The U.S. median home price stayed near its summer peak of $350,000 and hit record-high, year-over-year growth of 12.9 percent, according to realtor.com.
Source: Inman News
Median home prices see greatest annual growth since 2017
More from AnalysisMore posts in Analysis »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- Northeast sees strongest price gains in Q3 as median single-family home price hits $426,800
- Heard of a K-shaped economy? You’re living in it now
More from COVID-19More posts in COVID-19 »
More from danielle haleMore posts in danielle hale »
- Home investors’ strategies vary by location: Here’s where they’re getting the most for their money
- Tailwinds pull October existing-home sales up 1.2%
- 48% of Americans blame investors for ‘unreasonable’ housing costs
- ‘Not a shift, a transition,’ 2 reports say of homebuying market
- Here are the markets where homebuyers have the upper hand
More from DataMore posts in Data »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- What Zillow’s marketing genius can teach you about social media
More from homebuyersMore posts in homebuyers »
- Delistings and discounts jump as holiday season approaches
- Zillow Flex class-action complaint now includes RICO allegations
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- Fall has been ‘sneaky good’ for buyers, but the ‘warm-up is not guaranteed to last’
- Homebuying off to strongest November start since 2022
More from homesellersMore posts in homesellers »
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- Fall has been ‘sneaky good’ for buyers, but the ‘warm-up is not guaranteed to last’
- 53% of US homes lost value from 2024 — but it’s not a crash
- Share of first-time homebuyers falls to lowest point ever
- Commissions held up in Year 1. Would a seller’s shift upend them?
More from housing market recoveryMore posts in housing market recovery »
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- Homebuyers came out in force last week, and rates are trending down
- October was another slow month for pending home sales
More from median home price growthMore posts in median home price growth »
More from median home pricesMore posts in median home prices »
- Fall has been ‘sneaky good’ for buyers, but the ‘warm-up is not guaranteed to last’
- NAR sees existing-home sales rise ‘ever so slightly’ in July
- A ‘herky jerky’ start to the spring buyer season isn’t deterring agents
- NAR signals worst of downturn may be over as existing-home sales rise
- Easing rates expected to boost California home sales 10.5% in 2025
More from new listingsMore posts in new listings »
- Fall has been ‘sneaky good’ for buyers, but the ‘warm-up is not guaranteed to last’
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- Median monthly housing payments see sharpest drop in almost 1 year
- An interactive look inside the new-inventory run that’s losing steam
- As homebuyers gain leverage, sellers get cold feet. Is it happening near you?
More from realtor.comMore posts in realtor.com »
- Zillow reverses course and removes climate data from listings
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- After failed NAR vote, brokerages beef up referral disclosures
- What it takes to build a $100M real estate brand with heart
- Zillow’s SkyTour uses complex 3D tech to simplify home search
Be First to Comment