How to Sell Your House in Yorba Linda in 2026 (Without Leaving Money on the Table)

How to Sell Your House in Yorba Linda in 2026 (Without Leaving Money on the Table)

Selling a home in Yorba Linda in 2026 comes down to three things: pricing it right from day one, preparing it so buyers feel something the moment they walk through the door, and choosing an agent who knows this market block by block. The Yorba Linda median home price sits around $1.3 million as of spring 2026, homes are moving in roughly 36 to 43 days, and mortgage rates hover near 6.2% to 6.4% for a 30-year fixed loan. If you want to sell your house in Yorba Linda without leaving money on the table, you need a strategy built for this environment, not last year's.

I have been selling real estate in Orange County for over 20 years, and I grew up in Yorba Linda. More than 40 years of roots here. I played Little League at Hurless Barton Park, I watched Travis Ranch get built from dirt lots, and I have sold homes in every neighborhood from Bryant Ranch to Hidden Hills to Fairmont Knolls. As both a licensed Yorba Linda real estate agent and a mortgage lender (CA DRE# 01901810), I bring a perspective most agents simply cannot offer. I see both sides of the transaction: the sale price and the financing that makes it happen. That dual lens shapes everything in this guide. 

What follows is the playbook I use with my own sellers, based on real transactions in real neighborhoods at real price points. For a full breakdown of pricing, marketing, timeline, and costs, read our complete guide to selling your house in Yorba Linda in 2026.

Thinking about selling your Yorba Linda home? Homes are moving in 36 to 43 days. Get expert pricing and prep guidance today to maximize your sale.

Quick Answer

To sell your house in Yorba Linda in 2026 without leaving money on the table, price it within 2% to 3% of true market value using recent neighborhood comps (not Zillow estimates), invest in professional staging and photography, list during the spring selling window when buyer demand peaks, and work with a local agent who knows Yorba Linda at the street level. The median home in Yorba Linda is selling for around $1.3 million in 36 to 43 days as of spring 2026, but well-prepared homes in neighborhoods like Bryant Ranch and East Lake Village are consistently outperforming that average.

Why Spring 2026 Is a Strong Window to Sell Your House in Yorba Linda

Spring has always been the prime selling season in Orange County, and 2026 is no exception. Between March and May, buyer activity surges. Families want to close before the school year ends, relocation buyers from Los Angeles and the Inland Empire are actively searching, and the weather makes every property look its best. Open house traffic peaks, multiple-offer situations become more common, and homes across Orange County are selling at roughly 99% of asking price on average.

But here is the nuance that matters for Yorba Linda specifically. Inventory is up about 7.8% year over year across Orange County, and the median days on market has ticked up to around 40 days countywide. Buyers have more choices than they did in 2024. The frenzied, sight-unseen bidding wars are behind us. What has replaced them is a market that rewards preparation and punishes laziness. A well-staged, accurately priced home in Bryant Ranch will still attract multiple offers. A poorly photographed, overpriced listing will sit.

Mortgage rates are another critical factor. The 30-year fixed rate averaged 6.23% as of the week of April 23, 2026, according to Freddie Mac, with Bankrate reporting rates around 6.40%. That is meaningfully lower than the peaks of late 2023 and 2024. On a $1.3 million purchase with 20% down, the difference between a 7.5% rate and a 6.3% rate translates to roughly $800 per month in mortgage payments. That kind of shift pulls sidelined buyers back into the market, and more buyers mean more competition for your home.

As of spring 2026, the median home in Yorba Linda sells for approximately $1.3 million, with homes spending 36 to 43 days on the market and mortgage rates near 6.2% to 6.4% for a 30-year fixed loan.

I tell my sellers the same thing every spring: the window is real, but it is not magic. Listing in April does not automatically get you top dollar. Listing in April with a prepared home, accurate pricing, and professional marketing gets you top dollar. The season creates the demand. Your preparation captures it.

Understanding the Yorba Linda Market Neighborhood by Neighborhood

One of the biggest mistakes I see sellers make is treating Yorba Linda as a single market. It is not. The city spans everything from townhomes in Travis Ranch starting around $700,000 to equestrian estates in Hidden Hills and Kerrigan Ranch listed above $3 million. Pricing strategy, buyer demographics, and marketing approach all change depending on which neighborhood your home sits in. If your agent is pulling citywide comps and calling it a pricing strategy, you are already losing money.

