City of Spokane · 36 Years Local

The citywide median is the starting point. The micro-market is where the real intelligence lives.

South Hill, North Spokane, Kendall Yards, Browne's Addition, Downtown, and every neighborhood in between. A hundred insights grounded in documented transactions across 36 years in this specific city.

$385-420K
Citywide median price (2025-26)
16-41 days
Time on market (well-priced)
98.65%
List-to-sale ratio
36 yrs
Eric's Spokane experience
About Eric

A solo consultant who has worked the city through every cycle.

I have been licensed in Washington since January 1, 2000, and I have been working the City of Spokane for 36 years through multiple complete market cycles. More than 1,500 families have bought or sold with me. More than 90 percent of my business comes from referrals and repeat clients, and at this stage of my career, that number is closer to 100.

Spokane is not one market. It is the South Hill, Five Mile Prairie, Kendall Yards, Browne's Addition, Audubon, Hillyard, Indian Trail, Garland, and a dozen other distinct micro-markets that each have their own pricing logic, buyer profile, and supply dynamics. The first thing I do with any client is get away from the citywide median and into the specific sub-market they are actually in. That is where pricing discipline, negotiation strategy, and outcome converge.

I operate as a solo practitioner by choice. No team handoffs, no transaction coordinators, no showing agents representing my interests instead of yours. Every Spokane client works directly with me from first conversation through final closing. When something unexpected happens, and in Spokane's older housing stock with older systems something regularly does, you reach the person who has the whole picture.

The City, Priced Honestly

Six price tiers, six distinct buyer profiles.

A citywide median of $385K-$420K conceals more than it reveals. The tiers below are how I actually think about the City of Spokane on every listing appointment and every buyer consultation: entry to premium, north to south, ranch-house practicality to urban-core walkability. Each tier has its own pricing logic, its own inventory profile, and its own reasons buyers choose it over the others.

$250K-$400K Entry & Establishing

Audubon · Shadle · Hillyard · East Central

The entry-level and establishing segment of the city is below $350K to low $400s. Inventory in this tier is the tightest in the city. Buyers working here benefit from neighborhoods with genuine character and real potential for value accumulation as surrounding investment continues. Condition varies more at this price than any other tier, which makes property-by-property evaluation essential.

$400K-$600K Mid-Market North and West

Indian Trail · Northwest · Garland · Audubon-Downriver

The mid-market range captures most of North Spokane and the established neighborhoods that ring the downtown core. Indian Trail offers Five Mile elevation and views at a price tier below the prairie top. Northwest Spokane and the Garland corridor deliver walkable neighborhoods with preserved mid-century and early-20th-century housing stock. This is the city's largest transactional band by volume.

$450K-$900K The South Hill

Rockwood · Manito · Comstock · Grandview-Thorpe

South Hill single-family homes work generally between $450,000 and $900,000 for standard properties, with exceptional homes on the best streets and largest lots above. Price per square foot on the South Hill runs meaningfully above the citywide average. The differential has held across enough cycles that it is not a temporary premium. This is the city's most consistent performer through market shifts.

$500K-$800K+ Five Mile Prairie

Five Mile Prairie

Five Mile Prairie sits at the top of the North Spokane ridge. The November 2025 median was $549,000, up 8.1 percent year over year. Views south across the city and toward the mountains on a clear day explain the premium immediately. Housing stock ranges from established mid-century ranch homes to newer construction on larger lots. When Five Mile inventory comes to market, it moves.

Market by product Kendall Yards & Urban Core

Kendall Yards · Browne's Addition · Riverfront

Kendall Yards pricing reflects premium urban positioning: 25 acres of parkland, direct Centennial Trail access, walkability to downtown, and a business district with Mole, Baba, and Veraci Pizza. Condos, townhomes, and single-family homes trade at prices reflecting walkability, amenities, and design quality. You do not buy this product on square footage math. You buy what the neighborhood delivers.

$900K+ Premium & Specialty

Best South Hill streets · Premium acreage · Historic landmarks

The top of the city market includes exceptional South Hill properties on the best streets and largest lots, historic landmark homes, and specialty urban product. The buyer pool at this level has specific preferences and typically more certainty about what it wants. Listings that price accurately at this tier often move faster than the mid-tier because the buyers are decisive when they find the right property.

Market Intelligence

The numbers that shape decisions in the Spokane city market.

98.65%
List-to-Sale Ratio

At peak market in 2021 and 2022, Spokane properties were routinely closing above ask. Today the ratio sits at approximately 98.65 percent of list, meaning the market has returned to closer-to-normal negotiation. Correctly priced properties in strong neighborhoods still receive competitive attention. The overpriced ones generate the data that makes the average look soft.

1.67-2.9 mo
Months of Supply

Inventory remains below the five to six months that characterizes a balanced market, but is not frenzied. The entry-level segment below $350K remains tightest. The upper end above $600K has meaningfully more breathing room. Buyers have a little more time and room to negotiate than the peak allowed. Which segment you are in tells you how to behave at the offer table.

LA · Portland · Seattle
Where Buyers Originate

The buyers I am seeing in Spokane are coming from Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, and increasingly smaller California markets where equity has built significantly. The equity from a Portland or California sale applied to Spokane prices can eliminate a mortgage entirely, which changes a household's monthly financial picture in ways that are genuinely life-altering.

2 Major Systems
Healthcare Infrastructure

Providence Sacred Heart and MultiCare Deaconess are two major hospital systems with downtown and near-downtown campuses. They employ thousands and drive housing demand in specific sub-markets close to the campuses. Properties with walkable or short-commute access to either system carry measurable preference from the physicians, nurses, and administrators those systems employ.

Deep Dive

100 insights from 36 years working this specific city.

Organized the way I actually think about this market. Market intelligence, sub-markets in depth, hospitals, schools, parks, dining, economy, strategy, investment, hidden advantages, and closing wisdom. Tap any chapter to jump.

Chapter 01

Market Intelligence

Pricing and Conditions

1

What the Numbers Actually Tell You Right Now

The citywide median in Spokane is running in the range of $385,000 to $420,000 as we move through 2025 and into 2026. I want to be honest about what that number means and what it does not mean. The median is a useful starting point and a terrible finishing point. The gap between what a South Hill property commands and what a comparable square footage in a less desirable neighborhood commands is significant, and no citywide median captures that gap. When I sit down with a buyer or seller in Spokane, the first thing I do is get away from the citywide number and into the specific micro-market we are actually talking about. That is where the real intelligence lives.

2

Days on Market Tell the Story of Pricing Decisions

Right now, well-priced Spokane homes are going pending in 16 to 41 days depending on the neighborhood. Homes that are overpriced are sitting for 60, 70, 90 days and then selling for less than an accurate Day One price would have generated. I wrote an entire book about this because I have watched it happen hundreds of times in this market. The sellers who trust the pricing process and resist the temptation to test the market high are the ones who end up with the strongest net at closing. The days on market number is not a market condition report. It is a pricing decision report.

3

The List-to-Sale Ratio Is Not What It Was

At peak market in 2021 and 2022, Spokane properties were routinely closing above ask. The ratio today is approximately 98.65 percent of list price, which means the market has returned to something closer to normal negotiation. Correctly priced properties in good condition in strong neighborhoods still receive competitive attention. The overpriced ones are generating the data that makes the average look soft. Every dollar of overpricing at the list stage costs more than a dollar at closing because the carry time and the negotiating position that comes from extended market exposure compound each other.

