It depends on three things you mostly control and one you do not. You control price, presentation, and access: a home priced against its closed comparables, photographed professionally, and easy to show captures the market's peak attention in its first weeks. The variable you do not control is the buyer pool for your specific property type at that moment.
The pattern worth knowing: correctly priced homes tend to move while attention is fresh, and overpriced homes sit, then sell after cuts, usually for less than honest pricing would have produced. Days on market is public information, and buyers read a long history as an invitation to negotiate hard.
After contract, the remaining timeline is driven by the buyer's financing and the title work, which is why offer selection, not just offer price, determines when you actually get to the closing table. Rangely will give you a straight read on realistic timing for your property and neighborhood before you list.