US Housing News
The US housing market over the past 48 hours is defined by cooling momentum, rising leverage for buyers, and persistent affordability strain, rather than a sharp downturn. Nationally, days on market are longer than in the boom years, giving buyers more room to negotiate, while 30 year mortgage rates are holding near a relatively stable band around 6 percent, compared with the extreme volatility of the 2020 to 2023 period.[3] Bank of America’s recent analysis shows a median 70 days on market in February 2026, down seasonally from 78 in January but still above pre pandemic norms, underscoring a slower, more deliberate market.[3] Prices are flattening or edging down in several once hot metros. In Austin, Texas, the median sale price over the three months ending in May 2026 was about 542 thousand dollars, down 2.3 percent year over year, while homes are taking roughly 48 days to sell, similar to last year.[5] Sacramento remains competitive, with new listings up about 10 percent in May and the median price around 370 thousand dollars, up 1.4 percent month over month, signaling that demand is still solid in many mid priced markets.[7] At the same time, affordability pressures remain extreme at the high end. Zillow data highlighted this week show that the number of US cities where a typical starter home costs 1 million dollars or more has nearly tripled since before the pandemic, jumping from 80 in February 2020 to a record 242 today, even though the typical US starter home is still valued around 199 thousand dollars nationally.[1] Supply constraints and construction costs continue to shape consumer behavior. Recent research shared for Lexington indicates buyers are paying on average 183 thousand dollars more for new construction than for existing homes, pushing many toward older properties or smaller footprints.[11] In response, builders are leaning on incentives such as temporary rate buydowns and closing cost credits, while large lenders emphasize simpler, more transparent payment examples to keep hesitant buyers engaged.[3] Policy and nonprofit initiatives are stepping in where the market falls short. A new 910 thousand dollar Habitat for Humanity partnership in Wisconsin, announced this week, will help fund 20 single family homes and buy down costs for first time buyers, a small but concrete example of efforts to offset high prices and limited affordable inventory.[2] Compared with reporting from earlier in 2026, the current landscape shows a market that is cooler but not collapsing: prices in many regions are plateauing, buyers have somewhat more bargaining power, yet the long shadow of post pandemic price gains keeps homeownership out of reach for many would be buyers. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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