New Construction vs. Resale in Reseda

The new construction versus resale question looks different in Reseda 91335 than it does in markets where master-planned community development is actively underway. Reseda is not Porter Ranch 91326, where entire new-home subdivisions are opening year by year. It is not Calabasas 91302, where newer developments sit alongside established residential areas. Reseda is an established central Valley neighborhood whose residential grid was substantially built out between the 1950s and 1970s โ a neighborhood where genuine new construction means infill: small-lot subdivisions carved from larger parcels, teardown-and-rebuild projects on individual lots, attached townhome and condominium development on commercial-to-residential conversions, and the permitted ADU units that California's legislation has made increasingly significant across the neighborhood's existing housing stock.
Understanding this distinction โ that "new construction in Reseda" is a fundamentally different product than new construction in a master-planned community โ is the foundation of making a well-informed decision about whether new or resale inventory better serves your specific needs in this market. This article covers both product types honestly, what each delivers in Reseda's specific context, and how the decision framework should work for buyers and investors evaluating 91335 inventory in 2026.
1. ๐๏ธ What "New Construction" Actually Means in Reseda
Before any comparison can be useful, buyers need to understand what the new construction category actually contains in Reseda 91335 โ because the term means something fundamentally different here than in markets where master-planned communities are actively delivering new single-family detached homes.
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New construction in Reseda 91335 โ infill development on converted parcels, small-lot subdivisions, and individual teardown-rebuild projects rather than master-planned community development. Understanding what this product type delivers versus established single-family resale is the central comparison Reseda buyers need to make.
The four types of new or near-new construction in Reseda 91335:
Type 1 โ Small-lot subdivision single-family detached:
The most desirable new construction product in Reseda โ individual detached single-family homes built on lots that are smaller than the neighborhood's established 6,000โ8,500 sq ft standard, typically ranging from 2,500โ4,500 sq ft per unit when a larger parcel has been subdivided into multiple detached homes.
- โ ๐ Lot size: Meaningfully smaller than the established Reseda residential standard โ outdoor space is limited, setbacks are tight, and the private outdoor living proposition is compressed relative to what a standard resale lot provides
- โ ๐ฐ Price: $850,000โ$1,050,000 for a new 3-bedroom small-lot detached home in Reseda โ approximately 20โ30% above a comparable-square-footage resale in improved condition on a standard lot
- โ โ What it delivers: New systems (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, roof), contemporary finishes, builder warranty, and the specific peace-of-mind of moving into a home with no deferred maintenance history
- โ โ ๏ธ What it doesn't deliver: Lot size, mature landscaping, established neighborhood character, or value per square foot comparable to resale
Type 2 โ Attached townhomes and condos on commercial conversion sites:
The most common form of new construction appearing in Reseda โ multi-unit attached product (townhome rows, stacked condominiums) built on parcels that previously housed commercial uses, converted under Los Angeles's adaptive reuse and residential infill incentive programs.
- โ ๐๏ธ Configuration: Shared walls, shared HOA infrastructure, parking structures or garages rather than traditional driveways, and common area amenities that vary by project
- โ ๐ฐ Price: $620,000โ$820,000 for 2-3 bedroom attached townhome or condo in Reseda โ a lower entry point than detached new construction but carrying HOA dues that affect monthly cost
- โ โ What it delivers: New construction quality, warranty, contemporary finishes, and often a lower entry price than comparable detached resale
- โ โ ๏ธ What it doesn't deliver: Private outdoor space, independence from HOA governance, the traditional single-family residential character that most Reseda buyer profiles specifically seek
Type 3 โ Teardown-and-rebuild on an existing residential lot:
Individual lot purchases where the buyer (or developer) demolishes the existing structure and builds a new single-family home to current code standards on the same parcel.
- โ ๐ Lot size: Standard Reseda lot (6,000โ8,500 sq ft) โ the only new construction product that delivers comparable lot size to established resale
- โ ๐ฐ Price: $980,000โ$1,250,000 depending on finish level โ the highest new construction price point in Reseda, reflecting the combined land and construction cost
- โ โ What it delivers: Standard Reseda lot with full outdoor space, new construction quality throughout, contemporary floor plan rather than 1950sโ1970s layout, and full warranty
- โ โ ๏ธ What it doesn't deliver: Mature landscaping, established neighborhood character on the specific lot, or value per square foot competitive with resale; the math works primarily for buyers who specifically want a new home on a standard lot and are willing to pay the premium for that combination
Type 4 โ Permitted ADU as a new construction component:
Not a standalone new construction purchase, but increasingly relevant as Reseda investors and buyers evaluate whether existing resale homes with newly built ADUs function as partial new-construction purchases โ buying a 1965 single-family home where a 2023-permitted ADU has been constructed in the backyard.