Bryant Ranch is one of the most active neighborhoods right now. The median sale price hit $1.5 million in March 2026, up 3.1% year over year. Homes there are averaging 64 days on the market, which is longer than the city average, largely because Bryant Ranch attracts families willing to wait for the right home rather than impulse-buy. The master-planned community, the elementary school within walking distance, and the parks and pools make it a destination neighborhood. Sellers in Bryant Ranch need to understand that their buyers are comparing them against other Bryant Ranch listings specifically, not against homes across town.

Travis Ranch tells a different story. The median sale price dropped to $1,267,500 in March 2026, down 15.5% year over year. That decline is partly structural: Travis Ranch has a wider mix of housing types, including attached townhomes and condos that pull the median down. For detached single-family sellers in Travis Ranch, the comparable sales are more nuanced than the headline number suggests. I know which streets in Travis Ranch back up to the power line easement and which lots face the common area parks. Those differences can mean $100,000 or more in sale price, and they only show up if your agent has walked the neighborhood.

East Lake Village continues to attract buyers drawn to its lake amenities and mid-century charm. Listed homes have a median price around $1.39 million, though closed sales have been coming in around $1.8 million for the larger, updated properties. The gap between list price and sale price in East Lake Village is a signal: buyers are competing for the best inventory, and sellers who present well are getting rewarded.

At the top of the market, Hidden Hills and Kerrigan Ranch represent Yorba Linda's luxury and equestrian tier, ranging from $2 million to well over $5 million. These homes sell to a completely different buyer with different marketing, showing, and negotiation dynamics. The approach that works for a $1.2 million Bryant Ranch home does not apply to a $3.5 million equestrian property on a half-acre lot.

Bryant Ranch homes sold for a median of $1.5 million in March 2026 (up 3.1% year over year), while Travis Ranch's median of $1,267,500 reflects its broader mix of townhomes and detached homes ranging from $700,000 to $1.8 million.

Fairmont and Fairmont Knolls, Vista Del Verde, and the neighborhoods along the eastern ridgeline each have their own character. Some blocks in Fairmont Knolls are zoned for different schools than their neighbors across the street, and that kind of detail matters to every family buyer walking through your door. As your Yorba Linda real estate agent, it is my job to know those details and make sure they show up in the marketing.

Tree-lined streets, quiet neighborhoods, and strong buyer demand. This is why homes in Yorba Linda continue to attract serious buyers.

Pricing Your Yorba Linda Home: The Single Biggest Decision You Will Make

I will be direct about this: pricing is where sellers leave the most money on the table, and it works in both directions. Overprice your home and it sits. Days on market climb, buyer interest fades, and you end up chasing the market down with price reductions that signal desperation. Underprice it and you might sell fast, but you will never know what a properly marketed home at the right price could have brought. Neither outcome is acceptable.

The right approach is a comparative market analysis built from recent closed sales in your specific neighborhood, adjusted for condition, upgrades, lot position, and current market velocity. Not a Zillow Zestimate. Zillow's algorithm does not know that your Bryant Ranch home backs up to the greenbelt instead of the block wall. It does not know that your Travis Ranch kitchen was remodeled in 2024 with custom cabinetry. It does not know that the home two doors down sold $50,000 below market because the sellers were in a rush. I know those things because I sold the home two doors down, or I previewed it, or I talked to the listing agent. That is the difference between an algorithm and a local agent with 20 years of transaction history.

Bryant Ranch sellers wondering about net proceeds can read about what it costs to sell a home in Yorba Linda, including commissions, closing costs, and preparation expenses.

For the spring 2026 market specifically, I am advising my sellers to price within 2% to 3% of where I believe the home will close based on the most recent 60 to 90 days of comparable sales. In a market where inventory is up 7.8% and buyers have more options, the homes that attract the strongest offers are the ones priced to generate immediate interest. That does not mean underpricing as a strategy. It means accurate pricing as a strategy.

Here is a framework I use with my clients. In the $1 million to $1.5 million range (Bryant Ranch, Travis Ranch, Fairmont), your buyer pool is largest: move-up families financing with jumbo loans who are rate-sensitive, meaning the current 6.2% to 6.4% environment is pulling more of them into the market. In the $1.5 million to $2.5 million range (upper East Lake Village, Vista Del Verde), the buyer pool narrows but purchasing power is higher. These buyers are less rate-sensitive and more condition-sensitive. Above $2.5 million, you are in a luxury market where marketing, privacy, and presentation matter as much as price.

