SIGN UP CUSTOMER LOGIN

Posts made by author 'Carol Hunt'

My Blogs

Subscribe and receive email notifications of new blog posts.




rss logo RSS Feed
Area Expertise | 1 Posts
Buyers | 2 Posts
Downsizing | 1 Posts
Sellers | 8 Posts
Uncategorized | 1 Posts
June
9

How Long Does It Take to Sell a Home in Winnetka or Wilmette?

Slug: how-long-to-sell-home-winnetka-wilmette

Meta Description: Homes in Winnetka sell in around 29 days on average; Wilmette around 41 days. But timing, pricing, and preparation determine where your home lands. Here's what to know.


How long does it take to sell a home in Winnetka or Wilmette?

In 2026, homes in Winnetka are selling in around 29 days on average; homes in Wilmette in around 41 days. Well-priced, well-prepared homes in desirable locations move significantly faster — sometimes within days. Overpriced or under-prepared homes can sit for months. The difference comes down to strategy, not luck.

By Carol Hunt | June 5, 2026


"How long will it take to sell?" is on...

Click Here to Read More...

June
9

Chicago Is the Strongest Housing Market in the Nation. What That Means for North Shore Sellers and Buyers.

Is the Chicago housing market strong right now? Yes. Chicago posted a 6.1% annual home price gain in March 2026 — the highest of all 20 major U.S. cities tracked by the S&P Case-Shiller Index. The national average was 0.7%.

Most national real estate headlines right now tell a cautious story. Rates remain elevated. Price growth in many Sun Belt markets has stalled or reversed. Buyer demand has softened in cities that saw extreme appreciation during the pandemic years.

Chicago is a different story.

The [S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index](https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/indices/indicators/sp-corelogic-case-shiller-us-national-home-price-nsa-index/) for March 2026 ranked Chicago first among all 20 major U.S. cities for annual home price appreciation — at 6.1%, nearly nine times the national average. That is not a rounding error. It reflects a m...

Click Here to Read More...

June
9

Concierge-Level Preparation for Your North Shore Home

My family has been part of the New Trier district for four generations.

I grew up in Kenilworth.
I raised my daughters in Winnetka.

The homes in this community are not just structures. They hold history, tradition, and long-standing ties. Preparing them for sale requires experience — and care.

After more than 40 years representing North Shore buyers and sellers, I approach each listing with one clear objective:

Creating Value Just for You.

Start Early. Declutter With Intention.

Most of my sellers have lived in their homes for 20 years or more. Decluttering is not about erasing...

Click Here to Read More...

June
9

Can a buyer really purchase a luxury home sight-unseen?

Yes. In June 2021, a couple in Florida bought a $1.895 million home at 708 Lincoln Street in Evanston for full asking price — based entirely on a listing video. They never stepped inside. They skipped the inspection. They closed without a final walkthrough. The combination of a thoughtfully produced virtual tour, a well-marketed home, and clear timing for the buyers made the deal work without a single in-person showing.

By Carol Hunt | April 22, 2026


The Florida couple had never been inside the house.

They watched the listing video, talked to their agent, and made a full-price offer on a four-bedroom custom home on a tree-lined block in Evanston. No walkthrough. No inspection contingency. Their daughter was starting at Northwestern in the fall, and they needed a home base near campus — quickly.

That home was 708 Lincoln Street. It closed on June 17, 2021 at $1,895,000. Full asking price. No concessions.

This is the story of how one video — paired with a well-prepared home and a pair of buyers who knew exactly what they needed — turned into a nearly $1.9 million sale without a single showing.

What they saw that sold them

The video walked viewers through the whole property — fourteen rooms across a seven-year-old custom build, five bedrooms (four upstairs plus one on the lower level), and 5.1 baths. It captured scale without making the home feel cold, and it showed flow — the way the kitchen opened to the family room, the natural light through each principal room, and how the main floor actually lived.

But the two moments that stopped the buyers in their tracks had nothing to do with the main house.

The first was a separate coach house with a kitchenette and full bath — the kind of detached flex space that almost never comes up in this market. For a family sending a daughter off to college in a new state, the idea of a private guest house for visiting relatives, a quiet home office, or a landing pad for an extended stay was a genuine unlock.

The second was an exterior custom fireplace on the patio — a detail that reads small on a listing sheet but carries real weight on screen. It signaled a home designed for entertaining and for lingering outdoors, in a city where patio season is precious and short.