4

Inventory Is Still Tight But Not Frenzied

We are running at approximately 1.67 to 2.9 months of supply, which remains below the five to six months that characterizes a balanced market. The entry-level segment below $350,000 remains the tightest. The upper end above $600,000 has meaningfully more breathing room. Buyers have a little more time and a little more room to negotiate than the frenzied peak allowed. If you are buying in Spokane right now, knowing which segment you are in tells you how to behave at the offer table. I spend time with every buyer on that conversation before we write anything.

5

Where the Buyers Are Coming From

The buyers I am seeing in Spokane are coming from Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, and increasingly from smaller California markets where equity has built significantly and the lifestyle math of staying no longer makes sense. What they find when they arrive consistently exceeds their expectations. The equity from a Portland or California sale applied to Spokane prices can eliminate a mortgage entirely, which changes a household's monthly financial picture in ways that are genuinely life-altering. I have watched that transformation happen across my client relationships for several years and it is one of the most compelling stories in this market.

6

Washington's Tax Structure and What It Means in Specific Terms

No state income tax. That is the headline and it is real. A household earning $120,000 relocating from Oregon is looking at roughly $10,000 or more in annual after-tax income improvement. Washington does have a higher sales tax than many states, and Spokane County property taxes run at approximately 0.83 to 0.93 percent of assessed value. For a home assessed at $425,000, the current levy rate of approximately $9.66 per $1,000 of assessed value produces an annual tax bill in the range of $4,100. That is real money and it belongs in the full ownership cost calculation. I walk every buyer through it before we talk about price.

7

Appreciation: Honest Assessment

Spokane appreciated dramatically between 2020 and 2022. Some properties doubled. The market has since moderated to a pace of approximately 1.7 to 3.6 percent annual appreciation, which is healthy and sustainable rather than speculative and concerning. I tell clients this because buyers arriving expecting continued double-digit appreciation are going to be disappointed, and sellers priced on 2022 peak comparables are going to be frustrated. The market we have now rewards preparation, honest pricing, and quality properties. It punishes wishful thinking the same way markets always do.

8

The Affordability Advantage in Specific Terms

Spokane's median home price is approximately 20 percent below the national average and more than 50 percent below Seattle's. The buyer who can afford a $900,000 median in Seattle can own a South Hill property in Spokane outright with that same purchasing power. The buyer who is stretching to enter the market in Portland can often purchase with genuine financial comfort here. That differential is the single most powerful driver of the migration patterns I have been watching, and it shows no sign of reversing. Spokane is not a fallback choice for most of the buyers I work with. It is a deliberate one.

Chapter 02

The South Hill

Neighborhoods, Character, and Pricing

9

Why the South Hill Holds Through Every Cycle

I have sold real estate on the South Hill for 36 years and watched it outperform the rest of the city in every market cycle we have been through. The reason is not mysterious. Manito Park, school access, proximity to the downtown employment core and the hospital campuses, and housing stock with genuine character. When the market softens, South Hill properties hold. When the market strengthens, they move first. That is not coincidence. It is the product of genuine desirability built and sustained across generations.

10

South Hill Pricing in Specific Terms

When I am pricing a South Hill listing I am generally working in a range of $450,000 to $900,000 for standard single-family homes, with exceptional properties on the best streets and largest lots going above that. Price per square foot on the South Hill runs meaningfully above the citywide average, and that differential has been consistent enough across enough market cycles that I do not expect it to close. If you are buying on the South Hill and the number feels high relative to what you could get elsewhere, what you are paying for is real. The question is whether it is worth it to you specifically.

11

Manito Park Is Not Just an Amenity

Manito Park is 90 acres of botanical garden, open space, and community gathering established in 1904. The Japanese Garden, the Duncan Garden designed in European Renaissance style, the Rose Hill named the number one rose garden in the nation by All-America Rose Selections: this park exists because it was built 120 years ago and maintained by people who understood what it meant to their community. Properties within walking distance command a premium I have watched hold up through every market condition in my career. When a South Hill seller tells me they are worried about price, I walk them to the park and ask what they think it is worth to live next to it.

12

Rockwood Is the Neighborhood That Surprises Buyers

I have brought clients from Portland and Seattle to Rockwood and watched them recalibrate their entire understanding of what Spokane is. The winding streets, the architectural variety, the Rockwood Boulevard parkway with its formal streetscape, and the mature landscape that takes a century to develop: none of this can be bought in a new subdivision. Inventory is limited because people who own in Rockwood tend to stay. That low turnover is its own form of market intelligence and one of the most reliable signals I have learned to read in 36 years.

13

Comstock: The Entry Point to South Hill Character

If a buyer wants South Hill positioning and school access but cannot stretch to Manito or Rockwood pricing, Comstock is where I look first. Organized around Comstock Park with its public pool and natural creek drainage, the housing stock is solidly mid-century, well-maintained overall, and priced at levels that represent genuine value given the location. I have helped buyers get into Comstock when they thought South Hill was out of reach, and I have watched those purchases perform well through multiple market turns.

14

Lincoln Heights: The Most Livable South Hill Entry

Lincoln Heights is where South Hill practicality lives. The commercial strip on 29th Avenue gives you grocery, dining, pharmacy, hardware, and the kinds of daily errands that define how convenient a neighborhood actually is to live in rather than just to look at. Homes in Lincoln Heights are typically priced below the Manito core while sharing the school access advantages of the broader South Hill. For buyers who are optimizing for livability over prestige, Lincoln Heights deserves serious consideration before anything else.

15

The Perry District Changed Before Anyone Was Ready

I watched the South Perry District transform over the past decade and will tell you honestly that the buyers who got in early got the best of it. The Grain Shed baking with ancient grains, Francaise bringing genuine French technique to a neighborhood street, the density of locally owned food and retail that has accumulated on South Perry: this is not manufactured character. It grew from people who believed in the location before the market reflected that belief. Properties adjacent to the South Perry commercial corridor have appreciated in ways that are visible in the data for anyone paying attention.

16

South Hill Schools Drive Family Decisions

Wilson Elementary is ranked 33rd among Washington State elementary schools and its attendance zone affects pricing in measurable ways. Hutton Elementary and Moran Prairie Elementary are also strong performers within Spokane Public Schools. At the high school level, Lewis and Clark and Ferris are both highly regarded and their attendance boundaries significantly affect demand patterns for specific properties. I verify attendance boundaries for every family buyer I work with because the lines do not always follow the geography buyers assume. That verification has saved clients from expensive surprises more than once.

17

South Hill Commutes Work in Multiple Directions

One of the South Hill's underappreciated advantages is its commute geometry. It sits south of downtown, which means commuters heading to Providence Sacred Heart or MultiCare Deaconess are moving toward rather than away from their employment. The downtown employment core is a short drive. Buyers who work in the Valley or on the West Plains will find the South Hill commute longer, and I tell them that honestly. But for the significant portion of Spokane's professional workforce concentrated in the central city, the South Hill is one of the most efficiently positioned residential choices in the metro area.

Chapter 03

North Spokane

Five Mile Prairie, Indian Trail, Shadle, Audubon, Garland, and the North Side Corridor

18

Five Mile Prairie: The Premium of Elevation

Five Mile Prairie sits at the top of the North Spokane ridge and the views tell you immediately why the price premium exists. Looking south across the city and toward the mountains on a clear day, you understand what buyers are paying for. The November 2025 median was $549,000, up 8.1 percent year over year, reflecting sustained demand from buyers who want space, views, and suburban feel without leaving the city. The housing stock ranges from established mid-century ranch homes to newer construction on larger lots. When Five Mile homes come to market, I pay attention because the inventory is genuinely limited.