My background in mortgage lending gives me an edge here that most listing agents do not have. I understand exactly how rate changes, loan limits, and qualification requirements affect the buyer pool for your specific price point. When I price your home, I am not just looking at what similar homes sold for. I am looking at who can afford to buy it right now, at today's rates, with today's loan products. That dual perspective is why selling your home with Canyon Realty means you get both the brokerage expertise and the lending insight in one conversation.

If you are selling in Yorba Linda or nearby cities, I recommend starting with the full Yorba Linda selling playbook, which covers everything from pricing to closing.

Preparing Your Home to Sell: What Actually Moves the Needle

Every dollar you spend preparing your home should generate at least two dollars in return at the closing table. That is the test I apply when advising my sellers on pre-listing improvements. The goal is not to renovate. The goal is to present. Buyers in Yorba Linda at the $1 million-plus price point expect a home that feels move-in ready, but "move-in ready" does not mean new everything. It means clean, well-maintained, and visually appealing from the moment they pull into the driveway.

Curb appeal matters more in Yorba Linda than in most markets, and the reason is practical. The city has a Walk Score of 23, meaning nearly every buyer arrives by car and forms their first impression from the driveway and front walk. Fresh mulch, trimmed shrubs, seasonal flowers, and a well-maintained lawn set the tone before anyone steps inside. I always tell my sellers: if a buyer does not want to get out of the car, nothing inside the house matters. Drought-tolerant landscaping with California-native plants is not just environmentally smart in Orange County; it signals to buyers that maintenance costs will be reasonable and that the homeowner has been thoughtful about the property.

Inside, the playbook starts with decluttering and depersonalizing. Remove family photos, collections, and anything that makes the home feel like someone else's rather than the buyer's future home. Fresh interior paint in warm, neutral tones is the highest-ROI improvement I recommend. For a typical 2,500 to 3,500 square foot Yorba Linda home, a full interior paint job runs roughly $5,000 to $8,000 and returns multiples of that in perceived value.

Professional staging is not optional at this price point. A staged home photographs dramatically better, and photographs are where 95% of buyers form their first impression. In a market with 119 to 200 active listings across Yorba Linda, your online photos are your storefront. The gap in showing traffic, offer count, and final sale price between a staged home with architectural photography and an unstaged listing with iPhone photos is tens of thousands of dollars.

What I do not recommend is gut-renovating your kitchen or bathrooms before listing. The return on a $60,000 kitchen remodel in a $1.3 million home is rarely dollar-for-dollar, and it delays your listing by weeks. Targeted cosmetic improvements (paint, hardware, lighting fixtures, landscaping) consistently outperform major renovations. If your kitchen is dated but functional, a stager can work around it. If it is falling apart, that is a pricing conversation, not a renovation conversation.

Small upgrades like a clean, modern bathroom can make a big impact when selling your Yorba Linda home. Don’t overlook the details buyers notice.

The Pre-Listing Inspection: A Strategy Most Yorba Linda Sellers Overlook

Most sellers wait for the buyer's inspection and then react. I recommend a different approach: get your own inspection before you list. A pre-listing inspection costs $400 to $600 for a standard single-family home and gives you a complete picture of your home's condition before any buyer walks through the door.

I wrote an entire guide on this because I believe in it that strongly. You can read why pre-listing inspections matter for sellers for the full breakdown. The short version: a pre-listing inspection lets you fix what is worth fixing on your schedule, disclose what you choose not to fix so buyers cannot claim surprise later, and price accurately because you know the home's true condition. In a market where buyers have more leverage than two years ago, eliminating surprises in escrow is one of the most valuable things you can do.

I have seen transactions fall apart over $3,000 roof repairs the seller did not know about. A pre-listing inspection would have caught it. The seller could have fixed it before listing, and the deal would have closed smoothly instead of going back on the market with a "back on market" stigma that costs far more than $3,000.

Marketing Your Yorba Linda Home: Professional Photography, MLS Strategy, and Beyond

At the price points we are talking about in Yorba Linda, marketing is not an afterthought. It is the difference between 15 showings in the first week and 3. Between multiple offers and a single lowball. Between selling at asking and selling $40,000 below it.

Professional photography is the foundation. Not your agent's phone. Professional architectural photography with proper lighting, composition, and post-processing. For homes above $1.5 million, I also recommend twilight exterior shots and drone photography that showcases the lot and any view corridors. Yorba Linda's hillside neighborhoods benefit enormously from aerial imagery that cannot be captured from street level.

