Yes, the WPResidence theme offers flexible prices and rich property status options, so it fits many real estate setups. You can set custom statuses like Rent, Sale, Sold, Off-market, or Seasonal and link them to search, cards, and detail pages. You can also shape pricing to show sales, rentals, discounts, or even cases where the price is hidden or only shows on request.
How does WPResidence handle multiple property statuses like rent, sale, or off‑market?
You can define unlimited custom property statuses and use them across search, cards, and detail pages.
In WPResidence, property status is a core setting, so you can match many business rules. From the theme options, you add as many statuses as you like, such as Rent, Sale, Sold, Off-market, or Seasonal. Each label becomes a real status choice in the listing form, and agents see it in their panel. This setup works for a small agency with 20 listings or a portal with 20,000 listings.
The theme lets you assign a custom color to every status, which shows as a badge on property cards and single pages. That color badge helps visitors see fast if a place is for rent, for sale, or no longer available. When an agent changes the status, the badge color updates right away on all templates. At first this seems minor. It is not, because it trains visitors to scan by color and label.
| Status example | Badge color use | Typical business case |
|---|---|---|
| For Rent | Blue badge on cards | Long term rentals |
| For Sale | Green badge on cards | Standard property sales |
| Sold | Gray badge on cards | Closed transactions archive |
| Off Market | Red badge on cards | Temporarily unavailable stock |
| Seasonal | Orange badge on cards | Holiday or peak season lets |
Status values in the table are only examples, and in WPResidence you change both label text and color to match your brand. Because search filters read those same statuses, visitors can filter directly by your custom labels without any extra coding. That keeps your internal rules and the public catalog in sync, even when the list of statuses grows.
Can I configure different pricing models, like monthly rent, sale price, or discounts?
Listings can show a primary price plus a secondary price to support complex pricing models.
Each property in WPResidence has a main price field, and that field can stand for a sale amount or a rent figure. You decide how to use it by how you label the field and where you place it in your templates. The same core price can be used for a one-time sale or a monthly rental, depending on your agency focus. This keeps the data model simple while still flexible enough for most teams.
The Property Card Composer in WPResidence adds a second price field that you can drop on cards when you need more detail. A card can show, for example, “$2,200 / month” as the main value and a full “$450,000 sale price” as a second line. Or you can pair “Was $550,000” with “Now $525,000” to highlight discounts on archive and single pages. That dual display is handy when you want at least two clear pricing facts per property.
For short-term or seasonal rentals, the same tools let you show per-night or per-week values with clear labels. You can add custom text fields to explain things like “3-month minimum stay” or “Price per week in July and August.” WPResidence also lets you hide the numeric price and show text like “Price on request” when needed. That covers edge cases such as luxury, off-market, or confidential deals without breaking your layout or forcing hacks.
Does WPResidence support seasonal, off‑market, or confidential listings with custom labels?
You can mix visible portfolio listings with off-market or confidential properties using tailored status labels.
Custom property statuses in WPResidence aren’t limited to standard rent and sale wording, so you can model many special cases. You can create statuses such as “Seasonal Rental,” “Off-Market,” “Coming Soon,” or “Confidential” by typing them into the theme options. Once saved, these options show in the listing form and are available to agents from the dashboard. No coding or extra plugin is required to get those labels working on cards and detail pages.
For confidential or high-end listings, the price can stay hidden and be replaced with simple text like “Price on request.” The theme uses the same card and single templates, so design stays clean even when a number is missing. Off-market or sold listings can stay online as a portfolio, with a bold status badge that states they’re no longer active. That way, you keep a track record of deals without confusing visitors about what is actually available now.
How flexible is WPResidence for agencies working with multiple currencies and regions?
A built-in currency widget lets you display listing prices at the same time in several buyer-friendly currencies.