- โ ๐ The ADU consideration: A recently constructed ADU on an established Reseda resale property provides new-construction quality and warranty for the ADU unit specifically, while the primary home remains resale vintage
- โ ๐ฐ Valuation: ADU presence adds $80,000โ$130,000 in appraised value in most Reseda 91335 sub-neighborhoods โ buyers should evaluate the ADU's rental income potential and construction vintage alongside the primary home's condition
2. ๐ The Resale Case โ Why Most Reseda Buyers Choose Existing Homes
The established resale market represents the overwhelming majority of Reseda 91335 transaction volume โ and for most buyer profiles actively searching in 91335, it is the correct choice rather than a default. Understanding specifically why resale serves most Reseda buyers better than available new construction is the core of this article's practical value.
The lot size advantage:
The most consistent and most significant advantage of Reseda resale over available new construction is lot size. A standard Reseda resale lot โ 6,500โ8,500 sq ft โ provides meaningfully more outdoor space than small-lot detached new construction (2,500โ4,500 sq ft) and incomparably more than attached townhome product (no private lot at all). For the Reseda buyer profile โ predominantly working families, multi-generational households, and buyers with children โ the backyard is not an afterthought. It is the primary outdoor living space for families who don't have a lifestyle amenity corridor to substitute for it.
A $820,000 resale purchase of an improved 3-bedroom home on a 7,200 sq ft lot delivers: the private backyard for children, the potential pool (if the lot is appropriately configured), the parking for multiple vehicles, and the outdoor gathering space for the extended family BBQ that is central to the Reseda lifestyle described in the "what's it like to live in Reseda" article. A $920,000 small-lot detached new construction purchase on a 3,200 sq ft lot delivers: modern systems and a builder warranty, and a backyard approximately the size of a two-car garage footprint.
For most Reseda families, this is not a close call.
The value per square foot advantage:
- โ ๐ฐ Resale (improved condition, 3-bedroom, 1,400 sq ft): $740,000โ$875,000 โ approximately $529โ$625/sq ft
- โ ๐ฐ New small-lot detached (3-bedroom, 1,400 sq ft): $850,000โ$1,050,000 โ approximately $607โ$750/sq ft
- โ ๐ The gap: Buyers paying the new construction premium in Reseda are paying approximately $80โ$125 more per square foot of living space, for a smaller or no lot, in exchange for new systems and contemporary finishes
Whether this premium is worth it depends entirely on how much the specific buyer values the warranty and the new-construction peace-of-mind relative to the lot and the value per dollar โ a genuine personal decision rather than an objective one, but one that most Reseda buyers resolve in favor of resale when the numbers are laid out explicitly.
The established neighborhood character advantage:
Resale homes in Reseda come embedded in the neighborhood's established residential fabric โ mature street trees that took 40 years to grow to their current canopy, established neighbor relationships that new construction infill projects don't inherit, and the specific physical and social character of a residential block that has been a residential block for decades rather than a recently converted commercial site.
New infill development in Reseda โ particularly on commercial conversion sites โ frequently sits at the edge of the established residential grid, adjacent to commercial uses or on corridors that don't have the established residential character of the deeper neighborhood streets. Buyers who purchase resale in the established residential fabric of Reseda 91335 are buying into something that new construction can't replicate: a neighborhood that is already a neighborhood, not one that is becoming one.
3. โ๏ธ When New Construction Makes More Sense in Reseda
Despite the resale advantages for most buyers, there are specific buyer profiles and specific situations where available new construction in Reseda 91335 makes more sense than the resale alternative.
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New construction interior quality in Reseda 91335 โ contemporary finishes, modern systems, and builder warranty are what the new construction premium specifically buys. Buyers who prioritize these features over lot size and value per square foot are the buyer profile where new construction makes more sense than the resale alternative.
Scenario 1 โ The buyer who genuinely cannot manage deferred maintenance:
First-time buyers who are stretching to their absolute qualification ceiling, with minimal reserves remaining after close, face a specific risk with original or lightly updated Reseda resale: the HVAC replacement ($10,000โ$14,000), the roof at end of life ($14,000โ$20,000), or the plumbing issue that the pre-listing inspection didn't reveal. For buyers whose financial position cannot absorb these surprises in the first few years of ownership, the warranty and the modern systems of new construction have genuine financial value that partially offsets the price premium.
