US Housing News
The US housing industry over the past week shows a market that is cooling yet stabilizing, with notable regional contrasts and a growing focus on affordability and balance between buyers and sellers. Recent national data indicate that US home purchase lending fell to its lowest quarterly level in more than a decade in early 2026, as elevated prices and higher mortgage rates continued to strain affordability and limit transaction volumes.[11] Forecasts for 2026 now project home prices to rise only about 1.2 percent for the year, and typical monthly mortgage payments are expected to decline roughly 1.9 percent from a year ago, signaling slower price growth and slightly easing payment pressure for buyers.[7] Surveys of real estate agents released in early July report more professionals describing a balanced market, rather than the strong seller’s market seen in 2024 and 2025.[9] This shift is visible in many local markets. In Springfield, Illinois, June data show average home values rising to about 282,000 dollars, a 6.29 percent increase from May, even as closings dipped slightly from 478 to 452 and days on market fell from 86 to 69, suggesting demand is still solid but becoming more measured.[1] In contrast, Seattle’s median sale price over the three months ending in May 2026 was about 879,000 dollars, down 2.3 percent year over year, with homes now taking around 10 days to sell versus 7 days last year, a sign that buyers have a bit more leverage.[3] At the high end, San Francisco remains an outlier. The city’s median sale price reached a record 1.76 million dollars in May 2026, with annual gains above 14 percent driven in part by concentrated AI-related wealth.[5] This diverges sharply from the national picture, where prices in recent months rose only about 1.4 to 2 percent year over year.[5][7] Industry leaders are responding with more emphasis on affordable and workforce housing. Kennedy Wilson and Jamison recently announced a partnership to deliver 4,000 affordable units in Los Angeles through adaptive reuse and new construction, a large-scale effort aimed at easing supply constraints for lower income households.[2] In northwest Ohio, a 30 million dollar workforce housing investment at The Grand and The Glen was highlighted as a boost to the local economy and to housing access for workers.[8] These moves build on broader capital commitments: for example, Rural LISC devoted 243 million dollars in 2025 to affordable housing grants, loans, and equity, signaling ongoing institutional focus on affordability.[6] Compared with earlier reporting from late 2025, when rapid price appreciation and bidding wars were common, current conditions show slower national price growth, modest relief in monthly mortgage costs, more balanced bargaining power, and a clear strategic pivot by major players toward accessible and affordable housing. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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