Two Massachusetts cities among Twenty hottest summer housing markets MABA MassachusettsRealEstate FirstTimeHomeBuyers MaBuyerAgnet
Two Massachusetts cities are among the top twenty hottest summer housing markets, according to a new report. The Summer 2024 Wall Street Journal/Realtor.com Housing Market Ranking report features housing markets that provide buyers with a lower cost of living, affordable homes and vibrant local economies that are appealing but not overly crowded.
And in a market where potential homebuyers are still dealing with low inventory, higher prices and mortgage rates nearing seven percent, the communities on the list have homes priced more than $100,000 lower than the national median average. “In fact, only five of the top twenty markets were priced higher than the U.S. median in June, underscoring the importance of affordability to today’s buyers,” according to the report. “The ranking identifies markets that those considering a home purchase should add to their shortlist whether the goal is to live in it or rent it as a home to others.”
Both Worcester and Springfield made the list for the second year in a row and ranked higher than they did a year ago. Neither city made the top twenty last year. Worcester ranked seventeenth with a three point five percent unemployment rate. The median home-sale price in June was $550,000. Last summer, Worcester ranked twenty eighth. Springfield took the number twenty spot with a three point eight percent unemployment rate. The median home-sale price in June there was $412,000. Last summer, Springfield ranked thirty fifth. The Boston, Cambridge and Newton areas did not make the top twenty this year, falling fifteen spots to number thirty one on the list.
The Wall Street Journal and Realtor.com compared the largest two hundredmetropolitan areas in the U.S. across eight key metrics in two categories: the real estate market and economic health and quality of life. In the real estate market category they included: real estate demand, supply, median days on market, median listing price trend, property taxes and climate risk to properties. For economic and quality of life, the indicators included unemployment, wages, regional-price parities, share of foreign born, small businesses, amenities and commute time.
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