Scenario 2 โ The buyer who specifically wants a contemporary open-plan layout:
Most Reseda resale homes were built when the compartmentalized room layout โ separate formal living room, separate dining room, galley kitchen โ was standard. Buyers who specifically require an open-plan kitchen-living-dining configuration, a primary suite with a walk-in closet and double vanity, or a floor plan that reflects contemporary residential design standards will find that resale homes require renovation to achieve what new construction delivers as standard. For buyers who place high value on these specific layout features and who would spend $40,000โ$80,000 renovating a resale home to get them, a new construction premium that achieves the same result without the renovation process may be economically equivalent or even favorable.
Scenario 3 โ The investor targeting rental to a specific tenant profile:
Some Reseda investors โ particularly those targeting CSUN-adjacent or professional tenant populations who specifically seek newer finishes and modern systems โ find that new or near-new construction achieves rental rates ($3,200โ$3,800/month for a new 3-bedroom) that meaningfully exceed what a renovated resale delivers ($2,900โ$3,400/month), partially offsetting the acquisition premium through the income line. The math works only at specific acquisition prices and with specific tenant-targeting assumptions โ model it specifically rather than assuming the rental premium is automatic.
4. ๐ The Due Diligence Difference โ What Changes Between New and Resale
The due diligence process for a Reseda new construction purchase is meaningfully different from resale due diligence, and buyers who approach new construction with a resale mindset will consistently miss the specific protections and the specific risks that new product requires.
New construction due diligence โ what's different:
- โ ๐ Builder warranty review: California's statutory warranty for new construction requires specific coverage: 10 years for structural defects, 2 years for mechanical systems, 1 year for cosmetic/workmanship defects. Buyers should review the specific builder's warranty documentation during the purchase process and understand what is and isn't covered, rather than assuming all warranties are equivalent.
- โ ๐๏ธ Construction defect litigation history: For any Reseda builder or development entity with prior projects in the area, buyers should research whether prior projects have been the subject of construction defect claims or litigation โ a due diligence step that resale buyers don't need to take.
- โ ๐ HOA CC&Rs and reserve fund review (for attached product): New attached product in Reseda comes with HOA governance that established resale single-family homes typically don't carry. Review the CC&Rs, the HOA reserve fund contributions, and any HOA litigation history before committing to attached new construction.
- โ ๐ Mello-Roos verification: Most Reseda 91335 new infill development does not carry Mello-Roos obligations โ unlike Porter Ranch 91326 or parts of Calabasas 91302 where Mello-Roos is common on new construction. Verify per the specific project's NHD disclosure rather than assuming either way.
- โ ๐ Permit completion and certificate of occupancy: Verify that all construction permits are closed and a certificate of occupancy has been issued before closing โ incomplete permits on new construction are a title and future-sale problem that a straightforward permit history review prevents.
Resale due diligence โ what new construction replaces:
- โ โ Pre-listing or buyer inspection specifically targeting deferred maintenance โ the HVAC, roofing, plumbing, electrical, and foundation items that are the standard Reseda resale inspection focus
- โ โ Permit history pull for any additions, conversions, or structural modifications
- โ โ Assessment of renovation quality and permit status for any improvements made by prior owners
5. ๐ฐ The Financial Comparison โ Building the Side-by-Side Model
Bringing the price premium, the lot difference, and the due diligence considerations together into a specific financial comparison helps buyers make the new versus resale decision with clear numbers rather than general impressions.
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The side-by-side financial comparison that should precede any Reseda new construction versus resale decision โ not a general preference for new or old but a specific comparison of total costs, monthly payments, lot characteristics, and 5-year wealth-building projections for the specific properties actually available in the buyer's search.
