Current:Home > reviewsHomes are selling below list price. That's bad for sellers, good for buyers -Quantum Capital Pro
Homes are selling below list price. That's bad for sellers, good for buyers
View
Date:2025-04-19 03:05:57
Homes sold below their list price at the peak of the housing season, Redfin reports, a development that could shift the real estate market to the buyer’s advantage.
The typical home that sold during a four-week span in May and June went for 0.3% less than its asking price, according to the real estate brokerage Redfin.
That data point matters, housing experts say, because the market hits its annual peak in late spring and early summer. In the last few years, the average home sold at or above list price at that time of year. This year, it did not.
“It means that the housing market is starting to move to the buyer’s favor,” said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin.
Redfin found that fewer than one-third of homes - 32% - sold over list price in the four weeks ending June 23. That is the lowest quotient for late spring since 2020, when the pandemic hobbled the housing market.
Learn more: Best mortgage lenders
That’s good news for buyers. For sellers, not so much.
Real estate today: 'Buyers have the power'
“Overall, what we’re seeing is that buyers have the power, and I’m actually seeing that everywhere,” said Ryan Sypek, a broker associate at Compass real estate in Los Angeles, California.
That is a change: In recent months, the housing market has been brutal for potential buyers.
Both prices and mortgage rates are up. There’s a shortage of new homes. Homeowners are reluctant to sell old ones, because most of them hold mortgages with historically low interest rates.
Earlier this year, Fairweather told USA TODAY homebuyers faced “the least affordable housing market in recent memory.”
In recent weeks, however, the market has loosened – for buyers, at least.
New listings are up 8.2% from a year ago, Redfin reports.
More homes are languishing on the market: 62% of listings in May had been on the market for at least 30 days, compared with 50% two years earlier, a worrisome sign for sellers.
“During the pandemic, I had a house that had 60 offers on it,” Sypek said. “And now, if I have a listing, I’m lucky if I’m getting four.”
Home sellers may be setting their price too high
Sellers may be setting their asking prices too high, economists say, unaware they are walking into a buyer’s market.
“People are setting prices based on what they saw their neighbors’ homes sell for three or four months ago, and maybe that was when there were more buyers on the market,” Fairweather said.
In a normal housing market, sellers tend to set their asking price at or above the number they expect to get. It’s the same principle that shapes prices on used car lots, eBay listings and anywhere else buyers and sellers haggle over price.
Through much of the pandemic era, sellers in hot markets reaped bidding wars.
“The last couple years, it became normal for sellers to get more than the asking price,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com. “But that was really an aberration, fueled by high demand and low inventory.”
'We're starting to see more affordable homes on the market'
In recent months, the inventory of homes for sale has been rising. The number of listings rose 37% from June 2023 to June 2024, according to Realtor.com, the eighth consecutive month of growth.
“We’re starting to see more affordable homes on the market,” as well, Hale said, a welcome trend for buyers.
In recent years, homebuyers watched prices and mortgage rates rise apace, driving the monthly cost of home ownership to all-time highs.
The median sale price sits at a record $397,250, nearly 5% higher than a year ago, according to Redfin. The average interest rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage stands at 7.4%, twice the rate at the start of 2022.
At current rates, the typical homebuyer faces a monthly payment of $2,785, according to Redfin.
Until recently, buyers had little leverage.
“During the pandemic, homes were selling above asking price, and in some locations, they were selling for tens of thousands of dollars above asking price,” Fairweather said.
Housing inventory is rising, giving buyers options
Now, with inventory rising and homes sitting unsold, buyers have options.
The sultry, stormy weather of recent weeks may be yet another factor in the buyer’s favor. One reason houses sell briskly in spring and early summer is good weather. Last month, however, brought unseasonable heat to much of the nation.
“I’ve heard some clients say, ‘It’s so hot outside I don’t want to see anything,’” said Joe Hunt, a Redfin manager in Phoenix, Arizona speaking in the June 27 sales report.
Going forward, sellers may have to manage their expectations. They saw home prices rise by roughly two-fifths between 2020 and 2022. Prices are rising still, but some economists wonder how long the trend can last.
Home buyers may have 'a lack of urgency'
“What I’m hearing everywhere is, there’s just a lack of urgency from buyers right now,” Sypek said. “And urgency, and that feeding frenzy, is what drives prices up.”
Sypek cautions, however, that the national real estate market is really a constellation of smaller markets, each with its own pulse.
Jess Clegg, a broker-owner at Next Nest Real Estate in Seekonk, Massachusetts, says the market remains hot in her region.
“I can tell you that I just closed on two homes,” she said. “One sold for, I believe, $38,000 over asking, and the other sold $76,000 over asking.”
Michael Maerten, chairman of the Board of Tri-County Suburban REALTORS outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania says local sellers have reaped 102.7% of asking price in the last 30 days.
“It’s still a seller’s market here,” he said.
Of course, the asking price is an arbitrary sum: Sellers can set it as high or low as they wish. Both Clegg and Maerten advise sellers to collaborate with their real estate agent to find the right number.
“If you’re pricing your home appropriately,” Clegg said, “then you’re going to sell for over list.”
veryGood! (61289)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- Why Armie Hammer Says Being Canceled Was Liberating After Sexual Assault Allegations
- Shrek movies in order: Catch up on all the films in time for 'Shrek 5'
- I’m a Shopping Editor, Here’s What I’m Buying From the Nordstrom Anniversary Sale 2024
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Battered by Hurricane Idalia last year, Florida village ponders future as hurricane season begins
- Sports betting roundup: Pete Alonso has best odds to win MLB’s Home Run Derby on BetMGM Sportsbook
- Messi’s Copa America injury adds doubt for rest of 2024, 2026 World Cup
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Taylor Swift jokes she may have broken the acoustic set piano after an onstage malfunction in Milan
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Billionaire Ambani wedding festivities included Kim Kardashian, Justin Bieber performance
- Rare switch-pitcher Jurrangelo Cijntje 'down to do everything' for Mariners after MLB draft
- 1 killed, 6 injured when pickup truck collides with horse-drawn buggy in Virginia
- Small twin
- Fresno State football coach Jeff Tedford steps down due to health concerns
- Charlize Theron Shares Rare Insight Into Bond With Firecracker Kids Jackson and August
- Get 60% Off SKIMS, 50% Off Old Navy, 50% Off Le Creuset, 25% Off Disney, 75% off Gap & More Deals
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Aegon survived! 'House of the Dragon' star on Episode 5 dragon fallout
Aetna set to run North Carolina worker health care as Blue Cross will not appeal judge’s ruling
Charlize Theron Shares Rare Insight Into Bond With Firecracker Kids Jackson and August
Military service academies see drop in reported sexual assaults after alarming surge
Thomas Matthew Crooks appeared in a 2022 BlackRock ad
4 people fatally shot outside a Mississippi home
Cape Cod’s fishhook topography makes it a global hotspot for mass strandings by dolphins