Zillow Said WHAT?! Let’s Have a Calm Conversation

You checked Zillow.
You saw a number.
You either felt thrilled… or mildly offended.
And now we need to talk.
First — take a breath. Zillow is not evil. It’s just… an algorithm. And algorithms don’t walk through your backyard to see your custom shed, your mature desert landscaping, or that you have the biggest lot in your 12-home community.
They also don’t smell the neighbor’s 1994 carpet.
Let’s break this down calmly.
What a “Zestimate” Actually Is
Zillow pulls public data:
- Square footage
- Tax records
- Recent sales nearby
- Basic property details
Then it spits out a number based on formulas.
What it does not do:
- Adjust for condition accurately
- See interior upgrades
- Understand lot size differences
- Account for market timing shifts
- Factor in buyer demand for your specific neighborhood
In Tucson, especially in smaller communities or custom areas, those details matter. A lot.
“But It Says My House Is Worth $X…”
Here’s the part nobody likes:
The Zestimate can be off — sometimes by thousands. Sometimes by tens of thousands.
Especially when:
- Your neighbor listed too high.
- A distressed sale skewed comps.
- A cash investor bought something under market.
- Or the market shifted quickly (hello, interest rates).
Zillow is pulling data.
A Realtor is interpreting data.
That’s the difference.
Tucson Is Hyper-Local
What’s happening in Oro Valley is not the same as what’s happening on the East Side.
A house in 85715 does not behave the same as one in 85750.
Even within a 12-home neighborhood, one house with a larger yard, fireplace, or better orientation can justify a meaningful pricing difference.
Algorithms don’t see nuance.
Buyers absolutely do.
When Zillow Is Too High (Yes, That Happens)
Sometimes sellers see a high Zestimate and think:
“Well, let’s just list it there.”
But if the market doesn’t support it, the home sits.
Days on market increase.
Buyers start wondering what’s wrong.
Then price reductions happen.
And ironically?
You can end up selling for less than if you priced strategically from day one.
That’s not dramatic. That’s pattern recognition.
When Zillow Is Too Low
This happens too.
Especially in:
- Updated homes in average neighborhoods
- Homes with larger lots
- Homes with high-end interior finishes are not reflected in public data
Zillow doesn’t know your kitchen was renovated last year unless the data was reported properly.
Buyers walking in absolutely notice.
So What’s the Calm Next Step?
Instead of arguing with Zillow…
Or clinging to Zillow…
Let’s look at:
- True comparable sales
- Active competition
- Pending contracts (the most telling data)
- Current buyer activity
- And yes, even cash-offer options if speed is a priority
Because here’s the real question:
Do you want the highest theoretical number?
Or the strongest strategic outcome?
Those are not always the same thing.
Final Thought (Slightly Desert-Flavored 🌵)
Zillow is like checking WebMD.
It gives you information.
But before you diagnose your home with “Overpriceditis” or “Under-Valued Syndrome,” maybe have a conversation with someone who actually works in the Tucson market every day.
No pressure. No drama. Just clarity.
If you’re curious what your home is actually worth — or what a cash offer might look like — call, text us or fill out our consultation form.
Let’s keep it calm. And profitable.