The side-by-side at a representative Reseda price point:
Option A โ Resale improved condition, 3-bedroom, 1,450 sq ft, 7,000 sq ft lot:
- โ Purchase price: $820,000
- โ Down payment (10%): $82,000
- โ Loan amount at 7.25%: $738,000
- โ Monthly P&I: $5,035
- โ Property taxes (1.2% effective): $820/month
- โ Insurance: $130/month
- โ Total PITI: $5,985/month
- โ Estimated deferred maintenance reserve (1% annually): $683/month
- โ Total all-in monthly: $6,668
- โ Lot: 7,000 sq ft with genuine backyard
- โ Warranty: None โ buyer assumes existing condition
Option B โ New small-lot detached construction, 3-bedroom, 1,450 sq ft, 3,000 sq ft lot:
- โ Purchase price: $955,000
- โ Down payment (10%): $95,500
- โ Loan amount at 7.25%: $859,500
- โ Monthly P&I: $5,862
- โ Property taxes (1.2% effective): $955/month
- โ Insurance: $145/month
- โ HOA dues (if applicable): $0โ$300/month
- โ Total PITI: $6,962/month (without HOA)
- โ Deferred maintenance reserve: minimal in years 1โ5 given new systems
- โ Total all-in monthly (without HOA): $6,962
- โ Lot: 3,000 sq ft with limited backyard
- โ Warranty: Builder warranty (1/2/10 year structure)
The gap:
- โ Monthly payment difference: approximately $294โ$594/month more for new construction (without or with HOA)
- โ Additional down payment required for new: $13,500
- โ 5-year warranty value (avoided repairs, primarily HVAC + plumbing): estimated $8,000โ$18,000 in central Valley working conditions
- โ 5-year appreciation differential: both products in Reseda 91335 are likely to appreciate similarly given comparable location โ the lot size advantage of resale doesn't necessarily produce different appreciation in the resale vs. infill-new comparison at Reseda's price point
- โ Net 5-year outcome: The resale buyer has lower monthly payments, more lot, and absorbs some deferred maintenance risk; the new construction buyer has higher monthly payments, less lot, and minimal near-term maintenance concern
For most Reseda buyers, Option A's $294โ$594/month payment saving and significantly larger lot produce a better 5-year outcome unless the buyer has specific reasons to place high value on the new construction warranty and modern floor plan โ reasons that are real and legitimate for specific buyer situations but not universal.
๐ซ What NOT to Overdo
Don't assume new construction in Reseda delivers the same product as new construction in Porter Ranch or Calabasas. Master-planned community new construction โ which Porter Ranch 91326 and portions of Calabasas 91302/91372 deliver โ provides standard lots, community amenities, and a consistent streetscape built from scratch for a residential experience. Reseda infill new construction provides none of these. It is a new building inserted into an established residential or former commercial site. The product is different in kind, and buyers who price-compare Porter Ranch new construction to Reseda resale without understanding this distinction will make a flawed comparison.
Don't ignore the HOA cost in your new construction monthly payment. Attached new construction in Reseda โ townhomes and condominiums โ universally carries HOA dues that range from $150โ$450/month depending on the project's amenity load. These dues are a real, ongoing, inflation-adjusting cost that belongs in the monthly payment comparison alongside PITI. A new construction condo that looks price-competitive with a resale single-family home on the purchase price alone may look very different when HOA is added.
Don't use new construction's warranty as a substitute for your own inspection. California's statutory new construction warranty protects against specific categories of defect, but it doesn't protect against every possible issue, and making warranty claims often requires formal notification and documentation processes that buyers who skip the pre-close walkthrough inspection discover only when they need to use the process. Have an independent inspection performed even on new construction โ the cost is the same $400โ$600 as a resale inspection, and it creates a documented record of any issues present at close that is valuable if warranty claims arise later.
Don't let the resale deferred maintenance concern push you toward new construction without running the actual repair-cost math. The standard Reseda resale concern โ HVAC, roof, plumbing โ has real costs that belong in the financial comparison, but they are not infinite and they are not simultaneous. A resale home with a recently replaced HVAC and roof, and updated plumbing, carries the resale price advantage without the primary deferred maintenance concerns that new construction warranties against. Run the specific pre-listing inspection before evaluating deferred maintenance risk rather than assuming all resale inventory carries equal concern.
๐ Real-World Scenario โ Reseda 91335
A first-time buyer couple, pre-approved at $880,000, had been gravitating toward a new townhome development in Reseda 91335 โ attracted by the contemporary finishes, the builder warranty, and the specific comfort of knowing they wouldn't face a surprise repair bill in year one of homeownership. Their combined income was stable but not high, and the idea of an older home requiring unexpected repairs genuinely concerned them.
We built the side-by-side comparison for their specific situation. The townhome they were considering: $839,000, 2-bedroom with a small flex space marketed as a 3rd bedroom, 1,280 sq ft, no private yard, $285/month HOA. Total monthly PITI plus HOA: approximately $6,780. Their portion of down payment at 10%: $83,900.
