Selling a Home in Culver City in 2026
Real pricing data, neighborhood breakdowns, and a straight-talk strategy guide from a Los Angeles agent who has worked this market for 13 years.
Culver City Market Snapshot — Q1-Q2 2026
What You Will Find in This Guide
- Culver City Market Snapshot 2026
- What Is Driving Culver City Values
- Pricing Strategy by Neighborhood
- Pre-Listing Prep That Pays Off
- Culver City vs. Mar Vista vs. Playa Vista
- School Zone Impact on Sale Price
- Working With a Culver City Listing Agent
- Disclosure Requirements
- Three Seller Scenarios
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Quick Reference Cheat Sheet
- About Justin Borges
Culver City is one of those rare markets that has fundamentally changed its identity in less than a decade. When Amazon signed on for more than 600,000 square feet at Culver Studios and Apple broke ground on its 536,000-square-foot Culver Crossing campus, this west-side city stopped being a quiet bedroom community and became a genuine tech employment anchor. That shift has had real consequences for home prices — and for what it takes to sell here successfully in 2026.
In my 13 years working the Westside, I have seen Culver City go from a market where buyers asked "is this really safe to buy here?" to a market where qualified tech workers compete aggressively for well-presented homes in Culver Crest and Blair Hills. That does not mean selling is automatic. The market has recalibrated. Inventory across LA County is up about 20% from a year ago. Buyers are doing more due diligence. The sellers who are winning are the ones with precise pricing, clean prep, and strong representation.
This guide gives you the real numbers — prices by neighborhood, days on market, what improvements pencil out, and an honest look at Culver City's strengths and weaknesses from a seller's perspective. If you own a home on Culver Blvd, in the hills above the Kenneth Hahn Recreation Area, or in a condo near Main Street and Washington Blvd, there is specific data here for you.
Ready to know what your Culver City home is worth right now?
Call (213) 262-5092Culver City Market Snapshot 2026
The headline number — $1.4M median sale price, up 24% — requires some context. The jump is partially driven by a mix shift toward larger homes and the continued premium buyers place on access to Culver City's tech employment base. The Zillow Home Value Index shows a more moderate picture: $1,264,310, up 2.2% year-over-year. Both figures tell part of the story.
What I tell my sellers when they ask about pricing: look at what sold within half a mile in the last 90 days. Not county-wide statistics, not national averages. Half a mile, 90 days. In Culver City, that is usually 8 to 15 comparable transactions — enough to build a credible price range.
"The best-performing listings in Culver City right now are priced to create competition, not priced to leave room for negotiation. If you start $100K high expecting buyers to come down, you lose the pool of buyers who would have competed for your home." — Justin Borges, DRE #01940318
Price per Square Foot by Property Type
The market is competitive but not frenzied. Redfin data shows homes receiving an average of 3 offers before going under contract. That is healthy competition — enough to push prices to or slightly above list, but not the 15-offer bidding wars of 2021. Sellers who understand this dynamic price to attract those 3 offers rather than testing the market at a number that scares all of them off.
See current Culver City listings and recent sales data.
Browse Culver City ListingsWhat Is Driving Culver City Home Values
Culver City's value story has three legs. Remove any one of them and the market looks very different. Understanding all three helps sellers position their home to the right buyers.
Leg 1: Tech Employment Anchor
Major Tech & Entertainment Employers in Culver City
When Amazon moved into Culver Studios and Apple announced Culver Crossing, it changed the buyer profile for this market. The people buying $2M homes in Culver Crest are often Amazon directors and Apple engineering managers who need to be on-site 3 to 4 days per week. That is a high-income, employment-stable buyer pool. It provides a price floor that many other LA neighborhoods lack.
What I tell my sellers: your home is not just competing with other Culver City homes. It is competing with equivalent homes in Playa Vista, Palms, and Mar Vista for those buyers. The tech employer proximity is a genuine differentiator worth talking about in your marketing.
Leg 2: The Expo Line and Connectivity Premium
The Metro Expo Line (now E Line) runs through Culver City, connecting downtown Culver City to Santa Monica and downtown Los Angeles. For buyers who occasionally work from offices in Santa Monica or DTLA, this is a real quality-of-life feature. Homes within a half-mile walk of the Culver City Metro station command a modest premium of roughly 3% to 5% compared to equivalent homes further out, based on what I have seen in comparable transactions.
