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AI Listing Description Examples: Condos & Apartments

ListingLift · Example copy you can adapt

The samples below are illustrative listing descriptions we wrote as examples — they describe invented properties, not real homes. Use them as templates: swap in your own verified facts (beds, baths, square footage, fees, updates) and keep the structure that works. Condos and apartments sell on lifestyle and convenience as much as on the floor plan, so each example leans into a different angle. For the full workflow behind these, see How to Write a Listing With AI.

Example: 2-bed downtown condo

Sample copy: Wake up above the city in this bright 2-bedroom, 2-bath condo on the 14th floor. Floor-to-ceiling windows pull in morning light across an open living and dining space, while the kitchen keeps things easy with stone counters and a breakfast bar. The primary bedroom offers a walk-in closet and an en-suite bath; the second works just as well as a guest room or home office. Step out to a private balcony with skyline views, then take the elevator down to a fitness center, secure parking, and a doorman lobby. Restaurants, transit, and the riverfront walk are all steps from your door. A turnkey home for anyone who wants downtown energy without the upkeep of a house.

Writing tip: For urban condos, lead with the view, light, and location — that is what buyers are paying a premium for. Name two or three concrete building amenities rather than listing all of them; specifics ("doorman lobby," "secure parking") read as more credible than a long, generic pile.

Example: studio apartment in a walkable neighborhood

Sample copy: Smart, efficient, and ready to move into — this studio makes the most of every square foot. A full wall of windows keeps the space feeling open and airy, and the kitchenette comes equipped with full-size appliances tucked neatly into a clean, modern layout. There is room for a queen bed, a work-from-home corner, and a proper seating area without anything feeling cramped. In-unit laundry and a generous closet handle the practical side. Outside the door, you are minutes from coffee shops, the corner market, and the bus line. Whether it is a first home or a low-maintenance pied-à-terre, this one keeps life simple.

Writing tip: Small spaces sell on efficiency, not size. Highlight how the square footage is used — full-size appliances, in-unit laundry, a workable layout — and avoid words that draw attention to it being small. Let practical wins do the talking.

Example: 3-bed suburban townhome

Sample copy: Room to spread out with the ease of low-maintenance living — this 3-bedroom, 2.5-bath townhome delivers both. The main level flows from an open kitchen with an island into a comfortable living area and a half bath for guests, then out to a private patio that backs to green space. Upstairs, the primary suite includes a walk-in closet and a dual-vanity bath, with two more bedrooms and a full bath down the hall. An attached two-car garage and a finished entry-level flex room round out the floor plan. The community handles the lawn and exterior, so your weekends stay yours. Close to schools, shopping, and the highway for an easy commute.

Writing tip: Townhome buyers often weigh "house feel" against "less upkeep." Spell out both: square-foot-level features like the island and primary suite, plus the HOA conveniences (lawn, exterior). Walk the floor plan top to bottom so readers can picture the flow.

Example: 1-bed condo aimed at investors

Sample copy: A clean, low-fuss 1-bedroom condo positioned for easy ownership. The unit features a functional galley kitchen, a comfortable living space, and a full bath, all in a well-kept building with elevator access and on-site laundry. Recent updates to flooring and paint mean little to do before move-in or lease-up. Located near transit and a major employment hub, it suits an owner-occupant or anyone building a low-maintenance portfolio. Pair the central location with the building's stable management and you have a straightforward, value-focused option.

Writing tip: For investor-leaning listings, keep the tone factual and emphasize low maintenance, recent updates, and location near jobs or transit. Avoid speculative claims about returns or rents — stick to what is verifiable, and let the buyer run their own numbers.

These four angles — urban premium, efficient studio, family-friendly townhome, and value play — cover most condo and apartment listings you will write. Drop in your real facts, run a quick accuracy and Fair Housing review, and you are done. For more property types, see our single-family home examples and luxury home examples, or browse all guides.

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