




Spring is here!
The Spring Real Estate Market is thriving, and we are seeing a significant increase in demand for homes in Voorhees, especially from millennials.
In fact, the current absorption rate in our area is only 3 months, which means that if no more homes come on the market, we will only be able to sustain the current demand for up to 3 months.
This is great news for anyone considering selling their home, as the high demand can lead to a boost in your bottom line.
If you are thinking about selling your home, now is the perfect time to do so. To get started, it's essential to focus on your curb appeal, which can significantly impact the value of your property. That's why we've put together a helpful checklist to help you get started.
Friendly reminder: Before you make a repair, be sure to check with a real estate agent to make sure it is worth your return on investment. Feel free to Book A Call with me if you have any questions or want a free consultation!
Are you a little behind on your spring cleaning? Grab a copy of the Ultimate Spring Cleaning Checklist that was featured last month.
Click below for a full live schedule of local events around town!



The Complete Guide to Buying A Home
market Updates
buying new construction? buyer beware
Local market update
NAR's Commission Settlement:
National Market Update
Buyer Tips
Community Videos
3 best sandwich Shops
Best Burrito in Brentwood
Best Hot Dogs in Brentwood
MJ's Cafe in brentwood

Lesa Miller | Realtor Lic# RB14023899

Enjoy the latest & most up-to-date marketing & sales tactics to help you purchase a NEW home.
Thinking About Buying?
Are you thinking about buying a home but you don't know where to start?
Learn to take advantage of Tax Saving opportunities instead of throwing your money away
Walk through the important aspects of purchasing a home
What to Expect When Buying a Home
Purchasing a home is most likely going to be one of the largest investments you will make in your lifetime.
We have helped hundreds of clients in the past and we can help you too
My team and I are free! The seller pays for our fees and they have an agent who has their best interest at heart. We are here to have yours
First Step
The first step when looking to buy a home is getting qualified for a loan.
Before doing anything else you need to know what you can afford by getting qualified for a loan
Don’t go house hunting before going mortgage shopping
Pre-Approval vs
Pre-Qualification
Why you need an approval rather than just a pre-qualification.
Pre-Qualification is not a true approval but the initial step in a home loan process where you discuss your financial situation with a loan officer - nothing is verified
Pre- Approval is where the buyer provides the lender with the necessary documents to tell them what they are approved for, which loan option is the best for them and what the interest rate will be
10 Must Not’s When Buying a Home
Once you find your dream home, we need to make sure you get to move into it.
Don’t change jobs; becoming self employed or quit current job
Don’t buy a vehicles
Don’t use any charged cards or let your accounts fall behind
Don’t spend money you saved for closing
Don’t omit any debt or liabilities from your loan application
What are the Pros and Cons of Purchasing a Home?
Whether you’ve never owned a home before or it’s been a while since you’ve purchased, let's talk about the pros and cons.
Pro: Your wealth can increase as you build equity in your home through 2023 averaging about 3%
Con: Maintenance costs; work and money to keep a home in good condition
How Much Money Do I Need To Purchase a New Home?
Most people are afraid that it will cost them thousands and thousands of dollars to purchase a home in Brentwood.
There are various loans and grants to qualify to purchase a home
3 Tips To Get Your Offer Accepted
Are you competing with other buyers on your dream home or do you want to make sure you’ve got the best chance of getting your offer accepted?
Make sure you offered a competitive price on a home
Put down a larger earnest money deposit
Let the seller know that you have not written offers on any other properties
Offer Has Been Accepted, What’s Next?
Once your offer has been accepted, it's time to open up escrow.
It's time to get inspections done on the home, review disclosures, secure the loan, and get the appraisal done
WANT TO GET A FREE CUSTOM MARKET PROPOSAL?
Go to the next page to request a custom market proposal for your specific home
Top Tacos in Brentwood
41 Sand Creek Rd C, Brentwood
335 Oak St, Brentwood