19

Indian Trail: The Organized Alternative

Indian Trail shares much of Five Mile Prairie's elevation and view advantage without quite the same price premium. The neighborhood is characterized by well-organized residential streets with a mix of 1970s through 1990s construction, active HOAs in many sections, and good access to the North Division commercial corridor. Buyers who want North Side living with a more manageable entry price often end up in Indian Trail after discovering that Five Mile inventory is limited and pricing is firm. I have placed many clients here successfully and watched the neighborhood's values hold well.

20

The North Division Corridor and What It Means

North Division Street is the commercial spine of North Spokane, running from downtown through the residential fabric of the North Side. For buyers in North Spokane neighborhoods, this corridor provides the infrastructure that makes daily life functional: grocery, medical, dining, hardware, and service businesses every household needs regularly. The quality and density of the commercial offering along North Division has improved meaningfully over the past decade, which has contributed to the strengthening of North Side residential values in ways that do not show up in any listing description but that every resident feels.

21

Shadle Park: The Honest Assessment

Shadle Park is a mid-century North Side neighborhood that I approach with the same honesty I bring to every market conversation. It has genuine assets: the Shadle Park pool, established tree canopy, proximity to both the North Division corridor and the downtown core, and price points that represent real value relative to the South Hill. It also has challenges that I tell buyers about specifically. The blocks closest to the park and the residential interior are meaningfully better than the blocks along major commercial corridors. I know the difference, and when working with a buyer in Shadle Park I make sure they do too before any offer is written.

22

Audubon-Downriver: The Neighborhood That Rewards Research

Audubon-Downriver is one of the North Side neighborhoods that consistently rewards buyers who are willing to look past the surface. The proximity to the Downriver Golf Course, the river access, and the mature residential character of the best blocks make this a neighborhood that experienced Spokane buyers often gravitate toward. I have brought buyers here who were considering the South Hill exclusively, and more than once the Audubon-Downriver alternative made more financial sense for their specific situation while delivering more of the lifestyle they actually wanted.

23

The Garland District: Character Under Investment

The Garland District is one of the places in Spokane that I find genuinely exciting right now. The historic Garland Theater restored to its original 1945 splendor, the Blue Door Theater's comedy improv, the eclectic small business corridor on Garland Avenue: this is a neighborhood commercial district with real identity. The City of Spokane and the Washington Trust for Historic Preservation are currently directing nearly $2.5 million in ARPA funds toward the revitalization of Garland and three other neighborhood business districts. Investment at this scale changes what a neighborhood becomes. Buyers who get in front of that change do well.

24

North Monroe: Antiques and Reinvestment

North Monroe is Spokane's antique and thrift corridor, known for the density of vintage and second-hand retail that has clustered along Monroe Street over the past decade. It is also one of the neighborhoods receiving targeted revitalization investment from the current neighborhood business district grant program. For buyers who are interested in a neighborhood with genuine character that is still in the process of becoming, North Monroe represents the kind of early-position opportunity I have watched play out well in other Spokane districts over the years.

25

Whitman and North Hill: Value Without Sacrifice

Whitman and North Hill sit in the northern residential fabric of the city and offer housing stock and lot sizes that newer developments have stopped producing at comparable price points. These are neighborhoods where a buyer who does the work of understanding the specific blocks rather than defaulting to the neighborhood name as a proxy for quality will consistently find better value than the search filters alone would suggest. I have placed clients in both neighborhoods who came in thinking they were settling and left knowing they had found something specific.

Chapter 04

Downtown and Central Spokane

Kendall Yards, Browne's Addition, University District, and Riverfront

26

Kendall Yards: Built for the Life People Actually Want

Kendall Yards is one of Spokane's youngest districts, built on the north bank of the Spokane River on the site of the old railroad yards. Five minutes from downtown, 25 acres of parkland and open space, direct Centennial Trail access, and a business district anchored by Mole, Baba, Veraci Pizza, the Maryhill Tasting Room, and the Kendall Yards Night Market. The community will ultimately include 500,000 square feet of local restaurants, shops, and offices alongside more than 1,000 homes. For buyers who want genuine urban walkability in Spokane, Kendall Yards is the most compelling answer that exists.

27

Kendall Yards Pricing and Product

Kendall Yards pricing reflects its premium position in the urban market. Condos, townhomes, and single-family homes in the development trade at prices that reflect the walkability, the amenities, the river access, and the design quality of the community. This is not a neighborhood where you buy on square footage math and expect it to work. You buy because the lifestyle the location enables is what you are actually paying for. I have worked with buyers who made that decision consciously and have never regretted it, and buyers who made it without fully understanding it and who found the trade-offs difficult.

28

Browne's Addition: History You Can Live In

Browne's Addition is Spokane's oldest neighborhood, platted in the 1880s and developed for well-to-do clients around the turn of the century. The American Planning Association listed it as one of the ten best neighborhoods in the country in 2009 and the designation holds up. Victorian and Craftsman homes, the Patsy Clark Mansion, Coeur d'Alene Park, and the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture all within the neighborhood's 176 acres. The property mix ranges from historic mansions converted to multi-family to single-family Craftsman homes to condos, with prices from the low $200,000s for condos to well over $700,000 for maintained Victorians.

29

Browne's Addition for Investors

Browne's Addition has one of the highest renter-occupancy rates of any neighborhood in the country at approximately 85 percent. The density of multi-family properties that resulted from large historic mansions being divided into apartments over the decades creates an investment property market that is genuinely different from the standard single-family rental model. For investors who understand multi-family properties in historic buildings, Browne's Addition offers inventory that cannot be replicated and demand from residents who are specifically choosing the neighborhood for its character and urban position.

30

The Riverfront Park Anchor and What It Produces

Riverfront Park was designed for Expo '74 and encompasses the site of the World's Fair along the Spokane River. The SkyRide gondola over the Spokane Falls, the Spokane Falls themselves described as the largest urban waterfall in the United States, the renovated Pavilion, and the Centennial Trail access: Riverfront Park is the most significant urban amenity in the city and its proximity drives demand for residential properties in the downtown and Kendall Yards corridors. I evaluate Riverfront Park access as a genuine value driver when I am pricing properties in the surrounding neighborhoods.

31

The University District: Emerging and Undervalued

The University District on Spokane's east side is one of the areas of the city where I believe the next decade of value appreciation has the strongest foundation. WSU's medical school at the Riverpoint campus, the UW-Gonzaga health partnership's new facility, the density of research and healthcare activity that two medical schools generate, and the residential properties that sit in proximity to that activity but have not yet priced in the full value of the location. Buyers who are willing to research this corridor specifically rather than relying on general neighborhood reputation are the ones who will look back on their purchase with satisfaction.

32

The Centennial Trail as a Value Driver

The 40-mile Centennial Trail, designated a National Recreation Trail and used by nearly 2 million people annually, passes directly through downtown Spokane and connects Riverside State Park on the west to the Idaho border on the east. Properties with direct access to the trail or with proximity that makes trail use genuinely convenient carry a measurable premium over otherwise comparable properties that require a drive to access it. I evaluate trail access specifically when I am pricing properties in the downtown and Kendall Yards corridors because buyers in those locations consistently cite it as a priority.