The resale alternative we identified: a 3-bedroom, 1,500 sq ft improved-condition home on a 6,800 sq ft lot in an established Reseda sub-neighborhood, listed at $798,000. Pre-listing inspection already completed by seller and shared: HVAC replaced 2022, roof replaced 2019, plumbing updated 2018. No significant deferred maintenance items. Total monthly PITI: approximately $6,270. Down payment at 10%: $79,800.
The comparison for their specific situation:
- โ The townhome's warranty concern โ addressed: the resale's recent system replacements produced a 3โ7 year runway before any major systems would need attention
- โ The townhome's bedroom: a flex space with no closet, legally a 2-bedroom. The resale: a genuine 3-bedroom with closets
- โ The townhome's outdoor space: a 6-foot wide balcony. The resale: a 6,800 sq ft lot with a functional backyard
- โ Monthly savings with resale: $510/month including the HOA differential
They chose the resale. Two years in, they have replaced one water heater ($1,100) and a dishwasher ($750) โ the only unexpected costs. Their monthly payment saving versus the townhome has accumulated to approximately $12,240 over 24 months, net of the repair costs. They have a genuine backyard where they've begun a vegetable garden and where they host monthly family gatherings that their prior apartment never accommodated.
๐ Real-World Scenario โ Reseda 91335
A single professional in his early 30s โ no children, no extended family in the area, a remote worker for a tech company โ was specifically interested in a new construction small-lot detached home in Reseda 91335. His priorities were explicit: he wanted modern finishes and an open-plan kitchen-living area (he cooked professionally-caliber meals and needed the kitchen to function as a social space), he specifically did not want a large yard that would require maintenance he had no interest in, and he valued the warranty and the peace-of-mind of new systems above the lot size that most Reseda buyers prioritize.
We ran the comparison honestly for his specific situation. The resale homes in his budget that delivered the open-plan kitchen-living area he required were primarily homes that had been renovated โ the renovation adding $35,000โ$55,000 to the purchase price and still producing a kitchen that was updated rather than genuinely new. The new small-lot detached home he was considering delivered the floor plan, the finishes, and the warranty from day one, at a price approximately $90,000 above comparable resale.
His specific math: the $90,000 premium for new construction, divided over a 5-year anticipated hold, cost him approximately $1,500/month in additional financing cost. The renovation he would need to do on a resale to achieve the floor plan he required would cost him approximately $45,000 โ equivalent to approximately $750/month in financing cost โ plus the renovation timeline stress and management time he specifically wanted to avoid.
For his situation โ a buyer with explicit preferences that pointed toward new construction quality and a minimal interest in outdoor space โ the new construction premium was justified. He purchased the small-lot detached new construction. He uses the kitchen as his primary social space and has never once felt constrained by the 3,200 sq ft lot. The warranty has paid out once: a condensate line issue on the HVAC in month eight, repaired at no cost under the mechanical warranty.
โ FAQ
Is there much new construction in Reseda? Limited and specific. Reseda 91335 is an established central Valley neighborhood whose residential grid was substantially built out in the 1950sโ1970s โ there is no master-planned community development producing standard-lot new single-family homes the way Porter Ranch 91326 or parts of Calabasas 91302 do. Available new construction in Reseda is primarily: โ Small-lot detached single-family infill on subdivided parcels. โ Attached townhome and condo developments on commercial-to-residential conversion sites. โ Individual teardown-and-rebuild projects on existing residential lots. Search specifically for these product types rather than a general "new construction in Reseda" expectation.
Is new construction or resale better in Reseda? For most Reseda 91335 buyers, resale is the better choice โ it delivers meaningfully more lot size, more value per square foot, and the established neighborhood character that most buyer profiles in this market specifically value. New construction makes more sense for buyers who specifically prioritize modern systems and warranty protection over lot size, who want a contemporary open-plan floor plan without managing a renovation, or who have specific financial reasons to avoid near-term maintenance risk. The right answer is specific to your priorities rather than a universal recommendation.
How much more does new construction cost in Reseda compared to resale? New construction in Reseda 91335 commands approximately 20โ35% premium over comparable resale square footage โ meaning a new 3-bedroom home at 1,400 sq ft will price approximately $100,000โ$200,000 above an improved resale home of comparable size. This premium reflects new systems, contemporary finishes, and builder warranty โ not lot size advantage, which is typically lower for new infill product than for standard resale lots.