Leg 3: Independent School District Premium
One of Culver City's most underrated selling points: it has its own school district entirely separate from LAUSD. Culver City Unified School District ranks in the top 20% of California public school districts, with a 9/10 district ranking on average testing performance. Math proficiency at 51% vs. 34% statewide. Reading proficiency at 63% vs. 47% statewide.
For families with school-age children, this is worth paying for. El Rincon Elementary has a 7/10 GreatSchools rating and an A- on Niche. Farragut Elementary is similarly well-regarded. This is a genuine differentiator from equivalent Westside neighborhoods that fall under LAUSD.
Want to know how tech proximity affects your specific home's value?
📞 Let's talk about your Culver City timelinePricing Strategy for Culver City Sellers
Culver City is not a single market. The price range between a Culver Crest hilltop estate and a Fox Hills condo can be $2 million or more. Here is how I think about pricing across Culver City's distinct sub-areas.
Culver Crest
The highest elevation neighborhood in Culver City. Hillside views, larger lots, architectural variety from mid-century to contemporary custom builds. Properties that sold for $2.5-3M in 2023 are now commanding $3.2-4M. The buyer pool is thinner, but the buyers are serious.
Blair Hills
Adjacent to Kenneth Hahn State Recreation Area. Spacious homes, large lots, strong neighborhood cohesion. Active listings in 2025 ranged from $1.6M to $3.2M. Appeals to families prioritizing square footage and privacy. Slower days on market than downtown Culver City.
Hayden Tract Adjacent
Industrial-chic creative corridor that has attracted TikTok, Scopely, Jam City, and ChowNow. Residential pockets near the Hayden Tract benefit from walkability to these employers. Some buyers specifically target this area for 10-minute commutes.
Downtown Culver City
Condos and townhomes dominate. Main Street, Washington Blvd, the Culver Steps development. Highest walkability, closest to the E Line station. Ideal for buyers who want Culver City access without SFR upkeep. HOA costs are a factor buyers weigh carefully here.
Fox Hills / Culver West
More condo-heavy. Good value compared to downtown, slightly more car-dependent. Growing interest from buyers priced out of Culver Crest. Days on market here tend to run longer than the rest of Culver City — budget 45-60 days for proper exposure.
Washington Blvd Corridor
The Sony Pictures lot on Washington drives a consistent buyer pool of entertainment industry professionals. Older homes, often 1940s-1960s bungalows with strong renovation potential. Sellers here benefit from walking distance to downtown Culver City restaurants, shops, and the E Line Metro station.
Pricing by the Hundred Thousand
Here is the practical reality of how Culver City's market segments by price band in 2026:
$1.0M – $1.5M — The Highest Velocity Band
This is where the market is most active. Typically smaller single-family homes (under 1,800 sq ft), downtown condos, and Fox Hills units. Average days on market: under 30. Multiple offers expected for well-priced listings. This band is the most sensitive to LAX flight paths and street-level crime data — prepare to address both proactively.
$1.5M – $2.5M — The Core Culver City Band
Mid-size single-family homes in Blair Hills, Culver West, and the flat areas near the studios. Your competition is Mar Vista and Playa Vista at equivalent prices. Your differentiation is school district and tech employer proximity. Average days on market: 35-50.
$2.5M+ — Culver Crest Premium
Luxury market, longer runway to sale (60-90 days typical). Buyer pool shrinks significantly. These transactions require patient strategy, high-quality marketing, and often targeted outreach to specific buyer segments (tech executives, entertainment industry). Price drops here signal distress and cost you far more than starting correctly.
Pre-Listing Prep That Pays Off in Culver City
I am going to be direct here: most pre-listing improvements that sellers consider are not worth the money. The Culver City buyer pool skews toward tech and entertainment professionals who have seen thousands of Zillow listings and can see through staged cosmetics. What they cannot ignore is genuine presentation quality and proper pricing.