Chapter 05

Healthcare

What Two Major Hospital Systems Mean for This Market

33

Providence Sacred Heart: The Regional Anchor

Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center is the healthcare anchor of Spokane and of the entire Inland Northwest. It is home to the only Level II Pediatric Trauma Center and Level IV NICU in Eastern Washington, a regional cancer center, a transplant center, and a Comprehensive Stroke Center. US News and World Report has named it the Best Regional Hospital in the Spokane Metro for 2025 to 2026. For buyers who are evaluating Spokane from a healthcare quality standpoint, Sacred Heart's capabilities are a genuine argument for the city that smaller markets in the region cannot match.

34

MultiCare Deaconess: The Second Major System

MultiCare Deaconess Hospital anchors the second major health system in the city, offering a Level III Trauma Center, a Certified Chest Pain Center, a Certified Total Joint Restoration Center, and an accredited Primary Stroke Center with a medical staff of over 800 specialists and primary care doctors. For buyers who work in healthcare, which is one of Spokane's largest and most stable employment sectors, the hospital systems provide career stability that directly supports housing market fundamentals. Healthcare employment grew 12 percent in Spokane County over five years and stands 36 percent above the national average for an area of this size.

35

MultiCare Valley Hospital and Its Significance

MultiCare Valley Hospital received a Leapfrog 'A' grade in fall 2025, the highest commitment to patient safety and quality of care, making it the only hospital in the Inland Northwest to receive this honor. For buyers evaluating the Valley communities against the city proper, knowing that a highly rated acute care facility is located within the Valley itself rather than requiring a drive to the city changes the healthcare access calculation meaningfully. I address this specifically when I am working with older buyers or buyers with specific health circumstances who are evaluating both sides of the city.

36

Two Medical Schools and What That Means for the Market

Spokane is home to two separate medical schools: the Washington State University Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine at the Riverpoint campus and the University of Washington and Gonzaga University joint venture on the Gonzaga campus. The presence of both programs has brought more than $23 million in research dollars to Spokane, pushed wages in the city up by nearly 4 percent according to Washington Employment Security Department research, and attracted a professional population whose income and stability contribute to the housing market in the neighborhoods surrounding both campuses.

37

Healthcare as an Employment Anchor

Healthcare and social assistance employment in Spokane County has grown 12 percent over five years and now sits 36 percent above the national average for an area of our size. For anyone trying to understand why Spokane's housing market has held up better than many comparable markets during periods of economic uncertainty, the healthcare employment base is a major part of the answer. Healthcare workers buy homes, maintain them, and tend to stay. That stability reduces vacancy rates, supports rents, and provides the demand floor that less diversified economies cannot produce.

Chapter 06

Schools

Spokane Public Schools: The Full Picture

38

Spokane Public Schools: What the Numbers Actually Show

Spokane Public Schools serves 28,586 students across 69 schools. The district graduation rate is 82.7 percent, on par with the state average. Within the district, the performance range is significant. Libby Center ranks 2nd among Washington elementary schools in English Language Arts proficiency. Wilson Elementary ranks 33rd. Hutton Elementary and Moran Prairie Elementary are also strong performers. Understanding which specific schools serve a specific property is the research that matters, not the district average. I do that research for every family buyer I work with.

39

Lewis and Clark High School

Lewis and Clark High School is ranked 33rd among Washington State high schools and serves the South Hill and surrounding neighborhoods. Its attendance boundary significantly affects buyer demand and pricing for properties within it. Buyers who are targeting South Hill property specifically for Lewis and Clark access should verify the boundary for any specific address before making an offer, because the boundary does not follow the geography that buyers from outside Spokane typically assume it does.

40

Ferris and North Central High Schools

Ferris High School, ranked 51st in Washington, and North Central High School, ranked 57th, represent the other two major traditional high schools within the Spokane Public Schools district serving residential areas I work in. Both have strong academic programs with Advanced Placement coursework, and both serve distinct residential territories. Buyers who are evaluating North Spokane properties for school access need to understand which high school serves the specific address they are considering.

41

The Libby Center Advantage

Libby Center is Spokane Public Schools' gifted program, ranked 2nd among Washington elementary schools for English Language Arts proficiency. Access to Libby Center requires qualification through the gifted program assessment rather than through attendance boundaries, which means it is a district-wide resource rather than a neighborhood-specific one. I mention it specifically to buyers with academically advanced children because it is one of the genuinely exceptional educational resources in the city that does not get adequate attention in the general school quality conversation.

42

Private School Options

Spokane has a meaningful private school landscape that affects buyer decisions in specific neighborhoods. Gonzaga Prep, the Jesuit college preparatory school connected to Gonzaga University, draws families from across the city and affects demand for properties within reasonable commuting distance of the campus. Other private options including Spokane Valley's Christian schools and several smaller private institutions serve specific buyer demographics. I address private school options specifically when working with families for whom the public school attendance boundaries are not the primary decision driver.

Chapter 07

Parks and Outdoor Recreation

What This City Offers to People Who Use It

43

Riverside State Park Nine Miles From Downtown

Riverside State Park is 1,400 acres located nine miles northwest of downtown Spokane, which makes it one of the most accessible urban-adjacent wilderness areas in any mid-sized American city. The park includes more than 45 miles of trails, the Bowl and Pitcher suspension bridge over the Spokane River, camping facilities, and direct Centennial Trail connection. For buyers who are weighing Spokane against other Pacific Northwest markets, the access to a park of this quality at this proximity is a lifestyle argument that Seattle, Portland, and most other comparable cities simply cannot match.

44

Mount Spokane State Park

Mount Spokane State Park is Washington's largest state park, offering more than 100 miles of trails in the Selkirk Mountains. In winter it operates as a ski and snowboard destination. In summer it provides hiking, mountain biking, and backcountry access that buyers from larger markets consistently cite as a positive surprise when they discover what the Spokane region offers. The drive from the city to the mountain is approximately 30 miles, which means this resource is genuinely accessible as a regular recreational destination rather than an occasional expedition.

45

The Bloomsday Run and Community Identity

The Lilac Bloomsday Run is the largest timed road race on the West Coast and has attracted more than 40,000 participants every year since 1986. It takes place the first Sunday of May and runs 12 kilometers through the streets of Spokane. The race is not a tourist event. It is a community event in the truest sense, drawing participants from across the age spectrum who identify with Spokane in a way that produces genuine civic pride. For buyers who are evaluating whether Spokane has the community identity that makes a place feel like home, Bloomsday is one of the clearest expressions of what this city is.

46

The Centennial Trail for Daily Life

The 40-mile Centennial Trail is not primarily a recreational destination for the people who live near it. It is a daily commute route, a dog walking infrastructure, a social space, and a running corridor that passes through neighborhoods in ways that integrate outdoor access into ordinary life rather than requiring a special trip. For buyers who are choosing between properties, access to the Centennial Trail changes the daily experience of homeownership in ways that are difficult to quantify in a listing description but that become immediately apparent after living near it.

47

Green Bluff: The Seasonal Destination

Green Bluff, located about 15 miles northeast of the city, is an agricultural community of small farms and orchards that draws Spokane residents for apple picking, strawberry season, cherry harvest, and farm-fresh produce across the growing season. It is one of the lifestyle advantages of Spokane that buyers from outside the region consistently discover and consistently appreciate. The experience of driving to a working orchard 20 minutes from the city and returning with produce that does not exist in any grocery store is the kind of thing that makes people feel they chose the right place.