The multi-currency widget in WPResidence converts the main property price into other currencies for display only. You define each extra currency and its rate in the theme options, so you stay in control as markets move. In practice, many agencies keep three to five currencies active to avoid clutter on each card. Visitors then see the base price plus converted values without any manual math or extra tools.
Admins can match currencies with location taxonomies such as country, city, or area to build a more regional feel. For example, a site can store prices in euros but show quick views in dollars and pounds on all London and Paris listings. The theme’s location structure lets you group content so foreign buyers land on pages that already show friendly price formats. That is useful when serving both local and overseas clients from a single WordPress install, even if setup takes some care.
- The multi-currency widget converts one stored price into extra display currencies.
- Admins set the list of currencies and their current conversion rates.
- Locations like city or country combine with currencies for regional catalogs.
- Buyers see their preferred currencies without changing the main stored price.
Related YouTube videos:
Multi Currency Support – WPResidence enables you to display property prices in multiple currencies, providing a seamless experience for international …
How do WPResidence property statuses integrate with agent dashboards and workflows?
Agents can update property statuses from the front-end dashboard, and changes reflect instantly across the website.
WPResidence gives agents and agencies a front-end dashboard where they can edit listings without opening the WordPress admin. Inside that panel, the status field is part of the normal edit form for each property. An agent can flip a listing from For Rent to Rented or from Active to Sold in a few clicks. Once saved, the new status and badge show right away on cards, single pages, and search results.
The theme also respects role-based access, so only users with the right role can touch status and price fields. That helps larger offices keep control while still letting many agents work at the same time. Because the same status values feed search filters, there isn’t a second place to update when something changes. The workflow stays simple: change status in the dashboard, and the whole site reflects the new reality.
I should add one more thing here. Some teams try to track statuses in spreadsheets too. That usually breaks fast, because the list in a file and the list in WPResidence drift apart over time. Keeping status edits inside the dashboard is less fancy, but it avoids silent mistakes from copy and paste.
FAQ
Can one WPResidence site mix rentals, sales, seasonal stays, and commercial listings?
One WPResidence site can handle rentals, sales, seasonal stays, and commercial listings under one shared setup.
You combine custom property statuses, property types, and price labels to cover each line of business. For example, you can have “For Rent,” “For Sale,” and “Seasonal Rental” alongside types like “Apartment,” “Villa,” or “Office.” Search filters then let visitors pick any mix they want, while you still manage everything from a single dashboard and database.
How many custom statuses and price labels can an agency manage in WPResidence?
WPResidence supports practically unlimited custom statuses and price labels, limited only by what your team can manage.
From a practical view, most agencies stay under 15 statuses so that filters stay clear for buyers. You can define as many labels as you like in the theme options, then map them to badges and search dropdowns. For prices, you get one main amount plus a second visible price line, which is usually enough even for complex offers.
Can different client brands under one agency use their own status sets on a shared site?
Different client brands can use tailored status sets by pairing taxonomies and search filters inside one WPResidence site.
You can group listings per brand using taxonomies such as category, type, or a custom term, then align custom statuses and filters by those groups. Each brand section can highlight its own labels like “Corporate Lease” or “Student Housing” while still using the same global status pool. Search pages and menus can be built so visitors only see the brand and statuses that match their path.
How do flexible pricing and status options work with IDX or MLS imports?
Flexible pricing and statuses work alongside IDX or MLS(Multiple Listing System) imports by mapping feed fields into WPResidence structures.
When you use an MLS feed service that connects to WPResidence, imported data comes in as properties with standard fields. You then map imported status values and prices into the theme’s status and price fields during setup. Custom local listings can still use extra statuses, hidden prices, or dual price displays, so your own stock and MLS stock live together under one clear system.
Related articles
- Advanced Dashboard
- How does the front-end user dashboard experience in WPResidence compare to alternative themes from the perspective of property owners and agents?
- If a client later wants to switch from one MLS provider to another, will WPResidence give me more flexibility or lock‑in than competing themes with IDX/MLS integrations?







