DeSoto TX move-up seller deciding to sell first or buy first in 2026 DFW market

Should You Sell Your DFW Home First or Buy Your Next One First in 2026?

June 08, 2026

Should You Sell Your DFW Home First or Buy Your Next One First in 2026?

By Steven J. Thomas

DeSoto TX move-up seller deciding to sell first or buy first in 2026 DFW market

You have outgrown your current house in DeSoto, and the next one is calling. Maybe it is a new build in Midlothian or a bigger floor plan in Cedar Hill. But there is one question that stops most move-up sellers cold: do you sell your home first, or buy the next one first? In a 2026 DFW market with more inventory and pickier buyers, the order you choose changes your budget, your stress level, and how much equity you keep.

Direct Answer

In the 2026 DFW buyer's market, most move-up sellers should sell first or sell and buy at the same time. Inventory is high and homes take longer to move, so listing first protects your equity and removes the risk of carrying two mortgages. Buying first only makes sense if you can qualify for both payments or use a bridge strategy. Start by checking your home's readiness with a Home Selling Score.

The Two Paths: Sell First vs. Buy First

Every move-up seller in southwest DFW lands on one of two roads. Sell first means you list and close your current home before you buy the next one. Buy first means you secure the new house, then sell your old one. Both can work. The right answer depends on your equity, your income, and how much risk you can stomach.

Selling first gives you certainty. You know exactly how much equity you walk away with, you avoid two mortgage payments, and you make a stronger, non-contingent offer on the next home. The trade-off is logistics. You may need a short-term rental or a leaseback while you find and close the next place.

Buying first gives you comfort. You move once, on your schedule, and you never scramble for temporary housing. But it carries real risk in 2026. If your old home sits longer than you planned, you could be covering two payments or accepting a lowball offer just to stop the bleeding.

Why 2026 DFW Market Conditions Favor Selling First

The math changed. DFW is a buyer's market in a way it has not been in a decade, and that shift should drive your decision.

  • The DFW Metroplex had roughly 38,800 active listings in early 2026, with inventory up about 3 percent year over year (Homes.com DFW Market Report, 2026).
  • The median DFW close price was about $385,000 as of February 2026, down roughly 2 percent year over year (Norada Real Estate, March 2026).
  • Homes are spending longer on the market, with average days on market in the 38 to 71 day range depending on price and zip code.
  • In DeSoto, the average home value sits near $315,000, down about 3.2 percent over the past year, with recent listings going pending in roughly 30 to 49 days (Redfin DeSoto, 2026).

Here is what that means for you. When inventory is high and homes take longer to sell, buying first is a gamble. Your old home may not move on the timeline you need, and a second mortgage payment can wipe out the equity you were counting on. Selling first removes that risk. You convert your equity to cash, then shop with a clear budget and a strong offer. For a deeper look at where prices are heading, see the DFW market statistics updated through 2026.

"In a buyer's market, the seller who lists first controls the timeline. The seller who buys first is hoping the market cooperates. Hope is not a plan." — Steven J. Thomas, Refind Realty DFW

The Cost of Getting the Order Wrong

This is where a financial planning background matters. Let me show you the real costs hiding in each path so you can decide with numbers, not nerves.

  • Two mortgage payments: On a $400,000 next home at 6.48 percent, principal and interest runs about $2,520 a month before taxes and insurance. Carry that alongside your current note for even three months and you are looking at $7,500 or more out of pocket.
  • Bridge loan costs: Bridge financing can cover the gap, but expect higher rates and fees, often 1 to 3 percent of the loan plus interest. It is a tool, not a freebie.
  • Price cuts from pressure: If you buy first and your old home lingers, you may cut the price to sell fast. A 3 percent cut on a $350,000 DeSoto home is $10,500 of lost equity.
  • Rental or leaseback gap: If you sell first, budget for a short-term rental or a post-closing leaseback. In southwest DFW that is often $1,800 to $2,800 a month, far cheaper than a second mortgage.

The pattern is clear. The cost of selling first is small and predictable. The cost of buying first, in a soft market, can be large and open-ended.