Neither detail would have landed the same way in photos alone.

Why sight-unseen purchases work on the North Shore

Out-of-state buyers are a bigger share of the North Shore market than most people realize — especially in Evanston, where Northwestern parents, medical professionals affiliated with the hospitals, and corporate relocations generate a steady flow of buyers who can't easily fly in three times before making an offer.

For those buyers, video isn't a marketing extra. It's the showing. It's the walkthrough. And it's often the deciding factor between submitting an offer and waiting until the next listing comes up.

When the video is good — when it's actually a tour and not a highlight reel — a buyer can trust what they see. They can understand the floor plan. They can feel the pace of the home. They can picture their own life in it. That is what turns a pixel on a screen into an offer on paper.


Thinking about selling a North Shore home where a meaningful share of buyers will come from out of town? The way the home is photographed, filmed, and marketed online matters more than almost anything else you can do to prepare for the market. Reach out anytime — I'm happy to walk you through what a full marketing package looks like for a luxury listing.

Carol Hunt | Baird & Warner, Winnetka
? (847) 404-7959 | ✉️ carol.hunt@bairdwarner.com | ? hunt4houses.com


What the 708 Lincoln listing video actually did right

A good listing video isn't a fancy camera. It's a sequence of decisions.

Here's what this one did that made it possible for a Florida couple to buy a home they'd never seen:

  • It showed the whole property, not just the hero shots. The coach house, the exterior fireplace, the lower level — everything a buyer would want to see in person was on camera. Nothing was hidden for the showing.
  • It showed flow. You could follow the natural path through the home — foyer to living room to kitchen to family room to outside — so the floor plan made sense in motion, not just on paper.
  • It paired visuals with context. Room sizes, finishes, and the kind of lifestyle the home supports were all made clear, so remote buyers weren't left guessing.
  • It was the right length. Long enough to actually understand the home. Short enough to hold attention all the way through.

Production quality matters. But what matters more is what ends up on the screen. A home that's properly staged, professionally lit, and filmed with a buyer's decision-making process in mind will sell to buyers who can't see it in person. A home that isn't — won't.

The buyers made the decision easier for themselves, too

Here's the part that doesn't get talked about much: the Florida couple did the work on their side.

They were clear on what they needed — proximity to Northwestern, room for their daughter and visiting family, enough space to live and host and stay a while. They studied the video. They asked their agent the questions that mattered to them. And when the right home came up, they moved on it without overthinking.

They owned 708 Lincoln Street for four years. Their daughter graduated. The home served its purpose. And when it came time to sell, they did it on their timing — confident in a decision they'd made four years earlier, in part because of one video.

When video is the difference between selling and sitting

For out-of-town buyers, a strong listing video can take a $1.9 million home from "interesting" to "under contract" without a walkthrough. For sellers on the North Shore, that means the quality of your marketing is doing serious work whether you're home to see the showings or not.

If you're thinking about selling in Evanston, Winnetka, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Glencoe, Northfield, Glenview, or anywhere on the North Shore — and you want to understand how luxury listings actually get marketed to the full pool of buyers, including the ones watching from 1,400 miles away — reach out anytime. I'm happy to share the specifics of how a full marketing package comes together for a home like this one.

Carol Hunt | Baird & Warner, Winnetka
? (847) 404-7959 | ✉️ carol.hunt@bairdwarner.com | ? hunt4houses.com


About Carol Hunt

Carol Hunt has been a full-time real estate broker for more than 40 years with Baird & Warner in Winnetka, Illinois. She serves buyers and sellers across Chicago's North Shore — Wilmette, Kenilworth, Winnetka, Glencoe, Northfield, Glenview, Evanston, and the surrounding communities — pairing deep market knowledge with thoughtful negotiation, elevated marketing, and a genuine love for the people she works with. A lifelong learner who embraces leading-edge technology (and an avid bridge player off the clock), Carol's mission is simple: be a trusted advisor, share hard-won wisdom, and deliver a premium experience for every client.

Connect with Carol at hunt4houses.com, carol.hunt@bairdwarner.com, or (847) 404-7959.

:/

June
9

How to Price Your Home Strategically in Winnetka and the New Trier Market

Pricing is not about optimism.
It's about positioning.

In communities like Winnetka, Wilmette, Kenilworth, Glencoe and

Click Here to Read More...

Older Posts ⇨

Login to my Baird & Warner account

Pixel