How to Determine Your Real Estate Marketing Budget Based on Property Value

Whether you’re listing a luxury home, a multifamily investment property, a retail center, or a development opportunity, one thing remains true:

Your marketing budget should reflect the value of the asset you’re representing.

Yet one of the most common mistakes in real estate is underinvesting in marketing for high-value properties.

A multi-million-dollar listing gets marketed with templated flyers, rushed photography, and minimal strategy — then agents wonder why the property struggles to generate excitement.

The reality is:
Marketing doesn’t just advertise a property.

It shapes perception, builds credibility, attracts the right buyers, and can directly influence the final sale price.


Why Presentation Matters More at Higher Price Points

As property values increase, buyer expectations rise with them.

Whether someone is purchasing:

  • A luxury residence

  • A mixed-use building

  • A multifamily asset

  • A development site

  • A commercial investment property

…they are evaluating more than just square footage and numbers.

They’re evaluating:

  • Professionalism

  • Positioning

  • Attention to detail

  • Perceived value

  • Confidence in the listing agent

Poor marketing can unintentionally communicate:

  • Lack of demand

  • Lack of sophistication

  • Operational disorganization

  • Seller urgency

  • Weak positioning

Meanwhile, thoughtful marketing creates an entirely different experience.

It tells buyers:

“This property is valuable. This opportunity is curated. This listing deserves attention.”

And perception matters — especially in competitive markets.


A Simple Rule of Thumb

A strong baseline is:

Allocate approximately 0.25%–1% of the property’s expected sale price toward marketing.

The exact percentage depends on:

  • Property type

  • Competition

  • Target audience

  • Expected commission

  • Timeline

  • Desired level of exposure

Higher-end or highly competitive listings often require more strategic presentation to stand out.


Suggested Marketing Budgets by Property Value

Property Value Suggested Marketing Budget
$500K Listing $1,250–$5,000
$1M Listing $2,500–$10,000
$3M Listing $7,500–$30,000
$10M+ Asset $25,000–$100,000+

This doesn’t mean every listing requires an extravagant campaign.

But there should be alignment between:

  • The value of the asset

  • The potential commission

  • The quality of the presentation


What a Professional Real Estate Marketing Budget Covers

Many people underestimate how many moving pieces go into high-level real estate marketing.

A strategic campaign often includes:

Creative & Design
  • Property branding

  • Offering memorandums

  • Listing presentations

  • Brochures and print collateral

  • Custom maps and infographics

  • Email marketing campaigns

  • Social media graphics

Photography & Video
  • Professional photography

  • Drone imagery

  • Twilight photography

  • Cinematic video tours

  • Lifestyle content

  • Short-form social media reels

Advertising & Distribution
  • Paid social media advertising

  • Broker outreach campaigns

  • Email distribution

  • MLS exposure

  • LoopNet / Crexi placement

  • Print marketing

  • Digital ad placements

Strategy & Positioning
  • Defining the target buyer

  • Market positioning

  • Messaging and storytelling

  • Visual consistency across platforms

  • Launch strategy and rollout timing


The Cost of Under-Marketing a Property

One of the biggest misconceptions in real estate is viewing marketing as an expense instead of a sales tool.

When marketing is rushed or minimized, the consequences can include:

  • Reduced buyer engagement

  • Lower perceived value

  • Longer days on market

  • Weaker offers

  • More price reductions

  • Less competitive positioning

In both residential and commercial real estate, buyers form opinions before they ever schedule a showing or property tour.

Presentation influences perception long before the first conversation happens.


Marketing Is Part of the Sales Strategy

The strongest agents understand this:

Marketing is not an afterthought.
It’s part of the asset strategy.

Professional marketing:

  • builds trust

  • increases visibility

  • creates an emotional connection

  • elevates perceived value

  • and helps listings stand out in crowded markets

Especially today, where buyers encounter a property online before anywhere else, presentation quality matters more than ever.


Final Thoughts

If you’re representing a high-value property, your marketing should align with the asset's value.

Because buyers notice the details.
Sellers notice the effort.
And your brand reputation becomes attached to every listing you market.

The goal shouldn’t be:

“How little can I spend on marketing?”

It should be:

“What level of presentation does this property deserve?”

And often, that answer becomes the difference between a listing that blends in… and one that stands out.

Next
Next

Small Steps Create Big Shifts