It is the first question every seller asks. And it is the question most agents answer dishonestly — because the agent who tells you your home is worth the most tends to win the listing, whether that number is real or not.
This article gives you the actual answer: what the Bell County market data says your home is worth, how that number gets calculated, and — specifically — why the number an agent quotes at your kitchen table and the number a buyer will actually pay are often two very different things.
What the Bell County Market Looks Like Right Now
The median sale price in Bell County as of early 2026 is $276,900. By city: Temple is at $274,300, Belton at $326,420. Prices have been essentially flat for three years after the 2021–2022 pandemic peak, with 2026 showing slight softening.
What that means practically: buyers have options they haven’t had since pre-2020. Correctly priced homes still sell — in about 32 days, at or near full ask. Overpriced homes sit, accumulate doubt, and ultimately close at a deeper discount than a well-priced listing would have.
The sweet spot: The $200K–$350K range in Temple and Belton has the deepest buyer pool and moves fastest. Move-in ready homes are significantly outperforming fixer-uppers in the current market.
What a CMA Actually Is — and What It Is Not
A Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) estimates your home’s value using recently sold comparable properties nearby. A well-built CMA — one using the last 90 days of closed sales, adjusted for condition and features — is typically within 2–4% of your final sale price.
That is what a CMA is. Here is what it is not:
- It is not a Zillow estimate. Automated valuation models use public records and algorithms. They do not see inside your home, do not know whether your kitchen was updated last year, and do not adjust for the specific nuances of your street vs. the next one over.
- It is not a property tax appraisal. Bell CAD values your home for tax purposes, not for sale purposes — and the methodology is completely different.
- It is not the number your neighbor sold for in 2022. Markets shift. A comp from 18 months ago may be irrelevant in today’s flat-to-softening Bell County market.
The problem with how agents use CMAs: An agent who wants your listing has an incentive to select comps that support a high number — and omit the ones that don’t. This is the industry’s worst-kept secret. The result: you list too high, sit on the market, and eventually reduce anyway — often ending up at a lower net price than if you’d priced correctly from day one.
What Happens When You Overprice
In Bell County right now, 68.2% of listings need a price reduction before selling. The median price cut is $15,475. That is not a market problem — that is a pricing problem.
Here is what the timeline looks like when a home is overpriced in the current market:
What Homes Are Actually Selling For — Bell County by City
| City | Median Sale Price | Avg Days on Market | % Selling Above List |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temple | $274,300 | 103 days (avg) / 32 (priced right) | 12.3% |
| Belton | $326,420 | Varies by price bracket | Similar range |
| Killeen | $240,000 | Faster — deeper buyer pool | Higher |
| Harker Heights | $320,000 | Moderate | Moderate |
| Moody | ~$515K–$549K (list) | ~236 days (median) | Low |
Source: Bell County MLS, 4,923 sales, March 2026. Temple data: Redfin, February 2026.
How to Get the Real Number for Your Home
There is only one reliable way to know what your specific home will sell for: a CMA built from the last 90 days of closed sales in your ZIP code, adjusted for your home’s condition, square footage, bed and bath count, lot size, and finish level.
When I sit down with a seller, that is exactly what I build — before we discuss listing price, before we discuss timing, before I ask for anything. The number I give you is based on what buyers have actually paid, not what I think will win your listing.
A few things that will affect your specific number:
- Condition. Move-in ready homes are significantly outperforming fixer-uppers right now. Buyers have options and are not chasing projects the way they were in 2021.
- Recency of updates. A kitchen or primary bath updated in the last five years adjusts your comps upward. Original finishes from 2005 do not.
- Lot and location. In Bell County, backing up to a major road or being in a flood plain zone is a meaningful discount. A corner lot with mature trees is a premium.
- Timing. May through August is the peak selling window in Bell County. June historically achieves the best sale-price-to-list-price ratio (100.4%). January and February are the weakest months.
Questions to Ask Any Agent at a Listing Appointment
Most sellers interview one agent and accept the first CMA they see. Before you sign a listing agreement, ask:
- “Show me the comps you used — and the ones you didn’t use.” An honest agent will show you both.
- “What is the average days on market for homes in my price bracket right now?” If they don’t know the number, they haven’t done the analysis.
- “What happens if we don’t get an offer in 30 days?” The answer tells you a lot about how the agent thinks about pricing.
- “What percentage of your listings close above, at, or below original list price?” Agents who overprice to win listings have bad numbers here.
The honest answer to “what will my house sell for” always comes with a range, not a single number. Any agent who gives you a precise figure without pulling comps first is guessing — or telling you what you want to hear.
Frequently Asked Questions
Get the Real Number for Your Home
I’ll build you a CMA based on the last 90 days of closed sales in your area — no inflation, no pitch, no pressure. Just the data.
Call 254-307-4679 Start a Valuation