Does new construction in Reseda have Mello-Roos? Most Reseda 91335 new infill development does not carry Mello-Roos Community Facilities District obligations โ Reseda's established neighborhood infrastructure was funded through prior-generation mechanisms, not through the newer Mello-Roos financing that Porter Ranch 91326 and portions of Calabasas 91302/91372 carry on new development. Verify for any specific project through the NHD disclosure and preliminary title report, as individual projects may vary.
What are the advantages of buying resale in Reseda? The primary resale advantages in Reseda 91335: โ Standard lot size (6,000โ8,500 sq ft) with genuine backyard and outdoor space. โ 20โ35% lower price per square foot than comparable new construction. โ Established neighborhood character โ mature trees, established neighbor relationships, a residential block with decades of residential history. โ No HOA in most cases โ established single-family resale in Reseda typically carries no HOA obligation. โ More negotiating room in the current market, particularly for original or lightly updated homes where the seller understands the buyer is absorbing condition risk.
What should I look for in a Reseda new construction inspection? Even on new construction, order an independent inspection before closing: โ Verify all construction permits are closed and a certificate of occupancy has been issued. โ Document any cosmetic workmanship issues that will be covered under the 1-year warranty โ the pre-close walkthrough inspection creates a record. โ Review the grading and drainage around the foundation โ one of the most common early-year new construction issues in Southern California. โ Verify HVAC commissioning and system startup documentation. โ For attached product, review HOA financials and the reserve fund adequacy independently of what the builder's sales team provides.
๐ฏ Bottom Line
New construction versus resale in Reseda 91335 is a decision that plays out against a specific, local reality: new construction in this market is infill product โ smaller lots, attached configurations, or premium-priced teardown-rebuilds โ rather than the master-planned standard-lot development that the term "new construction" suggests in other markets. For most Reseda buyer profiles, established resale delivers more of what this specific market's buyers actually need โ more lot, more value per square foot, and the established neighborhood character that the "what's it like to live in Reseda" article in this cluster describes in depth.
For the specific buyer who genuinely prioritizes modern systems, contemporary layout, and warranty protection over lot size and value per dollar, new construction makes sense in Reseda โ but only after running the specific side-by-side comparison that shows exactly what the premium buys and what it costs in lot and monthly payment terms.
At Parkway Estate Properties, every Reseda buyer conversation includes both the new and resale inventory picture โ because buyers who understand what's actually available in each category in this specific market make better decisions than those applying assumptions borrowed from markets where new construction looks and functions differently.
๐ฉ Want a Current Picture of What New and Resale Inventory Is Available in Reseda Right Now?
We'll pull both categories for your specific budget and priorities โ the specific new construction projects active in 91335 and the resale homes that compare against them โ so you're evaluating real options rather than abstract categories.
Contact Liana Shersher at Parkway Estate Properties: ๐ง liana@parkwayestate.com ยท ๐ (818) 208-5881 ยท ๐ parkwayestate.com 15021 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 510, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403
About the Authors
Liana Shersher is a licensed real estate agent with Parkway Estate Properties Inc. and an Accredited Buyer's Representative (ABR) serving the San Fernando Valley โ with a focus on Sherman Oaks, Encino, Tarzana, Woodland Hills, and Northridge (DRE# 02164224). Liana guides first-time homebuyers through every step of the purchase, from the first showing to the keys in hand, and represents move-up and repeat buyers across the Valley. For sellers, she builds the pricing and marketing strategy that positions a home to sell for top dollar, fast. Buyers and sellers work with Liana for clear communication, sharp local knowledge, and an agent who treats their goals like her own.
Roman Shersher is the broker-owner of Parkway Estate Properties Inc. and a real estate investor with 18 years of experience in the San Fernando Valley (DRE# 01855095). Roman has personally led or co-led renovations on dozens of properties across the Valley, including recent projects in Northridge (91324) and Woodland Hills (91364). That hands-on renovation and investment experience shapes every pricing conversation and days-on-market strategy at Parkway โ sellers get a realistic read on what improvements actually return at resale, and buyers get an expert eye on a home's true condition and upside.
Parkway Estate Properties, Inc. 15021 Ventura Blvd., Ste. 510, Sherman Oaks, CA 91403 ยท (818) 208-5881 ยท parkwayestate.com ยท Broker License #: 01873092 Equal Housing Opportunity. Information herein is general and not legal, tax, or financial advice. Consult qualified professionals for your specific situation.
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