If you've ever wondered what happens to your home after you sell—not just physically, but digitally—you're not alone.
A question I've been asked more than once is:
"Are the photos of my home still going to be online after we close?"
And it's a good question. Because selling a home today doesn't just involve a sign in the yard—it involves a digital presence that doesn't always disappear the moment the keys change hands.
Let's walk through it together so you know exactly what to expect.
Once your home sells, the listing is no l...
There's a part of almost every home that quietly gets ignored.
No furniture. No décor. No reason to go there unless something goes wrong.
The attic.
Most homeowners don't go up there unless there's a leak, a noise, or an inspection forcing the issue. And even then, it's usually a quick glance—just enough to say, "Nothing looks too concerning," and back down the ladder we go.
But here's the part that's worth thinking about: some of the most expensive issues in a home don't start in the places we see every day. They start above us, slowly, quietly, and without much warning.
I've walked through enough homes—during listings, inspections, and buyer showings—to tell you this is one of the most overlooked spaces in a house. And it's often where the truth o...
There's a moment I watch for when I'm walking through a home with a buyer.
It's not when they see the square footage.
It's not even when they see the kitchen.
It's when they slow down—just slightly—and start noticing the details they didn't know they were looking for.
That's where value lives.
Not in the walls themselves, but in everything layered into them.
The MLS does a good job of capturing the facts—square footage, year built, roof age, HVAC, acreage. Those matter. They protect you.
Mount Pleasant is still Mount Pleasant. Buyers want to be here.
But the data tells a more honest story than "everything is hot" or "nothing is affordable." Looking at 76 recent closings, the market is active, but buyers are being selective. They are paying strong prices when the home, location, condition, and lifestyle make sense. They are also negotiating when the numbers feel stretched.
The median sold price in this group was about $945,000. That tells us something immediately: Mount Pleasant is not functioning like a typical entry-level market. Still, the largest cluster of closings happened below $1 million, especially between $500,000 and $1 million.
That is where many buyers appear to be working hardest to stay in Mount Pl...
Scanlonville is one of those Mount Pleasant neighborhoods that does not need to announce itself loudly. It sits near Mathis Ferry Road, Remley's Point, the Wando River, and the Mount Pleasant waterfront, but it still carries a quieter identity than many of the newer, more polished communities nearby.
That is part of what makes the Scanlonville real estate market so interesting right now.
This is not a neighborhood where every property looks the same. Recent MLS activity shows homes built from the late 1950s through newer construction, with lot sizes often larger than what many buyers expect to find this close to the water in Mount Pleasant. In the attached sales data, closed prices ranged from $820,000 to $1,450,000, with a median closed price just over
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