The MLS listing itself requires strategy. The first five photos determine whether a buyer clicks through or scrolls past. The property description needs to speak to the specific buyer for your home, not read like a generic template. And the pricing needs to position the home in the right search bracket. If your home is worth $1,310,000 and you list it at $1,350,000, you may be excluding yourself from the search filters of buyers looking up to $1.3 million. That tactical error happens constantly.

Beyond the MLS, effective marketing in 2026 includes targeted digital advertising to qualified buyer demographics, agent network email campaigns across Orange County and adjacent markets, social media reaching relocation buyers from Los Angeles and out of state, and where appropriate, private showings for serious buyers before public open houses. The combination creates the broadest possible exposure and generates the competitive tension that drives final sale prices up. Explore Canyon Realty's seller process to see how it compares to what you have been offered elsewhere.

The Selling Timeline: From Decision to Close

One of the most common questions I get is how long the whole process takes. Here is a realistic timeline for selling a home in Yorba Linda in spring 2026.

Weeks one through two are preparation: repairs from your pre-listing inspection, paint, landscaping, decluttering, and staging. A well-maintained home may need only one week. More significant cosmetic work may take two to three.

Week three is photography and listing launch. Professional photography, floor plans if applicable, and all marketing materials go live on the MLS, with digital marketing and agent outreach running simultaneously.

Weeks three through five are showings and offers. Well-priced Yorba Linda homes are generating meaningful showing activity within the first 7 to 10 days. Most of my listings receive first offers within 10 to 21 days. Homes priced aggressively that show exceptionally well can attract offers within the first weekend.

Weeks five through nine are escrow. The standard period is 30 days for financed transactions, though some closings take 45 days depending on loan type and contingencies. During escrow, we navigate inspections, appraisal, title processing, and any negotiations that arise. This is where experience matters, because deals that fall apart in escrow almost always fail due to poor communication, missed deadlines, or avoidable surprises.

Total timeline from decision to keys: roughly 8 to 12 weeks. The days-on-market data supports this: 36 to 43 days from listing to accepted offer, plus 30 to 45 days in escrow.

From decision to close, selling a home in Yorba Linda in spring 2026 typically takes 8 to 12 weeks: two weeks of preparation, two to three weeks on market to generate offers, and 30 to 45 days in escrow.

What It Actually Costs to Sell a Home in Yorba Linda

Sellers always ask about costs, and they deserve a straight answer. Here is what to expect when selling a home in the $1.3 million range in Yorba Linda in 2026.

The largest cost is agent commissions. Following the 2024 NAR settlement, the traditional commission structure has shifted. Listing agent commissions typically range from 2.5% to 3% of the sale price. Buyer agent compensation, which sellers historically offered through the MLS, is now negotiated separately and typically falls between 2% and 3%. On a $1.3 million sale, total commissions could range from roughly $58,500 to $78,000 depending on the negotiated rates.

Beyond commissions, California seller closing costs average approximately 2.7% of the sale price, including the Orange County documentary transfer tax at $1.10 per $1,000 (roughly $1,430 on a $1.3 million home), escrow fees, title insurance, and recording fees. Combined, non-commission closing costs on a $1.3 million home run approximately $35,000 to $40,000.

Estimated Seller Costs on a $1.3 Million Yorba Linda Home Sale (2026)

Cost Category

Typical Range

Estimated Amount

 

Listing agent commission

2.5% to 3%

$32,500 to $39,000

Buyer agent commission (if offered)

2% to 3%

$26,000 to $39,000

Transfer tax (Orange County)

$1.10 per $1,000

~$1,430

Escrow fees

$2 per $1,000 + $250

~$2,850

Title insurance and fees

Varies

~$3,000 to $5,000

Recording, admin, miscellaneous

Varies

~$1,000 to $2,000

Pre-listing repairs and staging

Varies

$5,000 to $15,000

All in, sellers should budget approximately 7% to 8% of the sale price for total costs, which on a $1.3 million home translates to roughly $91,000 to $104,000. Understanding it upfront is critical for setting realistic expectations about net proceeds. Part of my job is walking you through these numbers before you list, so there are no surprises at the closing table.

If you are navigating a more complex situation, for instance selling an inherited property or a home held in a trust, the costs and timeline can shift. I have guided families through probate home sales and inherited property transactions in Yorba Linda and across north Orange County. Selling a home after a loss is different, and it requires an agent who handles both the legal logistics and the emotional weight with care. If that is your situation, I am happy to talk through it.