Memorial Day weekend is the unofficial start of the summer real estate season. It’s the moment when buyers who’ve been thinking about a move all spring start actually showing up to weekend showings, and when sellers who’ve been on the fence about listing decide whether June is the right time.
Before I get into what to expect over the next three months, let me give you the actual numbers, because most of the public commentary about Bloomington’s market is either dated, conflated with other markets (Bloomington Illinois has its own data that gets mixed in surprisingly often), or working off generic national headlines that don’t reflect what’s happening here.
Based on the most recent Indiana Regional MLS data for Monroe County single-family homes in April 2026:
The median sale price is $350,000. That’s down 7% from March 2026, and down 12% from April 2025.
The median days on market is 26 days. That’s down 7% from last month, and down 41% from a year ago.
The sale-to-list price ratio is 95.4%. Down about 1% from a year ago.
Average daily inventory is 453 homes. Up 7% from March, up 2% from a year ago.
Read those numbers together and the picture is more interesting than any single one of them suggests. Yes, prices are softer than they were a year ago. A 12% year-over-year drop in median sale price is real, not a rounding error. But homes are also selling faster than they were a year ago. The 41% drop in median days on market tells me that well-priced homes are moving quickly. The sellers who are willing to meet the current market on price are finding buyers. The ones who are still anchored to 2024 expectations are the ones whose listings sit.
That combination, lower prices but faster sales, is what a market finding its equilibrium looks like. It’s not a crash. It’s a recalibration.
You have leverage you didn’t have a year ago. The 95.4% sale-to-list ratio means buyers are routinely negotiating prices below asking. The growing inventory (up 7% just in the last month) means you have more options to choose from. The lower median price means you’re entering the market at a more reasonable starting point than buyers who closed last spring.
A few specific things to expect over the next three months:
Sellers in Bloomington are now more open to concessions than they’ve been in years. Seller-paid rate buydowns (2-1 buydowns are popular), closing cost credits in the 1-3% range, and repair credits after inspection are all routinely on the table. If you’re working with an agent who isn’t asking for these, you’re leaving money on the table.
The 26-day median days on market sounds fast, and it is. But that’s the median. Houses that are overpriced or need significant work are sitting much longer. Houses that are priced realistically and presented well are moving in days. As a buyer, your competition for the well-priced, well-presented homes is still real. You’ll want to be ready to move quickly when the right house comes up, even though the broader market is slower than it was.
Mortgage rates jumped earlier this week (the 30-year fixed is around 6.6% to 6.75% as of mid-May). Most reliable forecasters no longer expect rates to drop below 6% in 2026. Waiting for lower rates is waiting for something that probably isn’t coming this calendar year.
For buyers relocating to Bloomington for jobs at Cook Medical, the Bloomington bio-pharma operations, Simtra, IU Health, Crane, or starting positions at Indiana University, the timing of your search relative to your start date matters more than the broader market. The summer months are when most relocations happen, and that’s when inventory is fullest. Searching now positions you for a closing before fall semester starts at IU, which is the most competitive moment of the year for inventory.
The 12% year-over-year price drop is the number that matters most for sellers, and it deserves a direct conversation.
If your reference point for your home’s value is what your neighbor sold for in 2024, that reference point is no longer current. Comparable homes in Bloomington are selling for meaningfully less today than they were 12 months ago. The buyers in this market are paying attention to recent comparable sales (the last 90 days, not the last two years), and they’re not going to overpay just because you have an emotional attachment to a higher number.
The good news for sellers, if you can call it that: homes are still selling, and they’re selling faster than a year ago at 26 days median. Translation: if you price your home appropriately for the current market, you have a real chance of selling quickly. If you don’t, your house sits, and a stale listing in this market gets harder to sell every week.
A few specific things to expect over the next three months:
Buyers are routinely asking for concessions. Be prepared to negotiate on closing costs, rate buydowns, and inspection repair credits. Going in with a clear sense of what you’re willing to do (and what you’re not) is essential.
Presentation matters more than it has in years. The 95.4% sale-to-list ratio means buyers are negotiating, and they negotiate harder on homes that show poorly. Clean, decluttered, neutral, professionally photographed, with minor maintenance items handled before listing. These aren’t optional anymore. The houses that move in 26 days are the ones that present well from day one.
Pricing strategy is everything. The single biggest mistake I see sellers making right now is pricing for what they want, then doing slow $5,000 reductions when it doesn’t sell. A house priced correctly from day one moves in days. A house priced 5-10% too high sits for 60 to 90 days and ultimately sells for less than it would have if it had been priced right initially. The math punishes overpricing more than it punishes underpricing in this market.
