United States Real Estate Markets Hit a New Record High Price’s: Massachusetts Homebuyers Homeownership
Just when you’d swear that real estate couldn’t get any crazier, February’s hottest housing markets broke a new record, right where it’s bound to hurt homebuyers the most: price. The median list price for the United States’ twenty hottest markets in February has spiraled to a new high of five hundred sixty two thousand dollars, based on analysis by Realtor.com®. That’s forty three percent more, on average, than the national median list price of three hundred ninety two thousand dollars, which hit its own record high in February as well.
The hottest market of all (measured by unique views per listing and how many days the listing remains active on Realtor.com before being snapped up) remains Manchester, NH. The former mill town has topped the list of America’s hottest housing markets ten times in the past year. This is likely due to its relatively affordable median list price of four hundred thirty nine thousand nine hundred dollars, combined with its commuting proximity to the Boston metro area, where homes averaged a whopping seven hundred twenty five thousand dollars in January. (Metros include the central city and surrounding towns, suburbs, and smaller urban areas.)
The highest priced market on February’s hot list? Santa Maria, CA, where the median listing price of metro area homes hovers at $1.625 million highlighting how hotness and affordability rarely go hand in hand. The main culprit for these record-setting prices is a housing shortage of almost 5.8 million dollars for a new single family homes. Simply put, there aren’t enough properties to satisfy homebuyer demand.
“The shortage of inventory has led to a fast pace of sales, with buyers snapping up properties as soon as they hit the market,” says George Ratiu, senior economist at Realtor.com. “Moreover, the surge in mortgage rates in the first six weeks of the year further prompted buyers to find a home before rates move even higher. These factors have pushed median prices to record highs, not only in the hottest markets but across the entire country.”
Where markets are hottest—and buyers will pay any price
The record breaking list prices in February’s hottest markets were primarily driven by the winter season, with buyers looking to warmer and higher priced Western metros. So while 2021 saw buyers spread out across the country looking for a better deal, California is roaring back in 2022. The Golden State now boasts five of the top twenty hottest markets. In addition to Santa Maria, the metros of Santa Cruz, Salinas, Vallejo, and Santa Maria all made the list.
“California buyers have made it known [that] they are ready to play the game of real estate, despite the rising costs, even though they are over the national median,” says Chantay Bridges, a senior real estate specialist at EXP Realty in Beverly Hills, CA. “While some have opted for more desirable price points in other states, there is still a large number that love the weather and all that California has to offer. They are not going anywhere. They are paying whatever it takes to have their dream home, over national median or not.”
But all hope is not lost for homebuyers looking for a house that won’t bust their bottom line. Indeed, seven of February’s twenty hottest markets saw a median listing price below the national median. Home shoppers willing to forgo sunny climes for more affordable (and colder) Midwestern and Northeastern markets can still score cheaper properties. In addition to Manchester, buyers may have good luck in America’s fourth-hottest metro, Springfield, MA, where home prices average a mere three hundred seven teen thousand two hundred fifty dollars. Or they could pay a median of three hundred thirty seven thousand five hundred dollars to settle in the metro of Columbia, MO.
And here’s more good news: With the COVID-19 pandemic receding in many areas of the U.S., signs suggest that more home sellers will enter the market with homes this spring probably closer to a trickle than a flood driving down prices. “Over the past six months, during late fall and winter, we’ve seen about a dozen metros across the country experience year over year price declines, as more new listings came to market,” says Ratiu. “As more markets continue to normalize this year, I expect to see more options for buyers and more approachable prices in the months ahead.”
February 2022’s hottest housing markets
Hottest Metros | Hotness Rank | Hotness Rank YoY | Median Listing Price |
Manchester, NH | 1 | 6 | $439,900 |
Santa Cruz, CA | 2 | 12 | $1,243,250 |
Raleigh, NC | 3 | 46 | $430,000 |
Springfield, MA | 4 | 81 | $317,250 |
Topeka, KN | 5 | 6 | $184,950 |
Rochester, NY | 6 | 9 | $225,000 |
Boulder, CO | 7 | 115 | $851,742 |
Portland, ME | 8 | 36 | $522,000 |
Salinas, CA | 9 | 58 | $909,000 |
Vallejo, CA | 10 | -6 | $593,500 |
Burlington, NC | 11 | -10 | $314,253 |
North Port, FL | 12 | 118 | $547,500 |
Fort Wayne, IN | 13 | 17 | $289,900 |
Columbia, MO | 14 | 7 | $337,500 |
Fort Collins, CO | 15 | 45 | $620,000 |
Concord, NH | 16 | -10 | $464,900 |
Columbus, OH | 17 | 6 | $324,950 |
Santa Maria, CA | 18 | 15 | $1,625,000 |
Billings, MT | 19 | 24 | $567,450 |
Worcester, MA | 20 | 35 | $424,000 |
The post The Hottest U.S. Real Estate Markets Just Hit a New Record-High Price—Prepare To Be Shocked appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
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