Here is what actually moves the needle, with realistic ROI figures based on what I have seen in Culver City transactions:
| Improvement | Estimated Cost | Typical ROI (Culver City) | Justin's Take |
|---|---|---|---|
| Interior paint (full house) | $4,000 – $9,000 | 150% – 200% | Always do this. Nothing communicates "move-in ready" like fresh neutral paint. |
| Professional landscaping / curb appeal | $1,500 – $5,000 | 100% – 150% | First impressions happen from the curb. Culver City buyers walk neighborhoods before scheduling tours. |
| Bathroom cosmetic refresh | $2,000 – $6,000 | 130% – 180% | New fixtures, re-grout, fresh caulk. Skip full tile replacement unless it is genuinely damaged. |
| Professional staging | $1,500 – $4,000 | 120% – 200% | The Culver City buyer tours the home online before visiting. Staging is for photos as much as walkthroughs. |
| Pre-listing home inspection | $350 – $500 | 300%+ | Surfaces issues before buyers find them. In Culver City's older housing stock, deferred maintenance is common. Know it before they do. |
| Full kitchen remodel | $30,000 – $80,000 | 50% – 75% | Rarely pencils out for sellers who plan to list within 12 months. Buyers will remodel to their own taste anyway. |
| New HVAC system | $8,000 – $15,000 | 60% – 80% | Only replace if the current system is genuinely failed or near end of life. If it functions, a buyer credit is cleaner. |
| Pool installation | $60,000 – $100,000 | 30% – 50% | Never add a pool for resale in Culver City. It is a liability for some buyers (maintenance cost, safety with kids). |
"I had a seller who wanted to spend $45,000 on a kitchen remodel before listing. We agreed on $8,500 for paint, landscaping, bathroom refresh, and staging instead. The home sold in 19 days at $67,000 over ask. The $36,500 difference stayed in her pocket." — Justin Borges, DRE #01940318
Not sure which improvements are worth it for your specific Culver City property?
Get a free pre-listing consultationCulver City vs. Mar Vista vs. Playa Vista — Seller Comparison
If you are selling in Culver City, your buyer is also looking in Mar Vista and Playa Vista. Understanding how these markets compare helps you position your home's value story.
Median Home Price Comparison (Q1-Q2 2026)
| Factor | Culver City | Mar Vista | Playa Vista |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price (2026) | ~$1.40M | ~$1.55M | ~$1.10M |
| Year-Over-Year Appreciation | +24.4% | +7.4% | -18.2% (early 2026 dip) |
| School District | CCUSD (independent, top 20% CA) | LAUSD | LAUSD |
| Tech Employer Proximity | Amazon, Apple, Sony, TikTok on-site | Commutable via freeway | Google, YouTube HQ walkable |
| Metro Rail Access | E Line (Expo) through city | Limited | Limited |
| Avg. Days on Market | 37 days | ~35-40 days | ~45-55 days |
| Price per Sq Ft | $712 median | $1,325 (Mar Vista avg) | $867 (Playa Vista avg) |
| Property Type Mix | SFR + condos | SFR dominant | Condos + townhomes dominant |
The interesting dynamic here: Culver City is showing the strongest year-over-year price appreciation of the three, even though Mar Vista carries a higher median price overall. That gap reflects Mar Vista's more mature market and higher baseline. Playa Vista's dip in early 2026 appears to be a correction after years of premium pricing on its condo-heavy inventory.
For sellers, the takeaway is clear: Culver City is the value play on the Westside for buyers who prioritize school district quality and tech employer proximity. That is a strong marketing position that your agent should be communicating directly to buyer agents representing Amazon, Apple, and Sony employees.
Selling in West Hollywood? Read Our Guide Selling in Silver Lake? Read Our GuideSchool Zone Impact on Your Culver City Sale
The school district question comes up in nearly every buyer conversation I have about Culver City. Here is the honest picture for sellers to understand and communicate:
| School | Level | GreatSchools Rating | Niche Grade | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| El Rincon Elementary | K-5 | 7/10 | A- | 54% math proficiency, 61% reading. Above CA average. |
| Farragut Elementary | K-5 | 8/10 | A | Among top-ranked public elementaries in Culver City. |
| Culver City Middle School | 6-8 | 7/10 | B+ | Strong athletics and arts programs. |
| Culver City High School | 9-12 | 8/10 | A- | Top 20% of CA public high schools. Strong graduation rates. |
What this means practically for sellers: Culver City Unified is not LAUSD. This is a genuine competitive advantage that commands a premium. In my experience, buyers with school-age children who are cross-shopping Culver City against Mar Vista or Santa Monica frequently tip to Culver City specifically because of school district quality at a more accessible price point.