The summer selling season runs about 14 weeks from now through Labor Day. Listing in early June puts your home in front of the strongest buyer pool of the year. Waiting until July or August means competing with more inventory and more sellers who also waited.
The Bloomington market doesn’t move in lockstep with national trends. A few factors are uniquely local and matter for what to expect this summer.
The Indiana University academic calendar drives a real rhythm. Faculty and staff relocations cluster around June and July before fall semester starts in late August. Parents buying property for IU students (a real segment of the Bloomington market that I see every year) are typically active May through July. If your house is in a neighborhood close to campus, your buyer pool peaks in those months. Listing in mid-May to early June captures that peak.
Bloomington’s employer base remains diversified. Recent layoffs at Novo Nordisk (about 400 positions, with approximately 1,400 still employed at the Bloomington site) and reductions in force at IU and Monroe County Community School Corporation are real and have affected real families. But the broader employer base, including Cook Medical, Simtra BioPharma Solutions, IU Health Bloomington Hospital, and Naval Surface Warfare Center Crane Division, continues to operate. Monroe County unemployment was 2.4% as of December 2025, which is well below national averages. The local economy can absorb workforce shifts more easily than markets with single-employer dependence.
The 2026 Indiana property tax changes are favorable for most homeowners. The new automatic 10% homestead credit (up to $300) and the higher supplemental homestead deduction (40% for the 2025 assessment year, paid in 2026) mean that property tax bills for owner-occupied homes are modestly lower this year than they would have been under the old law. For buyers evaluating Bloomington against other markets, this is a real advantage.
After 20 years of working through every kind of summer market in Bloomington, here are the two questions that matter more than the broader market data.
For buyers: Have you found a house that fits your life, and can you afford the payment at current rates? If both answers are yes, the rest is noise. The market won’t always favor you, but it does right now in ways it hasn’t for several years. Use that leverage. Negotiate. Ask for concessions. Don’t overpay, but don’t let a softer market scare you out of the right house either.
For sellers: Do you have a real reason to sell this summer? A job change, retirement, family circumstances, an upgrade you’ve been planning, downsizing. If yes, list now with the right pricing and presentation, and trust that the market will give you a reasonable outcome. If your only reason to sell is “I might do better next year,” the data doesn’t support that bet. Inventory will be higher next summer. Rates aren’t dropping meaningfully. Waiting usually costs more than it saves.
Memorial Day weekend through Labor Day is the busiest stretch of the Bloomington real estate calendar. Most years, more transactions close in those 14 weeks than in the rest of the year combined. The buyers are more committed (they’re shopping with a timeline that ties to fall semester or a job start date). The inventory is fullest. The decisions get made.
If you’ve been waiting to see what the market does, what it’s doing is right in front of you. Prices have softened. Days on market have shortened. Inventory is growing modestly. Negotiation is back. The summer is when the strongest buyer pool meets the most options of the year, and the matches that get made now are what drive the market for the rest of 2026.
If you’re thinking through a buying or selling decision and want to talk it through, give me a call at (812) 360-3863 or reach out through LesaMillerRealEstate.com. For more on the broader market context, the questions Bloomington buyers and sellers are actually asking right now covers the recurring themes from clients this week. For what the mortgage rate environment means specifically, what today’s mortgage rate spike means for Bloomington buyers and sellers walks through that. And for the cost-of-living picture, what it actually costs to live in Bloomington Indiana is the place to start.
Happy Memorial Day weekend. Whatever side of the table you’re on, this is the season when decisions get made.
Lesa Miller, Broker | REALTOR® Lesa Miller Real Estate | RE/MAX Acclaimed Properties Serving Bloomington, Bedford and the Surrounding Indiana Communities (812) 360-3863 | [email protected] https://LesaMillerRealEstate.com
"I cannot say enough good things about Lesa. She has helped me buy and sell several properties in the Bloomington and Bedford markets. She has always been very responsive and has gone far above and beyond when confronted with a difficult situation. I won't use anyone else."
"Lesa is very professional, attentive to detail and very easy to wor with. She has helped me navigate the often waters of buying and selling a home. Lesa is also a straight shooter and extremely honest with her clients. I can highly recommend her to anyone seeking a truly professional Realtor."
"Lesa is a very nice, friendly and professional realtor. She is well informed, knows the area and home prospects as well as the right contacts for everything. A fountain of information and always ready to assist. Would recommend her without reservation."
