Register

Synonyms for "flexible" in Real Estate Listings

Alternative Words for "flexible" in Property Descriptions

The free real estate thesaurus used by 25,000+ agents writing listing descriptions.

Try it: rewrite a sentence from your listing

Paste one sentence from your description and we'll rewrite it 3 better ways — free.

0/300

Prefer the whole description written for you? Try the free generator

5 results for "flexible"

adaptable
adjective

Able to adjust easily to new conditions or uses.

The adaptable floor plan lets buyers turn the bonus room into an office, nursery, or yoga cave depending on the chaos in their lives.

pliable
adjective

Easily bent, influenced, or adjusted.

The agent called the seller pliable on closing dates, which was much better than calling him emotionally bendy.

versatile
adjective

Suitable for many different uses or functions.

This versatile loft works equally well as a studio, guest suite, or a place to pretend you're definitely going to start painting.

supple
adjective

Bending or moving easily; gracefully flexible.

The listing description praised the home's supple use of space, which is a weird thing to say about square footage, but somehow it worked.

elastic
adjective

Able to stretch and return to its original form; capable of adapting.

The buyer had an elastic timeline for moving in, which was helpful because the lender moved at the speed of decorative concrete drying.

Words to Use With Caution in Listings

Some common real estate words can create Fair Housing problems. Describe the property — never the people who might live there.

"exclusive"Can imply certain groups are unwelcome — describe the property, not who belongs there.
"safe neighborhood"Often read as coded language about who lives nearby. Stick to verifiable features.
"family-friendly"Familial status is a protected class — "perfect for families" can exclude others.
"master bedroom"Most MLSs now prefer "primary bedroom" or "primary suite".
"bachelor pad"References marital status and gender — describe the layout instead.
"walking distance"Can discriminate against people with disabilities — use "0.3 miles to..." instead.
"near churches"Religion is a protected class — name the neighborhood, not places of worship.
"adult community"Only use for legally verified 55+ housing — otherwise it excludes families.
"no section 8"Illegal to state in many states and cities — leave rental criteria out of listings.
"integrated"References the racial makeup of an area — never describe who lives in a neighborhood.

Already wrote your description? Grade it free — we'll flag any Fair Housing risks and score the writing.

This is general guidance, not legal advice. Fair Housing rules vary by state and locality.