For sellers, the spring 2026 numbers are encouraging, and Brian Kidd's guide to selling in Yorba Linda walks through exactly how to capitalize on this window.

Why Seller Representation Matters More Than You Think

"Why do I need a listing agent? Can't I just sell it myself and save the commission?" In practice, FSBO (for sale by owner) homes consistently sell for less than agent-represented homes, and the gap is often larger than the commission savings. The National Association of Realtors reports that the typical FSBO home sold for $380,000 nationally, compared to $435,000 for agent-assisted sales. In a high-value market like Yorba Linda where negotiations are complex and buyer expectations are high, that gap widens further.

The same caution applies to discount brokerages. A listing agent who charges 1% and provides a lockbox and an MLS upload is not providing the same service as an agent who manages staging, coordinates professional photography, runs targeted campaigns, negotiates inspection responses, and is available when the appraiser calls with questions about comparable sales. At $1.3 million, the difference between 98% and 102% of market value is $52,000. That gap exceeds any commission savings from a discount model.

What I offer my sellers is deep local knowledge (I grew up in Yorba Linda and have sold here for two decades), dual licensing in real estate brokerage and mortgage lending, and a hands-on approach that treats every listing as a project, not a transaction. I am not managing 40 listings at once. I am managing yours. Call me at (714) 404-8152 if you want to have that conversation.

Schools, Lifestyle, and What Yorba Linda Buyers Are Looking For

Understanding what makes your buyer choose Yorba Linda over Anaheim Hills, Brea, or Fullerton helps you position your home for maximum appeal. The answer, overwhelmingly, is schools and lifestyle.

The Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District is one of the highest-rated in Orange County. Yorba Linda High School carries a 10 out of 10 GreatSchools rating with an average GPA of 3.69 and a 99% graduation rate. District-wide, math proficiency runs at 61% (versus the California average of 34%) and reading proficiency is 72% (versus 47% statewide). Bryant Ranch Elementary is top-ranked in the city. For families relocating from LA County or the Inland Empire, those numbers are a primary driver. If your home is zoned for a top-rated school, that belongs in the first paragraph of your property description.

Beyond schools, Yorba Linda buyers are drawn to trails, parks, and outdoor lifestyle. Proximity to Chino Hills State Park, equestrian culture in the eastern neighborhoods, and the community feel of Bryant Ranch and East Lake Village create something difficult to replicate in more urban parts of Orange County. Sellers who understand these motivations can emphasize the right features: the walking path behind the house, the horse trail access, the park visible from the backyard. These are the reasons someone pays $1.3 million to live here instead of somewhere else. You can read my deep dives on the top Yorba Linda neighborhoods for families and my honest review of Bryant Ranch for more of that perspective.

Top-rated schools and strong community events are a big reason buyers choose Yorba Linda. These lifestyle factors directly impact your home’s value.

Common Mistakes Yorba Linda Sellers Make (and How to Avoid Them)

After 20 years of selling homes here, I have seen every mistake in the book. Here are the ones that cost Yorba Linda sellers the most money.

Overpricing is the most common and the most expensive. A home priced 5% above market value actively repels buyers who compare it to the competition and move on. By the time you reduce four weeks later, the initial surge of interest is gone, and you are selling a "stale" listing. Yorba Linda homes average 36 to 43 days on market when priced well. Overpriced homes sit for 60, 90, or 120 days, and the final sale price is almost always lower than what accurate pricing would have achieved from the start.

Skipping professional photography is the second most damaging error. At $1 million-plus price points, buyers expect magazine-quality presentation online. In a market with 119 to 200 competing listings, your photos compete against professionally shot, beautifully staged homes. If your photos look amateur, your listing loses the click, and without the click, there is no showing, no offer, no sale.

Neglecting the buyer's perspective during negotiations is another costly error. I have watched sellers blow up deals over $2,000 repair requests because they felt insulted. The buyer is not insulting you. The buyer is negotiating. The question is not whether the repair request is fair. The question is whether fighting it puts your net proceeds at risk by killing the deal and sending you back to market. An experienced agent helps you see the math and make decisions based on outcomes, not emotions.

