Luxury buyers often spend considerable time researching properties before they ever schedule a showing. They review photos, study floorplans, compare locations, and evaluate features long before stepping through the front door. Yet despite all of that preparation, many buyers form their strongest impressions within the first few minutes of arriving at a property. That initial reaction is rarely about square footage or appliance packages. Instead, buyers are evaluating something much more difficult to quantify: how the home feels. In Bend's luxury market, that first impression often shapes the entire showing experience.
Not every expensive home is truly luxury. That distinction is becoming increasingly important in Bend as buyers grow more selective and more thoughtful about how they evaluate high-end properties. A few years ago, rapid appreciation and limited inventory pushed pricing upward across nearly every segment of the market. In many cases, homes achieved luxury-level prices simply because demand was strong and supply was limited. Today's buyers are looking deeper than price alone. They are evaluating quality, setting, design, privacy, livability, and how well a property aligns with the Central Oregon lifestyle. The homes that stand out now are usually not the ones trying hardest to appear luxurious—they are the ones that feel nat...
Luxury buyers in Bend are still active—but the way they evaluate homes has changed considerably over the past several years. A short time ago, demand often centered around urgency. Inventory was limited, competition was intense, and many buyers were willing to move quickly simply to secure a property in Central Oregon. Today's
April 2026 shows a Bend real estate market that is adjusting—not collapsing. Pricing has come off noticeably from a year ago, but buyer activity remains stable and, in some areas, quietly improving. The result is a more balanced market where properly priced homes are still moving, while aspirational pricing is getting corrected.
When a home hits the market in Bend, most sellers assume the process unfolds over weeks or even months. Showings build, interest develops, and eventually the right buyer appears.
That's not how it works anymore. In today's market, the first seven days carry disproportionate weight. This is when buyers are paying the closest attention, when new inventory is evaluated, and when a home either gains momentum—or misses it.