>the ceilings on the top floor were too sloped
One of them is fine, one of them is quite extreme, but I'd say that's obvious from the photos
>and she thought it was only worth 260k
Idk what your house is actually worth but I can tell you I've seen your agency and various iterations of them overprice massively in other branches, I'm writing at least one reply a month telling people this, they're all part of the same group.
>She also said that it was weird that I'd upped the price
Well it is, it's the sort of thing that irritates buyers
>but she only knows this because her viewing was booked before my house went live on Rightmove.
But anyone who has Property Log will also know this. You listed it and increased the price on the very same day, buyers will look and think 'oof, greedy'
You don't even need to have Property Log, in fact, just an inbox. I can tell you what any house in my area was originally listed for going back 18 months so I just need to search to see an original listing price.
Much sympathy re: CFS. Our last viewings were a 5 hour round trip and it was crippling. In the end, we decided to rent until we found the right house - my body couldn't take it anymore.
You appear to be behind a police station which is opposite a hospital. For me, the house or the price would need to be EXACTLY right for those two concessions (not wanting to be near either one of those things).
>The house two doors away sold in a few days and was on for 280k
Yes, but what it was on for is not key. What it SOLD for is crucial. Do you know what it actually sold for?
I came across a house the other day that sold in an area I was monitoring last year. Original asking price 430k, reduced and reduced to 330k. Land registry now shows me it sold for 285k. So there was an over 13% reduction agreed with the purchaser below the final listing asking price.