48

Skiing Within Driving Distance

Spokane sits within driving distance of five ski resorts, including 49 Degrees North, Mount Spokane, and closer access to larger Idaho and Montana mountains. For buyers who ski or snowboard, this proximity is a genuine lifestyle advantage that coastal Pacific Northwest cities cannot offer at the same price point and that inland markets at comparable distances from skiing typically offer without the urban amenity depth that Spokane provides. I address skiing access specifically when working with buyers who come from markets where skiing requires a flight.

Chapter 08

Dining and Neighborhood Culture

Where Spokane Eats and Gathers

49

The Kendall Yards Food Scene

Kendall Yards has become Spokane's most concentrated dining destination in a very short period of time. Mole for elevated Oaxacan Mexican, Baba for Mediterranean-inspired comfort food with wood-fired meats, Veraci Pizza with its apple-wood-fired oven, the Maryhill Tasting Room for Columbia Gorge wine, and the Kendall Yards Night Market running spring through summer as a gathering point for the entire city. For a neighborhood this new, the food and hospitality offering is exceptional and it continues to grow.

50

The Garland District Theater Experience

The Garland Theater, restored to its original 1945 splendor, offers a mix of current films at prices ranging from free to five dollars alongside classics, specialty screenings, and Gonzaga basketball telecasts. It hosts events like the International Fly Fishing Film Festival. The Blue Door Theater runs comedy improv on Friday and Saturday nights. These are not pretentious cultural institutions. They are neighborhood gathering places that reflect the eclectic, unpretentious character of the Garland District itself. For buyers who value this kind of neighborhood culture, the Garland area is worth a serious look.

51

Luna and the South Hill Dining Tradition

Luna on the South Hill celebrated 30 years in Spokane in 2024. It works with local farms and breweries to produce seasonally driven food in a setting that reflects the neighborhood's combination of refinement and warmth. For a neighborhood restaurant to sustain 30 years in any American city requires something real, and what Luna has is a community that has chosen to support it consistently across three decades. That relationship between a neighborhood and its restaurants is one of the things I look for when I am evaluating whether a neighborhood has genuine staying power.

52

Browne's Addition Neighborhood Dining

The Elk Public House on Pacific Avenue is one of the restaurants that helped establish Browne's Addition as a dining destination before the neighborhood's revival was complete. Italia Trattoria, widely considered one of the best Italian restaurants in Spokane, and Pacific Avenue Pizza anchor a compact neighborhood dining corridor that serves both the neighborhood's residents and visitors from across the city. For buyers who value walkable restaurant access, the Browne's Addition dining corridor is one of the most concentrated examples of that in Spokane.

Chapter 09

Community Events and Cultural Life

What Spokane Does Together

53

The Spokane Symphony

The Spokane Symphony is a genuine professional orchestra of the size and quality that most cities of Spokane's population cannot support. It performs at the Martin Woldson Theater at the Fox, a beautifully restored historic theater in the downtown core. For buyers who are coming from larger markets and who are concerned about Spokane's cultural depth, the Symphony is one of the most compelling pieces of evidence that the city's cultural life is more substantial than its size would predict.

54

The Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture

The Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture, located in Browne's Addition, is the largest cultural organization in the Inland Northwest, serving as a Smithsonian-affiliated institution with a permanent collection and a program of traveling exhibitions. The campus includes historic buildings alongside modern gallery space and the museum serves as an educational anchor for the region. Its location in Browne's Addition is one of the specific amenity advantages that distinguishes that neighborhood from others at comparable price points.

55

Gonzaga Basketball and Community Identity

Gonzaga University's men's basketball program has reached the NCAA Tournament for 26 consecutive years as of 2025, producing a level of national visibility that is genuinely unusual for a city of Spokane's size. Gonzaga basketball is not a secondary community interest in Spokane. It is a primary identity anchor that generates shared enthusiasm across demographics and neighborhoods in a way that strengthens the sense of community belonging that makes a city genuinely livable. For buyers who value community identity, the Gonzaga basketball culture is one of the things about Spokane that cannot be replicated.

56

The Lilac Festival and Seasonal Identity

The Lilac Festival is Spokane's signature spring event, featuring the Armed Forces Torchlight Parade, the Lilac Festival Court, and a week of events that celebrate the city's official flower and its spring character. Combined with Bloomsday, the farmers markets, and the neighborhood-level events that characterize Spokane's community calendar, the Lilac Festival is part of a seasonal rhythm of community gathering that gives the city a genuine sense of shared identity across neighborhoods. This is the kind of thing that does not show up in a listing description but that people talk about when they explain why they love living here.

Chapter 10

Employment and Economic Foundations

The Stability Underneath the Market

57

Healthcare Is the Employment Anchor

Healthcare and social assistance is the largest and fastest-growing employment sector in Spokane County, representing more than 50,000 jobs and growing at 12 percent over the past five years. For anyone trying to understand why Spokane's housing market has held up better than many comparable markets during economic uncertainty, the healthcare employment base is the primary reason. Nurses, physicians, researchers, administrators, and support staff buy homes, maintain them, and commit to the communities they serve. That commitment shows up in the market as consistent demand that is less subject to economic cyclicality than technology or manufacturing employment.

58

Gonzaga University and Whitworth University

Gonzaga University, with 7,274 students, 150 acres along the Spokane River, and a 12:1 student-to-faculty ratio, is a significant employer and a cultural anchor for the northeast neighborhood that surrounds it. Whitworth University on the North Side provides a second university presence. Together the two institutions generate employment, student housing demand, faculty and staff residential demand, and the intellectual and cultural character that university communities contribute to surrounding neighborhoods. For investors, the rental demand generated by these institutions provides a demand floor that non-university markets do not have.

59

Aerospace Manufacturing: The Overlooked Sector

Spokane County has more than 120 aerospace manufacturers, suppliers, distributors, and related organizations representing a sector that most buyers from outside the region are unaware of. This aerospace manufacturing base provides professional employment at wages significantly above average and creates demand for housing across the North Side and Valley communities that these facilities primarily serve. For buyers evaluating Spokane's economic diversification, the aerospace sector is one of the less visible but more significant pillars of the regional economy.

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Fairchild Air Force Base: The West Side Employment Anchor

Fairchild Air Force Base, located on the West Plains west of the city, is one of the largest economic contributors to the Spokane regional economy and one of the most stable. Military employment does not fluctuate with economic cycles, and the presence of Fairchild generates consistent demand for housing across the West Plains communities and throughout the western portions of the city. For investors evaluating rental property, the military and veteran population that Fairchild attracts provides one of the most reliable tenant profiles in the market.

Chapter 11

Buyer Strategy

What I Tell Buyers Before They Make Decisions

61

Pre-Approval Is Not Optional

In Spokane's current market, the buyer who arrives at a showing without a pre-approval is a buyer who is not in a position to compete when the right property appears. The properties that are correctly priced and well-presented are still generating showing traffic quickly, and the buyer who needs to start the pre-approval process after finding the property they want is consistently behind the buyer who completed it before the search began. I make this conversation the first one I have with every buyer, not because it is a procedural requirement but because it determines what they can actually do when something worth doing appears.

