Price per square foot is the fastest gut-check in real estate. Divide sale price by livable square footage, compare it to similar homes nearby, and you've got a rough read on whether a listing is priced fairly. Rough being the key word.
How appraisers actually use it
Appraisers lean on the sales comparison approach: find recently sold homes nearby with similar size, condition, and features, then adjust for differences. Square footage is one of the first filters, because it's objective and easy to verify against public records, unlike something like "updated kitchen," which is subjective.
Two similar homes on the same block, one at 1,800 sq ft and one at 2,400 sq ft, will usually not differ in price by exactly the ratio of their size. Location, lot size, and condition all pull the number around. Square footage sets the starting point, not the final answer.
Where it stops explaining the price
Extra square footage doesn't add value at a flat rate forever. A jump from 1,200 to 1,800 square feet often matters a lot to a family that's outgrown a starter home. A jump from 3,500 to 4,100 tends to matter far less, because most buyers in that range have already gotten the space they need and are now paying for finishes, location, and land instead.
This is why a huge house in an average location can sell for less per square foot than a modest one in a sought-after neighborhood. Size is a variable in the pricing model. It isn't the whole model.
A common mistake sellers make: assuming an addition pays for itself dollar-for-dollar in resale value. It rarely does. Buyers pay for square footage, but they pay more per foot for the first bedroom than the fourth.
What actually moves with square footage
- Comparable pricing. Buyers and agents use it to sanity-check whether a listing is in the right range for the area.
- Lending decisions. Lenders use appraised value, which itself leans on verified square footage, to determine how much they'll finance.
- Property tax assessments. Many counties calculate assessed value partly from recorded square footage, so an inaccurate record can mean an inaccurate tax bill.
Check your own number first
Before trusting a listing's square footage, or before pricing your own home, it's worth measuring the actual livable space yourself. Public records and MLS listings disagree more often than people expect.
Know Your Real Number
Measure your home's actual livable square footage before you rely on someone else's figure.
Calculate Square FootageSquare footage is the number everyone anchors to because it's simple and verifiable. Just don't mistake it for the whole valuation. It's the opening bid in a negotiation that also involves location, condition, and timing.