Hidden Opportunities: What Milpitas Buyers Want Most
Timothy Alston | Broker
Aegis Luxury Real Estate · DRE# 01328224
Published
October 28, 2021
Tech corridor crossroads
What buyers want most right now has shifted significantly, and it comes down to one word: space. Specifically, dedicated space to work from home. If you own a house in Milpitas with an extra bedroom, a finished bonus room, or an underused den, you may be sitting on exactly what today’s buyers are searching for, without even realizing it.
You know how some rooms in your house just sort of become storage? A guest room that nobody really uses, or a dining room that has quietly turned into a catch-all? And you keep meaning to do something with it, but it stays the same year after year?
A lot of homeowners in Milpitas are in exactly that position right now. But here is the part most people have not stopped to think about yet: that room you are not using could be the single feature that makes your home stand out in a competitive market. Does that make sense so far?
What Does Your Current Home Setup Actually Look Like?
Take a moment to think about how your household uses your home today versus how you imagined you would when you first moved in. Are there rooms that serve a different purpose now? Or no purpose at all?
Now think about this: what percentage of the people you know are still working from home, at least part of the time? If your answer is “a lot,” you are not imagining it. According to research from PricewaterhouseCoopers, nearly one in five employees wants to be fully remote going forward. And among workers who are already looking for new jobs, close to one in ten say the reason is that they moved away from the office during remote work and simply do not want to go back.
Remote work is not a temporary workaround anymore. It has become a permanent feature of how a large portion of the workforce lives. And that shift is reshaping what buyers want when they walk through a house.
What Buyers Want Has Changed, and Most Sellers Have Not Caught Up
The American Institute of Architects surveyed homeowners on design priorities, and the results are striking. Sixty-nine percent still want at least one dedicated home office. But the more revealing finding is this: a growing number of buyers want multiple work-from-home spaces, not just one. Think about a household where two people are on video calls simultaneously. Or a parent who needs a quiet corner while a teenager handles schoolwork in another room.
That is the reality buyers are shopping for. A single extra bedroom staged as a home office is appealing. A home that credibly supports two separate workspaces? That is a different conversation entirely.
Have you ever stopped to think about how many buyers in your price range are walking away from houses because the layout just does not work for the way they live now?
For nearly two decades, buyers in Silicon Valley neighborhoods rewarded homes that removed walls and maximized shared social space. The open concept kitchen-to-living-room flow was the defining feature in listings. Sellers who staged their homes around that aesthetic consistently drew stronger offers. But that preference assumed that work happened somewhere else, at an office, on a campus, not in the house itself.
The shift happened fast. Within months of widespread remote work adoption, buyer demand in the Milpitas market and across Santa Clara County began to reflect a new priority: rooms that could close. Doors, acoustic separation, dedicated lighting for video calls. The average days-on-market for homes with clearly staged office spaces dropped noticeably compared to similar homes without them. Buyers stopped asking “how does it feel?” and started asking “where would I work?”
If Nothing Changes, What Does That Actually Cost You?
Here is a consequence worth sitting with. If you have a house in Milpitas with one or two rooms that have no clear purpose, and you list it without addressing that, what happens? Buyers will walk through, see the potential, and then mentally add the cost of making it work to their offer price. Or they will simply move on to a listing where the work has already been done.
What would it mean for your sale price if your home showed up as move-in ready for the way buyers actually live today, instead of requiring them to imagine it?
That is not a small gap. Homes that photograph well, stage purposefully, and solve real buyer problems tend to attract stronger offers and shorter time on market. The buyers who are shopping for Milpitas homes for sale right now are not just looking for square footage. They are looking for a house that already fits their life.
What Small Changes Could Make the Biggest Difference?
You do not need to renovate. You need to reframe. A spare bedroom with a desk, good lighting, and a cleared closet reads as a home office to a buyer. A finished basement or bonus room positioned with two work areas tells a completely different story than one piled with boxes.
According to Gartner, Inc., sixty-six percent of organizations are still delaying a full return to office. That means the buyers walking through your door right now are, statistically, likely still working from home at least part of the week. They are not imagining a future need. They have a current one.
Can you see how a single staging decision, one that costs very little, could meaningfully change how buyers perceive the value of your home?
The Path Forward for Milpitas Homeowners
If you have extra space you are not using, the question is not whether buyers want it. The data is clear: they do. The question is whether your home is showing them what they are looking for before they move on to the next listing.
A conversation with an experienced broker can help you identify which rooms have the most potential, how to stage them affordably, and what comparable homes in your neighborhood are doing to attract serious buyers. This is not about redecorating. It is about making sure the value you already have is visible to the people who are ready to pay for it.
If you think this might be worth exploring for your situation, the next step is a straightforward walkthrough and conversation, not a pitch, just a clear-eyed look at what your home already offers and how to position it well. Would that be a useful conversation to have?
Reach out to Timothy Alston, licensed Broker (DRE# 01328224), at (408) 207-4593 to get started.
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Serving districts: Milpitas Unified SD (K-12). School district boundaries can change; please verify current enrollment boundaries and program offerings directly with the school district.
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Broker · DRE# 01328224
Aegis Luxury Real Estate
Harvard Business School Online, Certified Master Negotiation
23+ Years Silicon Valley Real Estate Experience
Retired Military Veteran
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The data relating to real estate for sale on this display comes in part from the Internet Data Exchange program of the MLSListings™ MLS system. Real estate listings held by brokerage firms other than Aegis Luxury Real Estate are marked with the Internet Data Exchange icon and detailed information about them includes the names of the listing brokers and listing agents.
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Aegis Luxury Real Estate · Timothy Alston, Broker, DRE# 01328224 · 10080 N. Wolfe Rd Ste SW3-200, Cupertino CA 95014 · (408) 207-4593
Last updated: July 09, 2026 | Data reflects July 2026 MLS statistics