62

Understanding Which Spokane You Are Buying In

Spokane is not one market. The buyer who is competing for a correctly priced South Hill property in a strong school zone is in a fundamentally different market from the buyer who is looking at North Side properties in the $300,000 range or the buyer who is evaluating investment property in the Hillyard corridor. Understanding which segment of the Spokane market you are operating in determines the strategy, the urgency, the negotiating posture, and the price discipline that makes sense. This is the conversation I have before we look at anything.

63

The First Week Is Not Like Any Other Week

In Spokane's market, the first week a correctly priced property is on the market is when it receives the highest-quality attention from the most prepared buyers. The buyers who have been watching the market know the value and they respond immediately to a property that is priced to match it. The buyer who waits to see what happens in the first week before making a decision is not being cautious. They are ceding their best opportunity to buyers who understood the urgency. I prepare every buyer for this reality before we write anything.

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What the Inspection Is and What It Is Not

The home inspection is the most consistently misunderstood service in the residential transaction. It is a professional opinion about the observable condition of a property at a specific moment in time. It is not a warranty. It does not guarantee the property is problem-free. A long inspection report does not mean a bad property. I read the report before I call the buyer to discuss it so that when we talk I can put every finding in appropriate context rather than letting the length of the list create alarm that the substance does not warrant.

65

The Sewer Scope Conversation

For properties with older plumbing, particularly those built before 1970, I consistently recommend a sewer scope in addition to the standard inspection. In Spokane's older neighborhoods, cast iron and clay tile sewer laterals are common and they deteriorate over decades in ways the surface plumbing inspection cannot reveal. A failed sewer lateral discovered before closing is a negotiating point. A failed sewer lateral discovered after closing is a significant unplanned expense. I have had this conversation enough times that I raise it without waiting to be asked.

Chapter 12

Seller Strategy

What I Tell Sellers Before They List

66

Day One Is the Only Day One You Get

The Day One momentum a new listing generates happens exactly once. The buyers who have been watching the market, who are pre-approved and ready, who know the value and will act when the right property appears: these buyers see the listing in the first few days and they respond to it based entirely on the price. A listing that hits the market at an honest price captures that audience and generates the competition that produces the strongest outcome. A listing that hits too high burns that audience in the opening two weeks. The price reduction that follows signals weakness even when the only thing wrong was the number.

67

Pre-Listing Inspection Is the Most Valuable Preparation

The most valuable thing a Spokane seller can invest in before going to market is a pre-listing inspection. Discovering what the buyer's inspector will find before the offer is written allows us to address it honestly in the disclosure, price for it correctly, or fix it before it becomes a negotiating weapon. Sellers who do this arrive at the inspection period without surprises, which means the transaction is less likely to be renegotiated after the buyer has emotional leverage. I recommend this consistently and the sellers who follow the advice consistently report that the process felt smoother than they expected.

68

Staging and Photography Are Not Optional

In a market where buyers are making their initial showing decisions based on photographs, the quality of what the photograph captures determines the showing traffic the listing generates. A property that photographs well generates more traffic. More traffic produces the competitive dynamic that produces stronger offers. I use professional photographers for every listing because the showing traffic difference between professional and amateur photography is visible in the data and significant enough to affect the outcome materially. Staging is the preparation that gives the photographer something worth capturing.

69

The Renovation Math Conversation

One of the most important conversations I have with sellers is the renovation math conversation: which improvements produce returns above their cost and which ones do not. Most renovations do not return their full cost. A clean, decluttered, well-staged existing kitchen often returns more than a new one because buyers can project themselves into a neutral space but not into a seller's taste. I go through this specifically with every seller who is considering improvements before listing because the decision of what to fix and what to leave affects both the net and the timeline.

70

Pricing Against the Right Comparables

The comparable sales that matter for pricing your Spokane home today are the ones that closed in the most relevant recent window, typically the last 60 to 90 days. A sale from eight months ago in a market that has since shifted is not a current comparable for today's pricing decision. The comparable sales that an appraiser will use are the same data I use when I recommend a price, and when a seller's price expectation is based on a neighbor's sale from a more favorable moment in the market, I show them specifically what the current data says and why the difference matters to the outcome.

Chapter 13

What Buyers and Sellers Often Miss

The Conversations I Have That Others Do Not

71

Flood Zone Status and Its Consequences

Flood zone mapping in Spokane varies across the city and it affects insurance requirements, financing, and the carrying cost of ownership in ways that the listing price does not reflect. Properties near the Spokane River and its tributaries warrant specific flood zone verification before any purchase. A property in a designated Special Flood Hazard Area requires flood insurance as a condition of most federally-backed mortgages, and the annual premium for that insurance is a real cost that belongs in the full ownership cost calculation. I check flood zone status on every property before my clients fall in love with it.

72

The Electrical Panel Matters More Than You Think

Spokane's older housing stock includes a meaningful number of homes with Federal Pacific or Zinsco electrical panels that insurance companies will not cover and that many electricians recommend replacing. These panels appear in otherwise beautiful, well-maintained properties and they create a financing and insurance problem that can threaten a transaction if they are not identified early. I look at the panel in every property I show because discovering a panel problem after an accepted offer is more disruptive than factoring it into the offer strategy from the beginning.

73

The Wildfire Risk Reality

Spokane County has a major wildfire risk profile, with 87 percent of properties carrying some risk over the next 30 years according to risk modeling data. For buyers purchasing properties at the urban-wildland interface, particularly in the hillier areas of the North Side and the communities north of the city, the wildfire risk conversation includes both the physical risk and the insurance implications. The availability and cost of homeowner's insurance for properties in higher-risk wildfire areas has changed significantly in recent years and will likely continue to evolve.

74

Combined Sewer and Stormwater Infrastructure

Some older Spokane neighborhoods are served by combined sewer and stormwater systems that create specific regulatory requirements and that are the subject of ongoing city infrastructure investment and regulatory compliance activity. Buyers purchasing in neighborhoods with older combined systems should understand this context as part of the full infrastructure picture of the property. The city's ongoing investment in separating these systems reflects a long-term commitment to the infrastructure but also an acknowledgment that the current state is not the final state.

75

HOA Structures and What They Actually Cover

Homeowners association structures in Spokane vary enormously across communities, from modest associations that manage little more than common area landscaping to comprehensive associations with significant monthly fees and extensive governance over property use, appearance, and modifications. I walk every buyer through the HOA documents before they are under contract because the difference between a well-funded HOA with reasonable fees and an underfunded one with pending special assessments is a financial difference that does not appear in the listing price.

Chapter 14

Investment Property

What the Numbers Actually Support Right Now

76

Cap Rate Compression Is Real

The investment property buyer who purchased a single-family rental in Spokane in 2018 is in a completely different financial position than the investor who enters today at prices that reflect the appreciation of the intervening years. The cap rate has compressed as prices have risen faster than rents in many segments of the market. Investors who enter at compressed cap rates are making a bet on continued appreciation to justify returns that the current income alone does not support. I am honest about this with every investment buyer because the investor who understands what they are actually buying is the investor who makes a decision they can sustain.

77

Browne's Addition for Multi-Family Investment

Multi-family properties in Browne's Addition and the University District tend to offer the best rental yields among Spokane's urban neighborhoods, driven by a mix of young professionals, students, and university staff whose demand for housing near downtown and campus amenities remains consistent. These properties can achieve solid occupancy rates and competitive rental pricing. The historic building character that makes some of these properties operationally complex also makes them essentially irreplaceable, which provides a supply constraint that benefits long-term investors.

