The Out-of-State Buyer Advantage
Why they pay more
and why that matters to you.
A buyer from New Jersey looking at a $380,000 Myrtle Beach home is comparing it to a $680,000 home in their own market. To them, your property is a bargain. They're not anchored to Grand Strand price history they're anchored to what this lifestyle costs back home.
They also move faster. Out-of-state buyers have already done their research, often visited the market once or twice, and are ready to commit. They're not waiting for the perfect price drop. They're waiting for the right property to appear in front of them.
Where the Buyers Live Right Now
Six states. Millions of potential buyers.
We market to all of them.
The Season is Closing
Out-of-state buyers are
most active right now.
That window closes in fall.
Myrtle Beach's peak real estate season mirrors its tourism season. Buyers from feeder states plan their visits in spring and summer, make decisions on the ground, and want to close before fall. Once October arrives, buyer traffic from the Northeast and Midwest drops sharply and it doesn't return until the following February.
A property listed in July still in contract negotiation has a buyer. A property that misses the summer window enters the off-season competing for a thinner buyer pool at lower seasonal urgency.
Get My Free Valuation Before Fall →The Chapter 3 Out-of-State Marketing System
How we put your listing
in front of the highest-paying buyer.
Why Buyers Are Already Sold on the Market
They've already been here.
You just need to sell them your home.
Myrtle Beach doesn't need to be sold as a destination. With 19 million annual visitors, it's already one of the top vacation spots in the country. Most out-of-state buyers have visited multiple times before they ever consider purchasing. By the time they're browsing listings, they're not evaluating the market they're evaluating your specific property.
That's the marketing advantage. We're not convincing someone to move to Myrtle Beach. We're showing them that your home is the right one in a market they already love.
Common Questions
What sellers ask about out-of-state marketing.
Do out-of-state buyers actually make offers without visiting first?
Yes, and more frequently than most sellers expect. With cinematic video, 3D virtual tours, and detailed neighborhood context, remote buyers routinely submit competitive offers sight-unseen. They often visit once for inspection, then close remotely. In vacation markets like Myrtle Beach where buyers already know the destination, this is especially common.
Why would an out-of-state buyer pay more than a local buyer?
Out-of-state buyers anchor their price expectations to their home market, not Grand Strand comps. A buyer from Bergen County, NJ where median prices exceed $650K genuinely perceives a $380K Myrtle Beach home as underpriced. They also feel urgency that local buyers don't they're on a trip, have limited time, and don't want to lose a property they've traveled to see.
How does Chapter 3 specifically reach buyers in other states?
We run Meta and Google paid campaigns geographically targeted to the top six feeder states NC, NY, NJ, PA, OH, and VA. We build custom audiences based on buyers who've searched Myrtle Beach properties or engaged with coastal real estate content. For investor-eligible properties, we also run targeted placement toward buyers researching short-term rental investments, which draws a different buyer profile than residential relocation campaigns.
Does the season really matter for attracting out-of-state buyers?
Significantly. Most out-of-state buyers plan trips to evaluate properties in spring and early summer, then want to close before fall. A property that enters the market in June and attracts a buyer in July is on track. A property that misses the summer window enters fall competing for a buyer pool that has largely returned home and won't resume active search until the following February.
What makes a listing most appealing to an out-of-state buyer specifically?
Three things above all else: exceptional visual media (video beats photos for remote buyers), a clear lifestyle narrative (proximity to beach, golf, dining, boating), and for investment-eligible properties quantified income potential. Out-of-state buyers are doing research on a screen, not walking the neighborhood. Every additional piece of compelling media is one more reason to write an offer before flying down.
Ready to reach the highest-paying buyer?
List before the
season closes.
Out-of-state buyer traffic peaks now and drops sharply in fall. A free home valuation takes 24 hours. Your listing strategy starts with knowing what your property is worth and when to move.
No obligation. Real estate commissions are negotiable and not set by law.
Common Questions
Frequently asked questions
Why do out-of-state buyers matter to Grand Strand sellers?
Out-of-state buyers make up a large share of Grand Strand demand. They shop online first and often carry equity from higher-priced markets, which makes broad digital marketing more valuable than local-only exposure.
How do you market a home to out-of-state buyers?
With listing-quality photography, accurate data-rich listings that syndicate nationally, and content built to answer the relocation and investment questions buyers research before they ever contact an agent.