Smart Ways to Bridge the Gap Without Two Mortgages

Selling first does not have to mean living out of boxes. There are structured ways to time both transactions so you are never homeless and never double-paying. This is exactly the gap I close for southwest DFW sellers.

  • Sell and Stay: Sell your home now to lock in your equity, then remain in place under a leaseback while your next home or new build finishes. This is built for sellers waiting on construction in Midlothian, Waxahachie, or Mansfield.
  • HomeSwap: Buy the next home first, move in, then sell your current one without the pressure of an occupied listing. Best when you can carry the timing or qualify for both.
  • SureSale: Leverage your equity while keeping the chance to capture full market value, so you move forward without selling short.

Because I am dual-licensed as a broker and a loan officer, I look at both sides at once: what your current home will net and what you can qualify for on the next one. That is how we map the timing before you list anything. Want the full sell-and-build path organized start to finish? Start a plan at chat with Steve.

Financing the Move in a 6.48 Percent Rate Environment

Rates shape your strategy. As of June 4, 2026, the 30-year fixed averaged 6.48 percent, down from 6.85 percent a year earlier (Freddie Mac PMMS, June 2026). That is not the 3 percent of 2021, but it is trending the right way, and it changes how you plan a move-up.

If you sell first, you arrive at the next purchase with a large cash down payment from your equity. A bigger down payment shrinks your loan, lowers your monthly note, and can offset today's rate. If you are building new, many DFW builders are still offering rate buydowns and closing cost credits to move standing inventory, which can drop your effective rate well below the market average for the first few years.

The move I make for most clients is simple. We confirm what you can comfortably afford on the next home before we touch your current listing. No guessing, no surprises at the closing table. Get that number locked by getting pre-approved here.

Conclusion

The 2026 DFW market rewards the seller who controls the timeline. With more inventory and longer days on market, selling first or selling and buying at the same time protects the equity you have built. Buying first can still work, but only with the income or the bridge strategy to back it. The biggest mistake is choosing the order by gut instead of by numbers. Run your equity, run your next-home budget, and let the math pick the path.

Ready to decide with confidence?

You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.

Key Takeaways

  • In the 2026 DFW buyer's market, selling first protects your equity and avoids two mortgage payments.
  • Buy first only if you can qualify for both homes or use a bridge strategy with eyes open.
  • The cost of selling first is small and predictable; the cost of buying first in a soft market can be large and open-ended.
  • Sell and Stay, HomeSwap, and SureSale let you time both moves without doubling up.
  • Lock your next-home budget with a pre-approval before you list your current home.

FAQ: Sell First or Buy First in DFW 2026

Should I sell my DeSoto home before I buy the next one in 2026?

In most cases, yes. With DFW inventory high and homes taking longer to sell, selling first locks in your equity and removes the risk of carrying two mortgages. Buying first works only if you can qualify for both payments or use a bridge plan.

How much equity do I need to make a move-up work?

Enough to cover your next down payment, closing costs, and moving expenses after paying off your current loan. Selling first tells you that number exactly, which is why it is the safer order in a softer market.

What happens if I buy first and my old home does not sell?

You risk covering two mortgage payments or cutting your price to sell fast, which can erase equity. A bridge loan or a structured plan like Sell and Stay reduces that risk, but it must be set up before you buy.

Are DFW builders still offering incentives in 2026?

Many are. To move standing inventory, builders across DFW are offering rate buydowns and closing cost credits, which can lower your effective rate for the first few years. These vary by builder and community, so confirm current terms before you commit.

How long does it take to sell a home in DeSoto right now?

Recent DeSoto listings have gone pending in roughly 30 to 49 days when priced correctly, though overall market timelines run longer. Pricing to today's market, not last year's, is the single biggest factor in selling fast.

Where can I see current DeSoto and DFW homes for sale?

Browse live, up-to-date listings on the Lone Star Living App, which pulls directly from the MLS so you see new homes the moment they hit the market.

Market data reflects conditions at the time of writing and is not a guarantee of future prices, timelines, or outcomes. Steven J. Thomas, Refind Realty DFW, 128 S. Cockrell Hill Rd, DeSoto, TX 75115. Phone 972-846-9170. Equal Housing Opportunity. All real estate services provided in accordance with TREC rules.

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