78

Healthcare Worker Tenants

The healthcare worker tenant profile is one of the most valuable in the Spokane rental market. Nurses, medical researchers, and allied health professionals who are relocating for positions at Providence Sacred Heart or MultiCare represent a tenant demographic with stable income, professional obligations that discourage frequent moves, and standards for property care that reduce the maintenance and condition issues that affect investment returns. Properties positioned to serve this demographic through proximity to the hospital campuses and through the quality of the property relative to professional expectations perform consistently well from a vacancy standpoint.

79

Washington State's No Rent Control Advantage

Rent control is illegal in Washington State, which means Spokane landlords have more flexibility in setting rental rates than landlords in markets like Oregon, California, and other states that have implemented rent control measures. For investors evaluating Spokane against markets in those states, the absence of rent control is a structural advantage that affects both the immediate return and the long-term flexibility of the investment. I mention this specifically to investors from California and Oregon because it affects the investment thesis in ways they may not have factored into their initial analysis.

80

The 1031 Exchange Opportunity

Spokane has served as a 1031 exchange destination for investors who are selling appreciated properties in higher-cost coastal markets and reinvesting in a market where the same capital produces more property and better income. I have worked with investors who sold California and Oregon properties and used their proceeds to purchase Spokane properties that generate genuine cash flow rather than the negative or marginal returns their coastal properties were producing. The exchange process has strict timing and procedural requirements that demand coordination between the real estate transaction, a qualified intermediary, and the investor's tax advisor well in advance of the sale.

Chapter 15

Hidden Advantages

What I Know After 36 Years That Searches Do Not Show

81

The Aquifer Underneath Everything

Spokane's water comes from the Spokane Valley-Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer, one of the largest and purest freshwater aquifers in the western United States. The water quality in Spokane is genuinely excellent from a source standpoint. This is an infrastructure advantage that buyers coming from markets with compromised water quality or supply concerns will appreciate specifically. The aquifer's geological characteristics provide natural filtration that most municipalities would invest significantly to achieve through treatment systems. It is one of those things that is invisible when it is working and irreplaceable when it is not.

82

The Spokane River and What It Does to Daily Life

The Spokane River flows through the urban core of the city in a way that is genuinely unusual among inland American cities. The river's gorge creates dramatic topography, the falls create visual and auditory presence, the recreational access creates daily-life engagement with moving water that most urban residents never experience. Properties with river views or river access carry premiums that are real and that I evaluate specifically. For buyers who have lived near water before, the Spokane River provides something in daily life that they know they want even when they do not articulate it as a search criterion.

83

The Spokane Club and the Downtown Dining Scene

Spokane's downtown dining and hospitality scene has developed meaningfully over the past decade in ways that buyers from outside the market consistently underestimate. Churchill's Steakhouse for USDA Prime, Durkin's for its diner-chic fare, the Bing Crosby Theater for performing arts: the downtown core delivers a quality of urban experience that surprises people who formed their image of Spokane from an earlier era. For buyers who are evaluating whether they can sustain their lifestyle in Spokane, the honest answer is that most of what they are looking for is here.

84

Expo '74 and What It Left Behind

The 1974 World's Fair transformed downtown Spokane in ways that the city is still benefiting from. Expo '74 restored the riverfront's openness and public access, creating Riverfront Park on land that had been an industrial railyard. The Pavilion, the SkyRide gondola, the river access infrastructure, and the civic investment that accompanied the fair established a downtown core that has served as the foundation for every subsequent improvement. For buyers who want to understand why Spokane's downtown has held up better than many comparable inland cities, Expo '74 is part of the answer.

85

The Spokane Chiefs and Community Belonging

The Spokane Chiefs hockey franchise provides a community gathering point that operates differently from professional sports in large markets. Games at the arena are events where the community shows up as itself rather than as consumers of a branded entertainment product. For buyers who are evaluating the community character of the places they are considering, the Chiefs represent something genuine about the relationship between Spokane and its institutions. It is the kind of observation that sounds minor in isolation and that becomes significant in the aggregate of what makes a place feel like somewhere worth committing to.

Chapter 16

Closing Wisdom

What 36 Years in This Specific Market Has Taught Me

86

Spokane Is Not a Consolation Prize

The most common mistake buyers make when they first encounter Spokane is treating it as an affordable alternative to somewhere better. The buyers who make that mistake do not stay. The buyers who discover that Spokane is genuinely what they were looking for do. In my experience, the difference between those two outcomes is almost entirely a function of whether the buyer did the work of understanding what Spokane actually is rather than what it costs. The outdoor access, the community character, the healthcare infrastructure, the food scene, the cultural life: these are not budget versions of what they would find somewhere else. They are real things that Spokane has built and maintained.

87

The Right Price Is the One That Produces Results

After 36 years of pricing properties in this market I have one consistent observation: the sellers who trust an accurate price and resist the temptation to test the market high consistently end up better off than the sellers who start above the data and reduce later. The psychological difficulty of accepting a price that is lower than what you hoped for is real and I do not minimize it. But the financial damage of overpricing is also real and I do not minimize that either. The right price is the one that produces the outcome you actually need. That is the conversation I have at every listing appointment.

88

The Relationship Is the Practice

The clients who call me two years after a closing to refer a family member are the clients I built a relationship with rather than just managed through a transaction. That distinction is the foundation of everything I do in this practice. I do not disappear after the closing because the relationship has value that outlasts the transaction, and the client who discovers that their consultant is still reachable and still engaged two years later is the client who refers without being asked. That is the business model I have built across 36 years in Spokane and it is the only one I know how to operate.

89

Spokane Rewards the Prepared Buyer

The buyers I have watched struggle in the Spokane market are almost always the ones who were not prepared when the right property appeared. The pre-approval was not complete. The criteria were not defined. The urgency of a correctly priced property in a desirable neighborhood was not fully understood. I spend the time upfront with every buyer making sure the preparation is complete before the search begins, because the moment that matters is the moment the right property hits the market and the buyer who is ready is the buyer who gets it.

90

What I Cannot Find Is as Valuable as What I Can

One of the most important things I do for buyers in this market is tell them honestly when a property is not the right fit before they are under contract rather than after. A house that looks right from a distance and that has a problem that I can see from inside the relationship with this specific buyer is a house I will tell them about directly. The client who purchased the wrong property and is unhappy is not a client whose trust I have earned. The client who passed on the wrong property based on honest counsel and found the right one is.

91

The Market Clock and the Life Clock

There are two clocks running for every buyer and seller. The market clock tracks what prices are doing and what inventory looks like and whether conditions are moving in your favor or against you. The life clock tracks the chapter you are in, the reasons you need to move, and the cost of postponing the decision one more year. I tell clients honestly about both clocks because the market clock is the only one that shows up in news articles, and the life clock is the only one that actually matters. The seller who has been waiting for conditions to improve has been paying a carrying cost that rarely appears in the calculation of whether to wait.

92

Go Ugly Early: The Principle That Runs My Practice

I learned early in my career that the problems that are disclosed honestly at the beginning of a transaction are problems that can be solved. The problems that are discovered after the inspection, after the offer, after the emotional investment is complete are problems that damage transactions and relationships. Go ugly early means when an issue arises, whether it involves a property defect, a pricing conversation, a contract concern, or a mistake on my part, I address it immediately rather than hoping it resolves itself. That standard is what produces the trust that produces the referrals that have sustained this practice for 36 years.

