US Housing News
The US housing industry is in a fragile, slow‑thaw phase, shaped by slightly lower borrowing costs, softening list prices, and persistent supply constraints. Over the past week, the headline shift has been on financing. Average long term US mortgage rates have edged down to roughly the mid 6 percent range after touching recent highs, easing monthly payments for some buyers but still well above the 3 percent levels of the pandemic boom.[3] This has unlocked a bit of pent up demand but not enough to trigger a new surge in sales. On prices, national listing data show the median US asking price fell about 2.4 percent year over year last month, the steepest decline in records going back to 2017.[3] This marks a clear break from the rapid appreciation of 2020 to 2022 and even from the flat to slightly rising prices seen in 2024. Yet the pattern is uneven. In Atlanta, the median sale price over the last three months was about 425 thousand dollars, essentially flat, down 0.05 percent from a year earlier, and homes are taking longer to sell, around 64 days versus 57 days a year ago.[5] In Austin, median sale prices over the same window were about 530 thousand dollars, down 3.3 percent year over year, with days on market roughly unchanged near 59 days.[7] By contrast, Omaha’s median sale price over the last three months rose about 4 percent year over year to 280 thousand dollars, with homes still selling in just over three weeks.[1] These numbers point to a shift in consumer behavior. Move up buyers remain cautious, locked into older low rate mortgages and reluctant to trade into higher payments. Affordability pressure has pushed more households toward renting and toward more affordable metros like Omaha, while expensive markets such as Austin are seeing modest price corrections.[1][7] Industry leaders are responding on several fronts. State and local housing finance agencies are expanding down payment assistance and specialized loan products to keep first time buyers in the market, as in Ohio, where programs now bundle below market interest rates with closing cost support.[8] Public agencies and nonprofits are also leaning into partnerships to add affordable units. Recent planning work at local housing authorities and neighborhood based organizations focuses on using federal HOME funds and similar programs to preserve and rehabilitate lower cost housing rather than only building new units.[4][11] Compared with conditions reported a year ago, today’s market features slightly easier credit costs than at recent peaks, flatter or gently falling prices instead of broad increases, modestly slower sales in several large metros, and an industry strategy that is shifting from chasing rapid growth to carefully rebuilding affordability. For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
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