US Housing Industry News
The US housing industry is entering a fragile, shifting phase marked by softening prices, higher borrowing costs, and cautious but active dealmaking. Over the past week, data from brokerage Redfin show the median US home price slipped by about 3000 dollars to roughly 416623 dollars, the first national price decline so far this year, even as the median listing price in May fell 2 point 4 percent year over year to 429500 dollars, the steepest annual drop since at least 2017.[1] This marks a swing of more than 20 percentage points from the peak 18 percent annual price growth seen in mid 2022, confirming that the pandemic era boom has clearly faded.[1] At the same time, mortgage costs have ticked higher. Freddie Mac data reported June 11 put the average 30 year fixed rate near 6 point 52 percent, its third increase in four weeks, after the latest inflation readings, further eroding affordability and sidelining many first time buyers.[5] Compared with earlier this spring, buyers are more rate sensitive, and many are delaying purchases in hopes of future cuts. Market conditions now vary sharply by region. For example, Charlotte, North Carolina, still shows moderate price growth, with a median sale price around 435000 dollars over the last three months, up about 2 point 3 percent year over year, but homes there stay on the market longer, about 48 days versus 43 a year ago, signaling slower momentum.[3] Nationally, large coastal and pandemic boom markets such as Austin, Los Angeles, and San Diego are seeing some of the largest listing price declines, with drops ranging from roughly 5 to 12 percent year over year.[1] On the industry side, lenders, brokers, and platforms are responding by emphasizing education, data, and partnerships. HousingWire, for example, has recently highlighted its acquisition of Keeping Current Matters to deepen market insights for agents and lenders navigating volatile conditions.[12] Developers and investors are increasingly pivoting toward more affordable and subsidized segments, including low income housing tax credit projects that can offer more stable financing flows in a high rate environment.[2] Compared with prior reporting from late 2025, the current picture shows a clearer transition from overheated to cooling: price growth has flattened into mild declines in many metros, rate relief has not yet materialized, and consumers are trading urgency for patience, waiting for better combinations of prices and financing before acting. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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