The School Premium in Dollar Terms
Based on comparable sales data, homes that fall within top-rated Culver City elementary school boundaries (particularly Farragut) command a premium of approximately $40,000 to $80,000 compared to equivalent homes outside those boundaries. Know your school zone before you price.
$40K – $80K school zone premiumThree Seller Scenarios: Which One Are You?
Most Culver City sellers fall into one of three situations. Here is how I approach each one differently:
| Scenario | Description | Market Position | Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Equity Harvester | Owned 7+ years, significant appreciation, relocating or downsizing. Culver Crest or Blair Hills SFR, $2M+. | Strong seller position. Limited supply at this price point. | Patient pricing strategy. Pre-list marketing to tech employer HR networks. No rush to accept first offer. Call (213) 262-5092 to discuss. |
| The Move-Up Seller | Selling a condo or starter home ($700K-$1.3M) to buy a larger home. Timing the sale and purchase simultaneously. | Active buyer pool, velocity market. Your sale should move quickly if priced correctly. | Price competitively to generate multiple offers within 14-21 days. Consider seller rent-back to bridge timing with next purchase. Text (213) 262-5092. |
| The Investor Exit | Investment property or rental held long-term. Tenant disclosure, 1031 exchange, capital gains considerations. | Depends on property type. Tenanted properties trade at 5-10% discount to vacant homes. | Coordinate tenant transition carefully. California law requires 60-90 day notice depending on tenancy. Vacant property at listing maximizes sale price. Let's map the timeline. |
Not sure which scenario fits you?
A 15-minute call tells me everything I need to outline the right approach for your Culver City sale. No pressure, just real information.
Working With a Culver City Listing Agent
Here is what I have learned in 13 years of working this market: the difference between a good listing and a great result is usually not the property — it is the process. Here is exactly what I do for Culver City sellers:
My Listing Process: Step by Step
- Pre-listing walkthrough: I walk the property and identify what a Culver City buyer will notice — both positives and concerns. I tell you what to fix, what to disclose, and what to leave alone.
- Competitive market analysis: I pull the last 90 days of comparable closed sales within half a mile. We price based on data, not emotion.
- Vendor coordination: I have relationships with Culver City-area stagers, photographers, and contractors. I can get prep work done faster and at better rates than you can independently.
- Pre-listing buyer agent outreach: Before the home hits the MLS, I contact buyer agents who represent Amazon, Apple, Sony, and TikTok employee relocations. This creates early momentum.
- MLS launch with professional media: Photography, 3D Matterport tour, video walkthrough. The listing goes live Thursday to maximize weekend showings.
- Offer management: I cross-qualify every offer before you see it. Price is only one factor — financing strength, contingency periods, and proof of funds matter as much or more in Culver City's market.
- Escrow management through close: I stay active through appraisal, inspection, and closing. In Culver City's older housing stock, inspection issues come up. An experienced agent navigates them without losing the deal.
"If this helped you think through your sale, I would love to earn your trust. Call me at (213) 262-5092 and let's have an honest conversation about what your Culver City home is worth and what it takes to sell it right in this market." — Justin Borges, DRE #01940318 | The Borges Real Estate Team
Ready to get started? Let's talk Culver City strategy.
Call Justin at (213) 262-5092Culver City Seller Disclosure Requirements
California has among the most detailed real estate disclosure requirements in the country. Culver City sellers have a few market-specific items worth knowing about beyond the standard statewide requirements.
Standard California Disclosures
- Transfer Disclosure Statement (TDS): Required for all residential transactions. You disclose known material defects, systems condition, and neighborhood issues.
- Natural Hazard Disclosure (NHD): Ordered through a third-party provider at time of listing. Covers earthquake, flood, fire hazard zones.
- Seller's Supplemental Checklist: Additional seller disclosures about HOA, permits, zoning.
- Lead-Based Paint Disclosure: Required for homes built before 1978, which includes most of Culver City's older housing stock.
Culver City-Specific Items to Address
- LAX flight paths: Parts of Culver City fall under LAX flight patterns. Buyers will research this. Proactive disclosure and noise mitigation improvements (double-pane windows, etc.) can reduce the impact on negotiations.
- Hayden Tract industrial proximity: If your property is near the Hayden Tract, buyers may raise questions about industrial use and air quality. Have current information ready.
