The fear behind most move-up hesitation isn’t about money or markets. It’s about time. Specifically: the gap between when your current home sells and when you close on the next one. The nightmare scenario is carrying two mortgages for months, or being homeless between closings with your furniture in storage.
What makes a simultaneous close work isn’t luck — it’s sequencing. Understanding the typical timeline for each phase of both transactions lets you plan the overlap rather than react to it. This guide maps the full move-up timeline from the first equity conversation to the day you get the keys to your next home, with the specific steps and realistic durations for each phase in the Temple and Belton market.
That 103-day average is the market reality — but it’s also the average, which means well-priced, well-marketed homes in Temple and Belton are selling in the 45–65 day range. The goal of a well-executed move-up plan is to be in that faster cohort, not the average. That starts before the listing goes live.
The Two-Track Model — Why Sequence Matters
The most common mistake move-up buyers make is running their sale and purchase sequentially: list the house, wait until it sells, then start looking for the next home. In the current Temple market with 103-day average days on market, that approach adds three to four months of unnecessary delay.
A simultaneous transaction runs both tracks in parallel from the start.
Equity review → CMA pricing → pre-listing prep → photography and marketing production → listing → showing management → offer negotiation → inspection → appraisal → close.
Pre-approval → active home search → offer strategy → under contract → inspection → appraisal → final loan approval → close.
Both tracks start at the same time. The closing dates are coordinated so Track A closes first (or same-day), funding the down payment for Track B. The art is keeping both tracks moving at compatible speeds — which requires more active coordination than most buyers realize going in.
“The simultaneous close doesn’t require perfect timing. It requires parallel preparation — starting both tracks at once and managing the gap before it opens.”
The Full Move-Up Timeline — Week by Week
- Free equity review: CMA on your current home, net proceeds calculation, buy-before-you-sell path selection
- Pre-approval letter: Secured before you start actively searching — not after you find a home you love
- If using a HELOC: Open it now, before any listing activity begins
- Identify target home price range based on equity + new mortgage payment math
- Define must-haves vs. nice-to-haves for the next home search
- Track A: Repairs, touch-up paint, decluttering, staging consultation
- Track A: Professional photography scheduled — ideally 1–2 weeks before listing
- Track A: Listing copy written, digital ad campaigns built, broker outreach begun
- Track B: MLS alerts set up for target neighborhoods and price range
- Track B: Tour properties actively — don’t wait for the listing to go live
- Professional photos, drone video, 3D tour go live simultaneously with the MLS entry
- Digital ad campaigns activate targeting local buyers plus Austin/Dallas relocation audiences
- Track B: Continue searching aggressively — if the right home appears, you are ready to offer
- If using a contingency offer strategy: be prepared to move quickly when your current home goes under contract
- Weekly market feedback review — showing activity, buyer comments, comparable new listings
- Price adjustment decision point at Day 21 if showing volume is low
- Track B: If you find the right home before going under contract on Track A — this is where your buy-before-you-sell path activates (Orchard, bridge loan, or HELOC draw)
- Keep Track B search active even if Track A hasn’t gone under contract yet
- Negotiate closing date with your buyer — ideally 35–45 days out to give Track B enough runway
- Negotiate leaseback if needed — up to 60 days in Texas, 30–45 days most common
- Track B: If not yet under contract on next home, intensify search immediately
- Option period on Track A (typically 7–10 days in Texas): negotiate repairs or credits, don’t let it derail the timeline
- Communicate Track A close date to Track B lender and title company immediately
- Track A: Buyer’s inspection, appraisal, final loan conditions, title work
- Track B: Your inspection (option period), appraisal, underwriting, final approval
- Keep both title companies aware of each other’s timelines — coordinated closings require it
- Do not make any new large purchases, change jobs, or open new credit accounts during underwriting
- Respond to all lender documentation requests same-day — delays here cascade to both closings
- Confirm moving logistics — storage unit, mover booking, temporary housing if needed
- Track A closing: receive net proceeds, confirm wire to Track B title company
- Track B closing: sign documents, receive keys
- Same-day double close is achievable with two cooperating title companies and advance planning
- If leaseback is in place: continue occupying current home for agreed period while Track B is being closed or you’re moving in
- Moving day: single move from current home to new home — no storage unit required when the timing is right
Managing the Gap — When Timing Doesn’t Align Perfectly
Even with good planning, simultaneous transactions sometimes develop gaps. The buyer of your current home’s financing falls through at week 8. Your next home’s seller needs an extra two weeks. The appraiser finds a value discrepancy that triggers renegotiation.
