Found 272 blog entries tagged as housing market.

This charming home in Northeast Austin is on the market for $449,000, less than the current median price of a home in Austin. Photo courtesy of Zillow

CultureMap Austin shares, "the latest Central Texas Housing Report from Unlock MLS and the Austin Board of Realtors (ABoR) has indicated Austin's real estate activity in August is portraying a "more balanced" housing market with an increase in active listings, stable prices, and a rise in pending sales. And two national marketplaces, Zillow and Realtor.com, have already recently declared Austin is now a buyer's market.

The local housing report analyzed August data across the Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos metropolitan statistical area (MSA), the city of Austin, and the five Central Texas counties: Travis, Williamson, Hays, Bastrop, and Caldwell.

Across the Austin metro, median home prices in August rose just 1.3 percent year-over-year to $444,490,…

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Realtor.com writes, "Austin, TX, once the poster child of America’s pandemic housing boom, has flipped into a buyer’s market.

After years of surging demand and record-setting prices fueled by remote workers and tech transplants, the tide has turned. Listings are piling up, prices have retreated from their peak, and affordability—long a sore point in the city—is starting to improve.

Nationally, the housing market has reached a balance of five months of supply—the first summer to do so since Realtor.com® began tracking this data nine years ago, according to the August 2025 Monthly Housing Market Trends report.

While local dynamics vary across the country, Austin’s trajectory underscores a broader theme in real estate: the pendulum swing between…

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Realtor.com writes,"Summer ended with a standoff between reluctant buyers and frustrated sellers—but this fall, house hunters can be a bit more optimistic as seven of the 50 biggest metros become buyer's markets.

The national housing market reached a balance of five months of supply—the first summer to do so since Realtor.com® began tracking this data nine years ago, according to the August 2025 Monthly Housing Market Trends report.

What does that mean in simple terms? The months of supply metric represents how many months it would take for all the for-sale homes on the market (including pending listings) to be sold at the current sales pace. 

The higher the months of supply, the slower the market—and the more negotiating power buyers have. 

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Realtor.com writes, "Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell suggested at the central bank's Jackson Hole Symposium on Friday that policy shifts may be coming, reinforcing expectations that rate cuts could arrive as early as September. 

His remarks highlighted the balancing act between curbing inflation and supporting employment, a dynamic that has far-reaching effects on consumer borrowing costs.

For the housing market, those costs remain a critical pressure point. Despite recent income gains, higher mortgage rates have slashed buyer purchasing power, reshaped demand, and left builders navigating an uneven recovery. 

Even though mortgage rates are still a headwind, existing-home sales rose in July, getting just past a 4 million sales pace. Home…

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Nine more homes sold year over year in July in Georgetown's 78626 ZIP code. (Courtesy Unlock MLS)


Community Impact reports, "This July, 230 homes sold across Georgetown's three area ZIP codes, according to recently released data from the Austin Board of Realtors and Unlock MLS.

Diving in deeper

While this is the same number of homes that sold in July 2024, the distribution of homes sold across each ZIP code varied.

ZIP code 78626 saw nine more homes sold year over year, while ZIP code 78628 and 78633 saw two and seven home declines, respectively.

The majority of all homes sold—137 of them across all three ZIP codes—sold for between $300,000-$499,999. However, homes sold at each of the following price points.

By the numbers

The median price of homes sold declined in two of Georgetown's three area ZIP codes, while ZIP code 78633…

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Soaring housing costs are pushing the income limits for many would-be buyers. SIRAANAMWONG VIA GETTY IMAGES

Austin Business Journal writes, "Americans now need to earn $114,000 per year to afford a median priced home.

That's an increase of 70.1% above the $67,000 required to afford that same mid-range home in 2019, according to data from Realtor.com. It's an increase driven by sky-high appreciation, persistent supply constraints and stubbornly high interest rates, among other factors — and the dynamic continues to weigh heavily on the housing market, even as buyers gain leverage.

The data looked at median home prices each April for the past six years.

“Even with today’s affordability hurdles, meaningful changes in the market could give buyers a better shot at finding a home,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com. “The number of homes…

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Tens of thousands of new apartment units have been built in the Austin area over the last several years. This construction took place in Pflugerville in 2020. ARNOLD WELLS / ABJ

Austin Business Journal shares, "Apartment rents typically drop when new units are added to a market's housing supply, but a new analysis quantifies by how much.

The study by the Pew Charitable Trusts on rent changes in major U.S. cities from 2017 to 2024 determined that for every 10% increase in a ZIP code’s housing supply, rent growth was 1.4% less compared to a ZIP code that had no additional housing supply. The Pew analysis also found that a 10% increase in a market's housing supply correlated to rents growing 5% less from 2017 to 2024.

In Austin, which has undergone an apartment building boom in recent years, the biggest rent declines were for older and lower-quality units, the study found.

Alex Horowitz, project director of housing…

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A water tank is adorned with a Texas flag and city theme in Denton, Texas, Thursday, May 29, 2014. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Spectrum News writes, "some of the top real estate markets in the nation are in the Lone Star State, according to a recent study.

The data comes from WalletHub, which used metrics like real-estate market rank, affordability and economic environment to rank U.S. cities.

In the top 10 alone are five Dallas-Fort Worth area cities, including McKinney, north of Dallas, with a total score of 72.33; Richardson, a Dallas suburb, with a score of 68.11; Denton, with 66.52; and Allen with a score of 66.35.

Making the top 20 were Fort Worth and Austin, with close scores of 65.31 and 65.13, respectively.

“Current home prices are extremely important, but there’s much more that you need to look at when determining the health of a city’s real estate…

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A July view of the Carillon neighborhood in Manor. DAVE CREANEY

Austin Business Journal shares, "Some Austin suburbs promise new homes aplenty.

The Austin Business Journal reached out to the city of Austin and its 19 biggest suburbs to survey them on how many single-family homes they report in their development pipelines. Cities measure that differently, and the number includes counts at various stages of entitlement and construction. It's an imperfect science, but it helps gauge how cities are preparing for what's to come in their backyards.

Cities like Kyle (nearly 44,000 homes) and Georgetown (nearly 32,000) have robust pipelines. Taylor (about 8,500) and Buda (about 6,600) are next in line. Meanwhile, Cedar Park is nearing capacity and only reported 200.

Among the highest is Lockhart. The city grew…

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Austin Business Journal shares, "While home sales in the Austin metro continued to slow in July, pending sales ticked up — potentially suggesting stronger sales activity heading into the fall.

That’s according to the latest market data from Unlock MLS, which found that the metro recorded 2,492 home sales last month, down from 2,823 in June and from about 2,700 home sales in July 2024. On the flip side, pending sales clocked in at 2,829 last month, up from 2,706 in June and about 2,440 in July 2024.

As sales have slowed, home prices have dropped. The median sales price in the metro fell from $449,000 in June to $435,000 in July.

“It’s typical for the summer market to slow as people focus on travel and leisure; we often see activity pick back…

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