Found 21 blog entries tagged as 2025.

Redfin.com writes, "As we approach 2026, Redfin reflects on a watershed year in the history of American real estate. Here’s our list of the ten most important 2025 trends.

1. The Market Shifted Towards Buyers

Since recovering from the Great Recession of 2008, the U.S. housing market has favored sellers. But 2025 has been the year buyers finally stepped back from rising home prices. Comparing sales of the homes listed in the first quarter of 2024 to sales of those listed in the first quarter of 2025, the median number of days that a listing was on the market increased from 47 to 54, a modest but still-significant shift. Prices are now likely growing slower than inflation, which is good not only for first-time home-buyers but also for the industry.…

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Scotsman Guide writes, "Austin, Texas, is the best city for recent graduates this year, thanks to high beginning salaries, an abundant supply of apartments and a vibrant social scene, according to a new report from Zillow.

The real estate website’s 2025 list of the best cities for college graduates had a strong Sun Belt theme. Texas dominated the top five choices of the survey, with first-place Austin being followed by Dallas at No. 3 and San Antonio at No. 4. Rounding out the top five are Albuquerque, N.M., in second place and Charlotte, N.C., in fifth place.

Zillow’s rankings combine rental affordability and the share of rental listings on Zillow offering concessions. The report also considers the strength of the local job market and the size…

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While new listings and home construction are welcome news in a market that's been starved of inventory for years, there are still a lot of challenges for both buyers and sellers. IMAGE SOURCE

Austin Business Journal writes, "The housing market has seen a decent amount of shifting this year amid broader economic uncertainty and an uptick in inventory.

While new listings and home construction are welcome news in a market that's been starved of inventory for years, there are still a lot of challenges for both buyers and sellers.

The national median profit margin on home sales fell to 50% in the first quarter of this year — down 3.2 percentage points from the fourth quarter of 2024 and down 4.8 points from the first quarter of 2024, reports The Business Journals' Joanne Drilling. It's also down from 64% in 2022.

As I get into in today's lead story, the changing housing market has had some sellers rethink how much they list their homes…

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Round Rock appeared as the 10th most affordable and fastest-growing city in the country. Round Rock, Texas – City Government/Facebook

CultureMap Austin shares, "A new national study has declared Texas home to the most affordable, fast-growing cities in the country, and Austin and Round Rock both made the list.

Round Rock ranked 10th while Austin ranked 35th on GoBankingRates.com's new list of "50 Most Affordable, Fastest-Growing Cities in 2025."

The Dallas suburb Frisco tops the national rankings at No. 1, and four more North Texas cities appear on the top 10: McKinney (No. 2), Allen (No. 5), and Lewisville (No. 8); and the Houston-area suburb League City (No. 7).

The personal finance website's experts narrowed the study down to U.S. cities of at least 100,000 people, with one-year and five-year population growth rates that were higher than the national average, and with…

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The New York Times writes, "As 2025 began, the stars were aligning for a housing market rebound.

Inflation was easing, the economy looked strong and mortgage rates were drifting downward. By April, there were more available homes to buy than at any time since January 2020, according to the Federal Reserve of St. Louis. The conditions were ripe for buyers to re-emerge, checkbooks in hands, and sellers to negotiate.

Then on April 2, President Trump rolled out his expansive global trade tariffs, shocking the stock and bond markets and sparking fears of a recession. Mortgage rates jumped again, hitting 6.89 percent for a 30-year fixed-rate loan on May 29, their highest level since early February. The extreme volatility threw cold water on a fragile…

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Community Impact writes, "This year’s appraisal valuations from the Travis Central Appraisal District show that single-family residences experienced an average 3.4% decline in market value compared to last year.

However, the median market value for a residential homestead in Travis County is still up 46%, or $163,841, since pre-pandemic levels in 2019.

The big picture

Beginning April 9, more than 488,000 Travis County property owners received their appraisal notices by mail. The notices include the market value assigned to a property as of Jan. 1, as well as the taxable value of that property based on its exemptions.

“Property owners can review their 2025 values on our website and should expect to receive their notices of appraised value over the next…

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The types of homes available for sale are changing to match the demographic shift in the nation's homebuyers. MARTIN BARRAUD

Austin Business Journal writes, "Homebuyers in 2025 have never been older. They've also never been more likely to be single or female.

Those changes have broad repercussions for the housing market, experts say.

According to the National Association of Realtors' 2024 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 73% of homebuyers in 1973 were married couples, 11% were single women, and 10% were single men. By 2024, the percentage of married couples had shrunk to 62%, and the number of single men had slipped to 8%, while the percentage of single women had jumped to 20%.

“We’ve seen this demographic shift due to women attaining higher education levels leading to senior positions and greater financial independence," said Veronica Crego-Flores, managing…

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Austin American-Statesman writes, "Steady as she goes.

That about sums up the 2025 outlook by real estate experts for the housing market in the Austin metro area, a five-county region stretching from Georgetown to San Marcos.

Peering into their crystal balls, several leading experts who have tracked the ups and downs of the Central Texas real estate market for years, even decades, foresee stable conditions this year. They predict the 2025 housing landscape could mirror last year's, as more normal trends continue in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic era buying frenzy, when multiple offers, often well above asking price, were common.

Those expected trends include home prices remaining relatively flat; a steady supply of housing; predictable…

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Austin Business Journal reports, "Every year we ask local Realtors to give us their statistics — number of homes sold, dollar volume, most expensive sold home and more — so we can rank them for ABJ's annual Residential Real Estate Awards luncheon.

The numbers have been crunched and the winners have been identified. Some of them competed solo, others banded together in teams. Some made the list by selling several homes a week. Others made the cut because they sold only a few, but they were mega-mansions.

Use this list if you're a homebuyer or seller trying to navigate this toughening housing market. Do you run a company that's recruiting a lot of people from out of town? Perhaps your business' go-to Realtor is in here so you can offer yet another…

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Rising development costs could slow the amount of affordable housing coming to Austin. PHOTOVS

Austin Business Journal reports, "Austin is expected to deliver more affordable multifamily housing units than anywhere else in the country in 2025, and it still may not be enough.

With housing affordability a major issue both in Austin and across the country, 2025 is expected to see 78,377 affordable multifamily housing units delivered nationally, with 3,452 units in Austin alone, according to a new report from Yardi Matrix. Los Angeles is expected to deliver the second-most affordable units this year, at 2,752.

Even with nation-leading construction, however, worries persist that Austin still won't have enough. In addition, rising development costs and other issues could reduce the number of new units in coming years.

Affordable multifamily…

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