When a Home Redefines the Comps
A Spanish Fork Case Study on Pricing Beyond the Data
By Juan Magana, Realtor® | Windermere Real Estate | Park City & Salt Lake City

Some homes follow the comps. Others make you question them entirely.
When the architecture, materials, and setting align at a higher level, pricing becomes strategy, not limitation.
Recently, we sold a custom home in Spanish Fork that, on paper, should have been priced in the high $600,000s. That’s what the data suggested. That’s where surrounding homes had been trading.
But from the moment I walked through the property, it was clear this home did not belong in that conversation.
The Moment Everything Changed
It wasn’t just the square footage or layout. It was the experience!
Exposed timber beams stretched across vaulted ceilings. A floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace anchored the living space. Every finish felt intentional. Every detail elevated.
This wasn’t a home competing within its neighborhood. It was a home standing apart from it.
And that distinction matters more than most sellers realize.

The Limitation of Comps
Comparable sales are a tool, not the full story. They tell you where the market has been, not where it is willing to go.
One of the most common mistakes sellers make is pricing their home to match the past. But buyers do not purchase based on spreadsheets. They respond to how a home feels, how it lives, and how it stands out.
The real question is not:
“What have homes sold for?”
It is:
“How should this home be positioned so the right buyer recognizes its value?”

The Strategy
Instead of defaulting to the comps, we made a deliberate decision:
We would position the home as a premium offering.
We listed at $850,000.
That decision wasn’t based on optimism; it was based on understanding the product and aligning every piece of the strategy around it.
Before going to market, we focused on three things:
1. Presentation
We walked through the home with a critical eye, refining each space so it felt cohesive, clean, and elevated. Every room needed to photograph beautifully and feel just as strong in person. See here
2. Storytelling
We created video content that allowed buyers to experience the home before ever stepping inside. One piece was designed for social media, creating immediate attention. Another was a more in-depth YouTube walkthrough, built to reach out-of-state buyers. See here
3. Exposure
We launched the home intentionally across multiple platforms, supported by a dedicated website that brought everything together into one clear narrative. See here
This wasn’t just about listing a property; it was about introducing it to the market the right way!

The Result
The response was immediate. Nearly 25 groups came through the open house. We received strong offers within the first weekend. And we closed quickly.
The buyer?
From out of state.
Someone who discovered the home through our marketing, connected with it, and acted decisively.
What This Really Means
This sale wasn’t about overpricing a home. It was about understanding it. When a home offers something the market hasn’t seen, it deserves a strategy that reflects that.
Because when you combine:
- Intentional presentation
- Clear positioning
- High-quality marketing
You don’t just fit into the market… you create a new benchmark within it!
What the Seller Had to Say
“We originally thought we would be listing in the $600s based on what we were seeing around us. Juan walked through our home and immediately saw something different. He didn’t just agree with the comps, he challenged them!

Final Thought
Not every home should be priced above the comps; but some homes are built differently.
The key is knowing the difference and having the strategy to support it.
If you’re considering selling and wondering how your home should be positioned in today’s market, it might be worth looking beyond the data.
Because sometimes… the home says more than the numbers ever will.