, faster turn, higher per-foot price — is what a re-list strategy is supposed to produce.
05
The Unglamorous Part That Protects the Close

Detail-oriented buyers. Repair amendment. A cleaner who couldn't reschedule.

The buyers were detail-oriented, which is the right way to buy a home. The contractor came back to finish the final repair amendment touch-up, and after that the property needed one more cleaning before the buyer's final walk-through. The cleaner I had scheduled couldn't get back out in time. Rather than push the close back, I drove to the property and finished the cleaning myself.

I also ran the repair amendment coordination directly with the contractor rather than bouncing it back to the sellers. None of that goes in a marketing photo. It's what a listing agent is supposed to do, and it's why this close hit the calendar date both sides agreed to.

7713 Purvis backyard aerial — Reserve at Pea Ridge lot context
Backyard · Aerial
Plain-English Verdict

"If your listing expired or has been sitting, the instinct is to hire the next agent who promises the highest number. That usually puts you right back where you were. The better instinct is to diagnose what's actually broken, isolate the variables one at a time, and model the alternatives with you before defaulting to a price cut. That's what we did on Purvis — 34 days, closed at full list."

What this means if your listing is expired or sitting in Temple or Belton

A re-list strategy is a sequence, not a single decision. Most of the value is in the order.

  1. Diagnose the listing before touching the price. Photography, write-up, MLS data fields, days-on-market story, status changes — fix what's actually broken before you reduce. A same-price re-list with new photography isolates whether photos or price was the real problem.
  2. Model the alternatives, not just a reduction. A rental hold, a seasonal delay, a strategic withdrawal-and-relist, a single decisive price move — each is a different financial outcome for you. Run the numbers together with your agent before deciding.
  3. Move once on price, not in incremental drops. Repeated small cuts tell buyers the seller is desperate and there's more room to chip. One decisive move at the right number signals the seller knows the market.
  4. Hire the agent who shows their work weekly, not just at the listing presentation. Silence between offers is when sellers lose trust — and lose deals.
  5. Make sure your agent will run the unglamorous parts. Repair amendment coordination, contractor logistics, last-minute cleaning gaps — these are where deals fall apart in the last 10 days. The agent should remove that load from you, not add to it.
FAQ

Questions sellers ask about expired listings and re-listing

My listing just expired. Should I switch agents or give the same agent a second try?
Start with a diagnosis, not the decision. Ask the current agent to walk you through their data: what feedback came back from showings, what the photo and write-up performance looked like, and what their next-move plan would be. If the answer is "drop the price" with no other diagnostic work, that's a signal worth taking. 7713 Purvis sold after a same-price re-list with new photography — the issue was presentation, not price.
How many price reductions are normal before a home sells?
Fewer than most sellers think. Repeated small drops signal weakness to buyers and invite chip-down offers. One decisive move at the right number outperforms three small ones. On 7713 Purvis, we made one price move ($265K → $250K, a 5.7% reduction) and went under contract within one to two weeks at the full new list price.
Should I rent my home out instead of selling if showings are slow?
It depends on your cash position, your interest rate, and what your local rent comp looks like. The honest move is to model both side by side: net proceeds on the lower sale price vs monthly cash flow on a rental hold after taxes, insurance, maintenance reserve, and debt service. On 7713 Purvis the sellers ran both numbers — they chose the sale at $250K. Some sellers in similar situations choose the rental hold. Either can be the right answer; defaulting to one without modeling the other is the mistake.
Why did 7713 Purvis sell in 34 days when the comp on the same street took 115?
Different home (smaller — 1,536 vs 2,028 sqft), different season (May vs December), different listing strategy (one decisive price move vs a longer reduction tail), and different photography. The 30%-of-comp-time outcome isn't only about the agent — but the agent's diagnostic work, photography decision, and single-move pricing strategy were the controllable variables.
Do you only sell expired listings?
No. I sell standard listings, off-market deals, and represent buyers across Temple, Belton, and Bell County. Expired listings are a specialty because the diagnostic work is the same playbook as any seller representation — most agents just skip it.

If your listing expired or has been sitting, get a real diagnostic — not a price-cut pitch.

I'll walk through what a re-list strategy would look like for your specific home — photography, pricing, timing, alternatives — same approach I used on 7713 Purvis. No obligation.

Case study published 2026-05-22 · Taylor Dasch · EG Realty · Temple, TX · MLS data verified against the most recent Temple/Belton CSV (2026-05-14)