- Unpermitted work: Culver City's older housing stock frequently has additions or conversions done without permits. Identify and disclose any unpermitted work before the inspection surfaces it as a surprise.
- ADU legality: Many Culver City sellers have converted garages or built ADUs. Verify permit status before listing — unpermitted ADUs affect lending and sale price.
Pre-Listing Inspection: Always Worth It in Culver City
In 13 years, I have seen more deals fall apart in Culver City over inspection surprises than any other single cause. A $400 pre-listing inspection eliminates that risk. You either fix the issue, price for it, or disclose it — all three outcomes are better than a buyer discovering it at the 11th hour and walking.
Honest Assessment: Pros and Cons of Selling in Culver City
Every seller deserves an honest read on their market. Culver City has genuine strengths and real challenges. Here is both sides.
Why Culver City Sellers Win
- Strong tech employer anchors (Amazon, Apple, Sony) driving steady high-income buyer demand
- Independent school district in top 20% of California — premium for families
- 24.4% year-over-year price appreciation in early 2026 — strong seller momentum
- E Line Metro access gives buyers a transit option rare on the Westside
- Downtown revitalization (The Culver Steps, Main Street) improving lifestyle perception
- Walkable urban core attracting buyers who want LA convenience without Hollywood prices
- Zero homicides recorded in the most recently reported year
- Smaller city feel with dedicated local government responsive to residents
What Culver City Sellers Must Prepare For
- LAX flight paths affect some areas — buyers flag this in due diligence
- Property crime rate is above national average — buyers will research this
- Tech-adjacent market volatility: demand correlates with tech hiring cycles
- Industrial proximity (Hayden Tract) raises air quality questions for some buyers
- 405 freeway noise affects properties on the eastern edge of Culver City
- HOA costs in condo-heavy areas add to buyer's total monthly payment
- Inventory up 20% across LA County gives buyers more alternatives than 2021-2022
When to List Your Culver City Home in 2026
Timing matters more than most sellers realize. In Culver City, the optimal listing windows follow tech industry rhythms more than traditional real estate seasonality.
Activity Level by Season (Culver City)
What I tell my sellers: list on a Thursday. Consistently. Culver City buyers look at new listings Friday morning before planning weekend tours. A Thursday launch means your home gets full weekend exposure in the first week, which is the highest-traffic period for any listing.
Also worth noting: avoid listing during major tech company all-hands or conference weeks. When Amazon or Apple has a large internal event, your core buyer pool is mentally occupied with work. I track these calendars for my Culver City listings.
Want to know the best week to list your Culver City property in 2026?
📞 Let's talk timing — (213) 262-5092Related Seller Guides for Los Angeles
If you are weighing Culver City against other Los Angeles neighborhoods, these guides cover similar markets with the same level of detail:
Frequently Asked Questions
Quick Reference: Culver City Seller Cheat Sheet 2026
Let's Talk About Your Culver City Sale
Whether you are 6 weeks or 6 months from listing, the earlier we start the conversation, the better your result will be. A 20-minute call costs you nothing and could change your outcome significantly.
The 7 Most Common Mistakes Culver City Sellers Make
In 13 years of Westside transactions, I have seen the same mistakes cost sellers tens of thousands of dollars that they should have kept. Here is the list — with specific context for Culver City's market in 2026.
Mistake 1: Pricing Based on Your Purchase Price or Mortgage Payoff
What you paid for your home and what you owe on it have zero bearing on market value. The market does not care about your cost basis. I have watched sellers price their Culver City homes $150,000 over comparable sales because they bought at peak 2021 prices and need to net a certain figure. The result is always the same: price cuts, longer days on market, and a final sale price below where they would have landed with accurate initial pricing.
Mistake 2: Choosing an Agent Based on Who Quotes the Highest Price
This is called "buying the listing" — when an agent tells you what you want to hear to win your business, then manages price reductions after the listing sits. The agent who shows you a realistic price range backed by actual comps is the one worth hiring. Ask every candidate to show you their last 10 Culver City sales and their list-price-to-sale-price ratio. Call me at (213) 262-5092 and I will show you mine.
Mistake 3: Skipping the Pre-Listing Inspection
Culver City's housing stock skews older. Many homes along Culver Blvd and in the Washington corridor were built in the 1940s through 1960s. Deferred maintenance, galvanized pipes, knob-and-tube wiring, foundation movement — these surface in buyer inspections and become bargaining chips in negotiations. A $400 investment in a pre-listing inspection eliminates 80% of that exposure before your home ever goes on market.
