Staging is one of the few pre-listing decisions where the return is measurable. The 2025 National Association of Realtors Profile of Home Staging surveyed 1,266 agents, and the findings are worth understanding clearly — including where staging pays and where it doesn't.
Buyers decide fast. Most of them meet your home through a phone screen weeks before they ever stand in the entry, and that first scroll is where interest is either created or quietly lost. Staging is simply the work of making sure the home they see online is the home you actually own — well cared for, easy to read, and easy to imagine living in.
But staging has picked up a lot of inflated marketing claims along the way. You'll see figures like "staging raises your price 25%" repeated across the industry. That number doesn't come from NAR's research, and we're not going to use it. Here's what the actual data supports.
of agents reported that staging their sellers' homes produced a 1% to 10% increase in the dollar value offered, compared to similar un-staged homes.
That's the honest headline. Roughly three in ten agents saw a measurable lift — meaningful, but not universal, and in the single digits to low double digits rather than a quarter of the sale price. On a $650,000 Austin home, a 1–10% lift is $6,500 to $65,000. That's a real range worth pursuing, and it's a range you should evaluate against what staging actually costs you.
of sellers' agents observed that staging reduced the amount of time a home spent on the market.
Time on market is where staging earns its keep most reliably. Nearly half of agents saw staged homes move faster — and in a market where carrying costs, price reductions, and buyer perception all compound with each additional week, speed is money. A listing that sells in three weeks negotiates from a very different position than one that's been sitting for ninety days.
of buyers' agents said staging made it easier for a buyer to visualize the property as their future home.
This is the most consistent finding across every edition of the report going back years. Staging's core function isn't decoration — it's reducing the imaginative work a buyer has to do. When a room has no clear purpose, or the furniture is oversized for the space, or the walls are covered in a very specific personal history, buyers spend their energy decoding rather than desiring.
NAR's data reflects agent perception, not controlled A/B testing on identical homes. No one can list the same house twice, once staged and once not. The results are directionally reliable and drawn from a large sample, but treat them as informed professional observation rather than a laboratory measurement. Any source presenting staging ROI as a precise guarantee is overselling.
Staging every room is rarely necessary and rarely cost-effective. The data is clear about where buyer attention concentrates. Among buyers, the living room ranked most important to stage (37%), followed by the primary bedroom (34%) and the kitchen (23%). The guest bedroom came in last at 7%.
Sellers' agents stage accordingly — living room (91%), primary bedroom (83%), dining room (69%), and kitchen (68%). Guest and children's bedrooms sat at just 22% each.
There's a gap between what buyers expect and what most homes deliver, and it isn't your fault. NAR found that 48% of agents reported buyers expected homes to look like the ones staged for television, and 58% said buyers were disappointed by how homes compared to TV portrayals. Among agents, 77% said these shows set unrealistic or inflated expectations.
Buyers walk in carrying a reference image you never agreed to compete with. Staging doesn't beat that image — it just narrows the distance enough that the buyer stops comparing and starts imagining.
Adam Timothy GroupThis is the practical argument for staging that doesn't rely on ROI math at all. You're not competing against the house down the street. You're competing against a renovated, professionally lit, budget-unlimited version of a home that exists only on a screen. Staging is how you close enough of that gap to keep buyers engaged.
NAR reports a median of $1,500 when sellers used a professional staging service, versus $500 when the listing agent staged the home personally. Median means middle — half of sellers spent more, and in higher-priced or larger Austin homes, full staging commonly runs well above that figure.
Notably, most sellers' agents don't stage at all: 51% said they didn't stage homes before listing, but instead recommended that sellers declutter or correct property faults. Only 21% staged every listing, down from 38% in 2017. Staging has shifted from default practice to a selective, property-by-property decision.
Most of the perceptual benefit of staging comes from things that cost very little: removing roughly a third of your furniture, clearing every horizontal surface, taking down personal photographs, deep-cleaning windows and floors, replacing every bulb in the house with matched daylight-temperature bulbs, and fixing the small broken things you've stopped seeing. Do this first. Then decide whether professional staging is worth it on top.
One shift worth internalizing: the staging isn't for the open house anymore. It's for the listing photos. Most buyers form an opinion of your home on a screen before they ever schedule a showing, and NAR found that one in three buyers' agents reported clients were more likely to schedule a showing after seeing a staged home online.
Which means the entire calculus changes. You aren't staging for how a room feels to stand in — you're staging for how it reads in a wide-angle frame at thumbnail size. Symmetry matters more. Clutter reads worse. Empty corners read as dead space. Every staging decision should be made with the camera in mind first and the walkthrough second.
Staging influences the offers you receive more than the price you list at. Per NAR's 2025 data, 29% of agents reported staging produced a 1–10% increase in the dollar value offered versus comparable un-staged homes. It's not a guaranteed lift, and claims of 20%+ increases are not supported by NAR's research.
NAR reports a median of $1,500 for professional staging services and $500 when the agent stages the home. Actual costs in Austin vary widely by square footage, whether the home is vacant or occupied, and the length of the rental term on furnishings.
Prioritize the living room, primary bedroom, kitchen, and dining room — these are where buyers concentrate attention. Guest bedrooms and children's rooms rank lowest in buyer importance and rarely justify staging spend.
This is staging's most consistent benefit. Roughly 49% of sellers' agents in NAR's 2025 survey reported that staging reduced days on market.
Often not in full. If your furniture is current and appropriately scaled, decluttering, depersonalizing, and editing down the volume of furniture captures most of the benefit at a fraction of the cost. Over half of sellers' agents recommend exactly this instead of formal staging.
Usually yes. Vacant rooms photograph poorly, read smaller than their actual dimensions, and give buyers no reference for scale or function. Vacant properties are the clearest case where staging investment tends to justify itself.
Staging is not magic and it isn't a 25% windfall. It's a lever — one that reliably shortens time on market, meaningfully improves how buyers perceive and visualize your home, and produces a single-digit to low-double-digit lift in offers for a meaningful share of sellers. Whether it's worth it for your specific property depends on its condition, its price point, whether it's occupied, and what else is competing against it right now.
That's a conversation about your house, not a rule. Before you spend a dollar on furniture rental, it's worth walking the home with someone who can tell you which rooms are actually costing you offers — and which ones just need the counters cleared.
If you're preparing to sell, our Austin neighborhood guides can help you understand what your specific submarket is rewarding right now, and our featured properties show how we approach presentation on the listings we represent.
Let's walk your home before you spend anything on staging. We'll tell you honestly what's worth doing, what isn't, and what your property needs to compete in today's Austin market.
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