These are normal events, not catastrophes — if you’ve planned for them. Here is how to handle the three most common gap scenarios.
Negotiate a leaseback from your buyer — rent back your sold home for 30–45 days while Track B closes. This is the most common gap solution and works well when your buyer has financing flexibility. Alternatively, short-term furnished rental as a bridge.
If using Orchard or a bridge loan, this is by design — you’ve already purchased before your sale closes. If using a contingency offer, this scenario typically doesn’t arise because Track B can’t close until Track A is secure.
The most stressful scenario. Your sale falls out of contract, your Track B purchase is now at risk. Protocol: immediately re-list your current home at current pricing, communicate the situation to your Track B seller, and request a contract extension. Most sellers will grant 7–14 days if the communication is immediate and honest.
If your current home hasn’t sold and your Track B home is available, this is where the buy-before-you-sell path activates. The Orchard program, a bridge loan, or a HELOC draw funds your Track B purchase while Track A continues on market. The plan you made in Week 1 now executes.
The Most Common Reason Simultaneous Closes Fail
Two agents who aren’t talking to each other. The most common execution failure in a move-up transaction is having your selling agent and your buying agent operating independently — each managing their own transaction without coordinating the timing of the other.
Closing dates slip. Inspection deadlines conflict. One title company doesn’t know the other’s timeline. The wire transfer from Track A can’t fund Track B because the sequence wasn’t set up in advance.
Working with a single agent who is managing both transactions — or a team with an explicit coordination protocol — removes this risk. It’s not a luxury for complex deals; it’s the minimum necessary infrastructure for a smooth simultaneous close.
Where to Start Right Now
Frequently Asked Questions
A coordinated move-up transaction in Temple and Belton typically takes 90 to 150 days from start to finish — 2–3 weeks of preparation, up to 103 days average on market in Temple before an accepted offer, and 30–45 days to close after contract. The key to compressing this timeline is running both transactions in parallel from the start, not sequentially, with pre-approval in hand and the home search active from day one.
A simultaneous close is when the sale of your current home and the purchase of your next home close on the same day or within a few days. In Texas, this is achieved by coordinating closing dates with both title companies and both lenders in advance. The proceeds from your sale wire directly to your purchase closing — often on the same day — so you never carry two mortgages and never need temporary housing.
Temple TX homes are averaging 103 days on market from listing to accepted offer in 2026, plus approximately 30–45 days to close after contract — about 133–148 days total. Well-priced, well-marketed homes are selling in the 45–65 day range. The average is pulled up significantly by overpriced properties that sit and require multiple price reductions before selling.
The four biggest risks: closing delays on either transaction extending the gap period; your buyer’s financing falling through; inspection or appraisal issues requiring renegotiation that shifts dates; and a kick-out clause activating on a contingency before your home goes under contract. Most of these are manageable with advance planning. The most common cause of failure is having two agents who aren’t coordinating — a single agent managing both sides eliminates most of this risk.
Not necessarily. With an Orchard buy-before-you-sell program, bridge loan, or HELOC, you can close on your new home before your current one sells. With a contingency offer, you typically need an accepted offer (not necessarily closed) on your current home first. With a simultaneous close, both transactions close the same day — proceeds from your sale fund your purchase.