Mistake 4: Listing Without Professional Photography
Your primary buyers are Amazon engineers, Apple creative directors, and Sony entertainment executives who spend their days working with visual media. They will not schedule a tour of a home with dark, blurry phone photos. Professional real estate photography in Culver City costs $450 to $900. It is the highest-return line item in your entire marketing budget.
Mistake 5: Not Addressing the LAX Flight Path Issue Proactively
If your Culver City property is under a flight path, buyers will find out. They will check FlightAware, they will stand in your backyard during the open house and listen, and they will ask the question in their offer contingency. The sellers who handle this well disclose it upfront, mention noise mitigation features (double-pane windows, solid-core doors), and frame it honestly rather than hoping buyers do not notice. The sellers who handle it poorly lose deals late in escrow when buyers back out citing noise.
Mistake 6: Ignoring the Buyer's Financing
In 2026's market, not all offers are equal. A cash offer at $30,000 under ask from a qualified buyer can be worth more than a financed offer $50,000 over ask from a buyer with a 3-week contingency and a pre-approval letter from a lender nobody has heard of. I cross-qualify every offer before my sellers see it — calling the lender directly, verifying proof of funds, and assessing the realistic close probability. Text (213) 262-5092 to learn how I evaluate offers.
Mistake 7: Going Off-Market Without Testing It First
Some sellers are tempted by off-market sale pitches ("We have a buyer, no MLS exposure needed, saves you the hassle"). In Culver City's market, going off-market almost always costs you 5% to 12% of sale price compared to a properly marketed MLS listing. The exception is ultra-luxury ($3M+) where privacy concerns are real. For most Culver City sellers, maximum market exposure is maximum sale price. Do not shortchange yourself.
Questions about any of these? I will give you a straight answer. No sales pitch.
Call Justin — (213) 262-5092Your Culver City Sale Timeline: What to Expect Week by Week
Here is a realistic timeline for a Culver City home sale from first conversation to close. Every transaction is different, but this reflects what I see in the majority of well-run Culver City listings.
| Timeframe | Milestone | What Happens |
|---|---|---|
| 6-8 Weeks Before Listing | Strategy Session | CMA, pre-listing inspection ordered, improvement plan finalized, timeline confirmed. (213) 262-5092 |
| 4-6 Weeks Before | Pre-Listing Prep | Paint, landscaping, staging, repairs completed. Listing agreement signed. Disclosures drafted. |
| 2 Weeks Before | Photography & Media | Professional photography, 3D tour, video walkthrough completed. MLS listing drafted and reviewed. |
| 1 Week Before | Pre-Launch Outreach | Agent network notified. Coming Soon MLS status activated if applicable. Open house scheduled for first weekend. |
| Thursday: Go Live | MLS Launch | Listing goes active. Syndicated to Zillow, Redfin, Realtor.com. Showing requests open. |
| Days 1-7 | Peak Showing Window | Open house weekend 1. Showings scheduled. Offer deadline set (typically Sunday evening or Monday). |
| Days 7-10 | Offer Review | All offers reviewed and cross-qualified. Counter offers or acceptance. Seller accepts best offer. Escrow opens. |
| Days 10-20 | Inspection Period | Buyer's inspection. Repair requests negotiated. Pre-listing inspection data helps seller respond from a position of knowledge. |
| Days 15-25 | Appraisal | Lender orders appraisal. Seller's agent provides comp support to appraiser. Most Culver City homes appraise at or near contract price when priced correctly. |
| Days 25-35 | Loan Funding & Close | Buyer's loan funds. Final walkthrough. Signing at title. Keys transfer. Net proceeds wired to seller. |
Total timeline from first conversation to closing: 10 to 13 weeks is typical for a smooth Culver City transaction. Rush listings (4-5 weeks from conversation to list) are possible but increase risk of preparation gaps that show up in negotiations.
📞 Let's build your Culver City sale timeline — (213) 262-5092Ready to Sell Your Culver City Home?
If this guide helped you think through your sale, I would love to earn your trust. Let's have a real conversation about what your Culver City property is worth, what it takes to prepare it, and how to position it for the best possible outcome in 2026.






