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    Home » ‘A step in the right direction’
    Bond

    ‘A step in the right direction’

    userBy userMarch 2, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read
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    As spring homebuying season approaches, prospective buyers are finding themselves with the upper hand — sort of.

    Interest rates are still high, as are home prices. But the lucky few who can overcome those affordability hurdles have the most inventory to choose from in years. Homes are lingering on the market longer in many parts of the country, giving buyers more negotiating power and helping keep a lid on prices for the first time in years.

    The shifting fortunes are the latest sign that the housing market may finally be exiting a deep freeze that started in mid-2022, when mortgage rates and home prices rapidly rose in tandem, pricing millions out of the market and sending home sales plummeting.

    Active listings in February were 27.5% higher than a year earlier, an encouraging sign considering that market dynamics like mortgage rates and all-in prices haven’t changed much, said Hannah Jones, senior economic research analyst at Realtor.com.

    “It’s such a great step in the right direction toward balance,” Jones said.

    Price cuts are also on the rise, a sign that sellers are growing more motivated. According to Zillow, nearly 23% of sellers lowered prices in January, the largest proportion for the month since the real estate website began tracking it in 2018.

    In Colorado Springs, Colo., real estate agent Kevin James Bond said he’s been counseling prospective sellers who bought in recent years at top prices that they might not make money on their homes.

    “They’re not flying off the shelves,” he said. “This isn’t 2020 or 2021 where if you didn’t get in in the next four minutes, you didn’t get the house.”

    Last month, homes spent a median of 66 days on the market, according to Realtor.com, five days longer than in February 2024. Median listing prices have also inched down about 1% to $412,000.

    Different regions, different markets

    Buyers’ power varies widely by location. These days, many of the biggest buyer’s markets are in coastal Florida, where condo owners, in particular, have been struggling with rising insurance costs and hit with higher fees and assessments to bring their buildings up to code in the aftermath of the 2021 Surfside condo collapse.

    Cape Coral, Miami and Fort Lauderdale each had more than 10 months of available supply in January, according to Redfin. That metric measures how long it would take for all listed homes to sell, assuming typical monthly transaction volumes. Five or six months is typically considered a balanced market.

    When husband and wife Michael and Maria Mancini, both 28, began searching for homes in the Orlando area this winter, they were pleasantly surprised by the extent of the options available in their budget. They toured around 15 homes, including a marathon day in January that took them to seven viewings.

    But they still encountered competition. “It was Saturday when we saw the seven houses. By Monday, four of those houses had already gone pending,” said Maria, who works in influencer management.

    Ultimately, they won out on a $470,000 single-family home in a gated community after another buyer’s offer fell thorough, and an offer they made on a home that had been on the market for 200 days was rejected. They had mixed success negotiating concessions with their seller, who agreed to replace the home’s aging roof but nixed a mortgage rate buydown.

    Learn more: Ask a Realtor — What home improvements should I make before selling?

    Real estate agent Scott Neal in Richardson, Tex., has seen similar trends in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. The most desirable properties in his region are commanding multiple offers, while ones deemed overpriced or in need of major upgrades are remaining on the market.

    “Buyers are not willing to pay top market value for something that they think is not top market quality,” Neal said.

    Redfin considers both Orlando and Dallas to be “somewhat competitive.” The fiercest competition in the country is in snowy yet in-demand cities like Rochester, N.Y. and Buffalo, N.Y. There, supply is at some of the lowest levels in the nation, likely in part due to winter weather.

    What to expect this spring

    Many economists expect that buyers will continue to find more options to choose from this spring, though affordability will remain a challenge. Bond, in Colorado Springs, estimates that half the region’s residents are priced out of the market. As of January, the median home there was listed for nearly $480,000, making purchasing home a non-starter for most households bringing in less than six figures annually.

    Read more: How much house can I afford on a $70,000 salary?

    Mortgage rates, though, have emerged as a tiny bright spot. They’ve been drifting gradually lower in recent weeks to hit a more than two-month low of 6.76%.

    Ultimately, it will take a combination of more listings and lower mortgage rates to fully reignite the market, said Realtor.com’s Jones.

    “Plenty of buyers are convinced they want to buy, but it’s just not feasible,” she said.

    Claire Boston is a Senior Reporter for Yahoo Finance covering housing, mortgages, and home insurance.

    Click here for the latest personal finance news to help you with investing, paying off debt, buying a home, retirement, and more

    Read the latest financial and business news from Yahoo Finance



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