Finally, choosing the wrong agent compounds every other mistake. An agent who does not know Yorba Linda's neighborhoods will misprice your home. An agent who does not invest in professional marketing will under-expose it. An agent who has never negotiated a $1.5 million escrow will panic when the appraisal comes in low. Your agent choice is the first domino.

Frequently Asked Questions About Selling a Home in Yorba Linda

What is the median home price in Yorba Linda in 2026?

As of spring 2026, the median home sale price in Yorba Linda is approximately $1.3 million to $1.4 million, depending on the source and the month measured. Redfin reported a median of $1,382,491 in March 2026, while Zillow places the typical home value near $1.36 million. Prices vary significantly by neighborhood, with Bryant Ranch at $1.5 million and Travis Ranch at $1,267,500 for the same period.

How long does it take to sell a house in Yorba Linda right now?

Homes in Yorba Linda are spending a median of 36 to 43 days on the market from listing to accepted offer as of spring 2026. Add 30 to 45 days for the escrow period, and the total timeline from listing to closing runs approximately 10 to 13 weeks. Well-prepared, accurately priced homes often receive offers faster than the median.

What are the total costs of selling a home in Yorba Linda?

Total seller costs in Yorba Linda typically run 7% to 8% of the sale price when combining agent commissions (4.5% to 6%), closing costs (approximately 2.7%), and pre-listing preparation expenses. On a $1.3 million sale, that translates to roughly $91,000 to $104,000 before calculating your mortgage payoff.

Is spring 2026 a good time to sell in Yorba Linda?

Spring remains the strongest selling season in Orange County. Buyer activity peaks between March and May, mortgage rates near 6.2% to 6.4% are bringing more qualified buyers into the market compared to the higher rates of 2023 and 2024, and homes across Orange County are selling at approximately 99% of asking price. However, inventory is also up about 7.8% year over year, so preparation and pricing matter more than they did during the supply-constrained years.

Should I stage my Yorba Linda home before selling?

At Yorba Linda's price points ($1 million and above), professional staging is not optional if you want to maximize your sale price. Staged homes photograph better, attract more showing traffic, and consistently sell for more than unstaged homes. The cost of staging a typical Yorba Linda home runs $3,000 to $8,000 depending on square footage and the number of rooms staged, and the return on that investment is typically several times the cost.

What mortgage rate should I expect buyers to be working with in 2026?

As of late April 2026, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate is approximately 6.2% to 6.4%, according to Freddie Mac and Bankrate. For buyers purchasing a $1.3 million home with 20% down, that translates to a monthly principal and interest payment of roughly $6,400 to $6,600 on a $1,040,000 loan. Buyers with strong credit and larger down payments may secure rates slightly below these averages.

Do I need a pre-listing home inspection?

A pre-listing inspection is not required, but Brian Kidd and Canyon Realty strongly recommend it. For $400 to $600, you gain a complete picture of your home's condition before listing. This allows you to fix issues on your terms, price the home accurately, and avoid deal-killing surprises during the buyer's inspection. The cost is negligible compared to the risk of a transaction falling apart in escrow over an issue you could have addressed in advance.

How does Brian Kidd's dual licensing as a broker and mortgage lender help sellers?

Brian Kidd holds a California real estate broker license and a mortgage lending license (DRE# 01901810), which provides sellers with insight into both sides of the transaction. This dual expertise means Brian can evaluate how interest rate changes affect the active buyer pool for your price point, advise on pricing strategies that align with current lending conditions, and anticipate financing-related issues before they surface in escrow. Most listing agents do not have this lending background.

Ready to Sell Your Yorba Linda Home? Let's Talk.

If you are thinking about selling your home in Yorba Linda in 2026, the first step is a conversation. Not a sales pitch. A conversation about your home, your neighborhood, your goals, and what the current market means for your specific situation. I will give you an honest assessment of what your home is worth, what it will cost to sell, and what you can expect to net at the closing table. If the numbers make sense, we move forward. If they do not, I will tell you that too.

I have been doing this in Yorba Linda for over 20 years, and I have 40-plus years of roots in this city. I am a licensed real estate broker and mortgage lender, CA DRE# 01901810. I know the neighborhoods. I know the buyers. I know how to get you the best possible outcome without the hype, the pressure, or the empty promises.

Call me at (714) 404-8152, email me at [email protected], or schedule a consultation online. If you want to start with a no-obligation sense of what your home might be worth, request a free home valuation here. As your Yorba Linda real estate agent, my job is to make sure you do not leave money on the table. Let's make sure you don't.

 

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