Listen

Description

#HoustonRealEstate, #MarketUpdate, #PaintColorsToAvoid, #BedroomBoost, #RealEstateTips, #HoustonHousing, #HomeSellingSecrets

Grab your oversized mug and settle in for Coffee With Real Estate, the Houston-centric show where host Susan, a battle-tested Realtor with an encyclopedic feel for every zip code, and producer Kurt, the numbers nerd with a caffeine addiction, brew a perfect blend of market intel, design do’s and don’ts, and laugh-out-loud money traps.Episode after episode, Susan and Kurt dissect the sprawling Houston metro like only locals can. This installment kicks off with a September 2025 market pulse: 7,400 homes sold (up 5% YoY), median price at $327,000 (down 2%), average at $421,000 (up 2%), active listings ballooning 28% to 38,500, and days on market creeping to 55. Translation? Still a seller’s market, but patience is the new power move. Builders are pumping the brakes just enough to keep inventory from drowning the core, while the outer ring—Waller, Brookshire, Montgomery County, Hockley—explodes 11.2% year-over-year with starter homes 25% cheaper than inside the beltway. Susan explains why a Conroe commute to The Woodlands beats fighting I-10 into downtown, proving Houston’s multiple “downtowns” fuel endless growth without the gridlock nightmares of single-CBD cities.Then the duo pivots to the paint can. Kurt unearths a designer hit list: black (moody but polarizing), neon anything (Seinfeld-level sleep sabotage), screaming reds, and deep purples. Susan groans at the gray tsunami flooding new listings—“I’m exhausted by battleship walls.” The antidote? A restful, hotel-spa blue in the primary bedroom. Zillow data backs it up: the right blue hue lifts sale prices $1,500 on average and accelerates offers. Susan recounts a quick-win listing where one calming coat turned “meh” showings into a same-week contract. Pro tip: pair the walls with neutral bedding and let buyers picture their own five-star retreat.Finally, the fan-favorite fun segment: “Sping”—that sneaky mash-up of spending to save. Kurt drops the stat bomb: Americans flush $50,000 lifetime on this mental gymnastics routine. Classic moves? Driving twenty minutes for ten-cent cheaper gas, stockpiling eclipse-level toilet paper because “per roll” math, or—Susan’s confession—scouring a website for a $3 filler item to dodge $12 shipping, only to land a $9 net save on something destined for the junk drawer. They riff on grocery “buy 5, save 5” traps, thrift-store $3 impulse buys you’d never grab at $25 retail, and the egg-roll apocalypse after a “buy 2, get 2 free” freezer raid. Susan defends strategic stockpiling of true staples (laundry detergent, toothpaste) when the coupon-mail-in-rebate triple play once scored her a full year of free soap. Kurt counters with the million-dollar latte principle: redirect that $100 monthly “spaving” into a 7% index fund and watch it compound to $50K in twenty years.