If you own a home in Evergreen, Morrison, Conifer, Golden, or Pine — and you've been quietly asking yourself whether this is finally the right time to sell — you're not alone. That question has been sitting on a lot of kitchen tables up here for the past two years.
The short answer: spring 2026 is a real window. Not a frenzy. Not a panic. A genuine, well-timed opportunity for sellers who go in prepared. How well it works for you depends entirely on how you enter the market — and whether your strategy matches what buyers are actually doing right now.
Is it a good time to sell a home in the Colorado Foothills in 2026?
Yes — with the right approach. The foothills market in spring 2026 is stable, with buyer activity picking up after a slow winter. Prices in Evergreen, Conifer, Morrison, and Golden have held firm. Sellers who price accurately and present well are closing near list price. What's changed from prior years: buyers have more choices and take more time — so strategic pricing and strong presentation matter more than they did during the pandemic seller's market.
The Foothills Market at a Glance — Spring 2026
Translation: this isn't a market where you overprice and wait it out. But it's also not a market where you need to give the house away. Sellers who treat this like 2022 will be frustrated. Sellers who approach it strategically are closing.
How the Foothills Market Has Shifted
Understanding where we came from helps explain where we are. Here's how key market indicators have moved across the foothills over the past three years:
What this means for you: The window has reopened. It's not 2022 — but it's the best seller climate since then. Buyers who waited out the rate spike are re-entering the market as rates stabilize near 6%. The foothills, specifically, are drawing lifestyle and relocation buyers who can't find this kind of property in the Denver metro.
Why Spring Is the Best Window in the Foothills
The foothills have always had a distinct seasonality that works in sellers' favor. When snow recedes and the views open up, properties show differently — and buyers feel it. Mountain homes that look heavy in February come alive in April and May. The lot, the acreage, the outdoor spaces — all of it photographs and shows better.
There's also a timing advantage. Many buyers who researched online all winter are ready to commit in spring. Relocation buyers — people moving from California, Texas, and the Pacific Northwest — typically work with late spring and summer timelines. And foothills lifestyle properties are among the first things they're searching for.
One more thing worth knowing: a significant number of foothills sellers held their homes off the market through winter, waiting for better conditions. Spring will bring some of those listings back. Sellers who list early and prepared capture buyers before the field widens.
Who Is Buying Foothills Homes Right Now
Understanding your buyer pool matters when planning a listing strategy. Here's who we're seeing most actively in spring 2026:
Flexibility to live 30–45 minutes from Denver — or farther — opened a buyer segment that didn't exist five years ago. They want acreage, space, quiet, and a different pace. Evergreen, Conifer, Pine, and Morrison check every box.
Adults 35–54 who built equity in Arvada, Littleton, or Aurora over the past decade are ready to trade up for more land and lifestyle. Stabilizing rates have made that math more feasible than 18 months ago.
Buyers from California, Washington, and Texas are bringing equity from competitive markets. Foothills properties at $700K–$1.5M look like strong value to buyers used to coastal price tags.
Long-time foothills homeowners ready to trade acreage for something simpler. They know the area, aren't wasting time, and move quickly when they find the right property.
What "Well-Prepared" Actually Means in This Market
You'll hear it constantly: well-priced and well-prepared homes are selling. Here's what that actually looks like:
Price to the Actual Market — Not Last Year's Comps
Buyers in 2026 are doing their research. They know what homes sold for six months ago and cross-reference days on market before making an offer. Pricing 5–10% above current comps hoping to "leave room to negotiate" almost always backfires — properties sit, accumulate days on market, and eventually sell for less than they would have with accurate day-one pricing.
Presentation That Competes Online First
Most buyers are filtering properties online before scheduling a showing. Professional photography is non-negotiable. Drone footage for acreage properties and mountain views — equally important. A listing description that leads with lifestyle, not just specs. If your home doesn't stop the scroll, it doesn't get the showing.
Address Insurance and Inspection Items Proactively
Wildfire zone properties in Evergreen, Conifer, Morrison, and Pine face heightened scrutiny from insurers. Buyers factor insurance costs into monthly payments before making offers. Sellers who handle deferred maintenance and fire mitigation items before listing — not after — move faster and with fewer surprises at closing.
Before You List: An Honest Seller's Checklist
None of these are meant to discourage you. They're the questions that separate sellers who close smoothly from sellers who end up frustrated. Going in with clear eyes makes everything easier.
We've Lived This Market — From Both Sides
Tim and Sandy Jones have been helping foothills homeowners buy and sell since 2011. We didn't just build careers here — we built a life here. We currently live on 20 acres in Pine, and we've bought and sold in Evergreen, Morrison, and the surrounding communities. We know what it feels like to love a foothills property and what it takes to let one go.
We also know what buyers are asking for, what inspectors flag in mountain homes, what wildfire insurance underwriters are looking at, and how to position a property to attract serious offers — not just showings. That knowledge comes from a lot of transactions in a very specific market.
Ready to Talk About Your Home?
No pressure, no obligation — just an honest conversation about what your home is worth and what selling looks like in today's market.