93

The Easy Exit Guarantee

I offer every client an easy exit: if I am not the right fit or not meeting expectations, there is a clear and respectful way to move on. This reflects a deeper commitment to accountability than to retention. The client who feels trapped in a professional relationship that is not serving them is a client who cannot give the process their full engagement. The client who knows they can leave if the relationship is not right is a client who chooses to stay when it is. That choice, made freely, is the foundation of the trust that makes the work worth doing.

94

What a Solo Practice Delivers That a Team Cannot

Every client who works with me works directly with me from the first conversation through the moment the keys change hands. There is no team to hand off to, no assistant fielding questions, no showing coordinator who becomes the primary contact after the offer is written. When the inspection surfaces something unexpected and I call to discuss it, I have already read the report and I know the client's situation, their priorities, and the history of every conversation we have had because I was in every one of them. That continuity is not a byproduct of how I have built this practice. It is the central design principle of it.

95

SEALFIT and What It Means in a Transaction

I completed SEALFIT training at age 54. SEALFIT is the civilian version of Navy SEAL preparation, designed to break down what you think your limits are and show you where your actual limits actually are. Completing it changed something permanent in me about what I understand to be possible under pressure. In the context of a real estate transaction that is going sideways at the worst possible moment, that standard shows up as the willingness to stay engaged, stay functional, and find the path forward when less prepared professionals are managing their own discomfort rather than solving the problem.

96

My Background in Lending and Appraisal

Before I was a real estate agent I was a loan officer and appraiser at Northwest Farm Credit Services across Oregon and Washington, reaching the position of senior property specialist. That background gives me the ability to see a transaction the way a lender sees it and the way an appraiser sees it simultaneously with the way a buyer or seller sees it. When I assess a listing price I am running the same analysis an appraiser will run. When I review a pre-approval I am reading it the way a loan officer reads a file. That combination of perspectives is not something that can be acquired through sales experience alone.

97

What Thirty-Six Years in One Market Gives You

I have watched the Spokane market move through multiple full cycles. The prices that seemed impossible in the peak years of the early 2000s became the floor for the recovery. The prices that seemed permanent during the pandemic appreciation have normalized into the current market. The neighborhoods that were overlooked a decade ago are the neighborhoods where the smart buyers got their best returns. Thirty-six years of watching this specific market produces pattern recognition that no database can fully capture, and I bring that pattern recognition to every pricing conversation and every neighborhood recommendation I make.

98

Call Me Before You Decide Anything

Before you decide a neighborhood is not right. Before you decide the timing is wrong. Before you decide the price is too high. Before you decide you should wait. I have a different set of facts than the internet has, and those facts matter to the decision you are about to make. The conversation costs you nothing. The decision you make without it might cost you more than you expect.

99

Spokane Is Worth the Commitment

I have built my life and my career here for 36 years. I have watched this city change, grow, survive difficult periods, and emerge from each of them with more going for it than it had before. I live here. My daughters grew up here. The relationships I have built in this community are the most valuable professional asset I have. I am not trying to talk anyone into Spokane who is not genuinely suited for it. But for the buyer who is looking for a real city with real infrastructure, real community, real healthcare, real outdoor access, and real value for the commitment they are making: Spokane is not a compromise. It is the answer.

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The Promise I Make to Every Client

I will tell you the truth about every property, every market condition, and every situation that arises in the process of buying or selling your home, even when the truth is not what you hoped to hear. I will stay with you through every step of the process with the same complete attention and genuine care I would bring to a decision of this magnitude if it were my own. And when the transaction is complete, the relationship does not end. The question you have two years from now, the family member who is ready to buy, the neighbor who is wondering who to trust with their listing: those are calls I am here for. That is what it means to be a consultant for life rather than an agent for a transaction.

Why Eric

Four things that separate documented authority from marketing claims.

01

Solo by choice

Every phone call is answered by me. Every email is responded to by me. Every showing is conducted by me. Every negotiation is led by me. No team handoffs, no showing agents, no transaction coordinators. When a Spokane transaction throws something unexpected at you, and the city's older housing stock regularly does, you reach the person with the whole picture.

02

Micro-market fluency

Spokane is not one market; it is a dozen micro-markets. South Hill pricing logic is not Five Mile pricing logic. Kendall Yards is not Audubon. Browne's Addition is not Hillyard. Every consultation begins with getting the citywide number out of the conversation and into the specific sub-market that actually matters for the decision in front of us.

03

Documented authority

Six published books on pricing strategy, transaction turbulence, the hidden costs of overpricing, and confident real estate decisions. EricEtzel.com is a documented authority hub, not a listings page. When you google the name, you find credentials and published expertise, not generic claims.

04

Community investment

Wheels 4 Meals is the annual fundraising car show I founded in 2014 to benefit Meals on Wheels Spokane. It is not a marketing event. It is genuine community service that reflects my belief that success is measured not just by production, but by contribution to the community that makes the work possible.

Frequently Asked

Questions I answer on every Spokane first conversation.

What does the Spokane citywide median actually tell me?

Less than you would think. The citywide median runs $385,000 to $420,000, but that number is a useful starting point and a terrible finishing point. The gap between what a South Hill property commands and what comparable square footage in a less desirable neighborhood commands is significant, and no citywide median captures it. The first thing I do with any Spokane buyer or seller is get away from the citywide number and into the specific micro-market we are actually talking about.

How long do well-priced Spokane homes take to sell right now?

Well-priced Spokane homes are going pending in 16 to 41 days depending on neighborhood. Overpriced homes sit 60, 70, 90 days and then sell for less than an accurate Day-One price would have generated. Days on market is not a market condition report. It is a pricing decision report. The sellers who trust the pricing process and resist testing the market high are the ones who end up with the strongest net at closing.

Is the South Hill really worth the price premium?

For most buyers who can afford it, yes, and the data supports that conclusion. I have sold South Hill real estate for 36 years and watched it outperform the rest of the city in every market cycle. When the market softens, South Hill properties hold. When it strengthens, they move first. The reasons are not mysterious: Manito Park, school access, proximity to the downtown employment core and hospital campuses, and housing stock with genuine character. Whether it is worth it to you specifically is the actual question.

What schools serve Spokane city properties?

Spokane Public Schools (District 81) serves the city. The district includes multiple high schools with distinctly different attendance areas and character: Lewis & Clark, Ferris, Rogers, Shadle Park, North Central, and specialty programs. A buyer who assumes all Spokane Public Schools are interchangeable is missing meaningful variation. Verify the current attendance boundary for any specific address directly with the district, and evaluate the specific school your children would attend rather than relying on district-wide averages or third-party platform data.

Where are Spokane buyers coming from?

The buyers I am seeing are coming from Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, and increasingly smaller California markets where equity has built significantly. The equity from a Portland or California sale applied to Spokane prices can eliminate a mortgage entirely, which changes a household's monthly financial picture in ways that are genuinely life-altering. Relocating buyers consistently tell me that what they find in Spokane exceeds their expectations. Understanding what each origin market is comparing against shapes how I guide their search.

What are the city's two healthcare systems, and do they affect real estate?

Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center and MultiCare Deaconess Hospital are the two major systems with downtown and near-downtown campuses, plus affiliated facilities throughout the city. They employ thousands of people, drive housing demand in specific sub-markets close to the campuses, and provide stability to the overall Spokane economy that is genuinely meaningful. Properties with walkable or short-commute access to either system carry a measurable preference from the physicians, nurses, technicians, and administrators those systems employ.

Ready to talk

Let's have a conversation about Spokane.

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