Weekly Housing Trends View — Data Week May 22, 2021

Our research team releases regular monthly housing trends reports. These reports break down inventory metrics like the number of active listings and the pace of the market. In light of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, we want to give readers more timely weekly updates.  Generally, you can look forward to a Weekly Housing Trends View near the end of each week along with a weekly video update from our economists. Here’s what the housing market looked like over the last week.

For the first time since February there are slightly more than half as many homes available for sale compared to this time last year.  This milestone hardly seems like one many home buyers would want to celebrate, but it also marks the 7th consecutive week of smaller declines in the number of homes that are actively for sale and coincides with 7 consecutive weeks of new listings growth from a year ago. Home prices continue to rise and homes are still selling fast, but buyers watching the market closely will see that we’re inching toward more options thanks to the seasonal surge in home sellers.

Weekly Housing Trends Key Findings

Key Findings:

  • Median listing prices grew at 14.9 percent over last year, marking 41 consecutive weeks of double-digit price growth. The typical asking price for homes continues to grow at double-digit pace but eased from last week. Nonetheless, median home listing prices are trending toward a new record that will surpass the record-high April national median asking price of $375,000. Home prices rising this quickly might normally dampen housing demand, but with rents rising, too, the mostly-fixed costs of a mortgage stack up favorably against rent for those with a medium-term horizon. 
  • New listings–a measure of sellers putting homes up for sale–were up 9 percent, making this the 7th consecutive week of increases over last year. Driven by high expectations of favorable market conditions, more owners are putting homes up for sale this year. And if the experience of recent home buyers is any indication, home seller expectations are being met and often exceeded. Eventually, the influx of sellers will help relieve some of the competitive pressure buyers are facing. 
  • Total active inventory is “only” 49 percent below this time last year. This week’s data marks the first time since February that we’ve seen a decline in total active listings under 50 percent. While we’re still pretty close to the “half-as-many” mark, we’ve now seen 7 consecutive weeks of improvement that coincide with 7 consecutive weeks of growing numbers of new sellers.
  • Time on market was 34 days faster than last year. With more homes coming up for sale, the typical home sitting on the market hasn’t been sitting long, and brisk time on market is expected to continue through mid-summer, as it typically does each year.

Data Summary

Recent Weeks:

All Changes year-over-year First 2 Weeks
March 2020
Week ending May 8, 2021 Week ending May 15, 2021 Week ending May 22, 2021
Median Listing Prices +4.5%  +15.2% +15.5% +14.9%
New Listings  +5%  +5%  +8%  +9% 
Total Listings  -16%  -52%  -51%  -49% 
Time on Market 4 days faster  28 days faster  32 days faster  34 days faster 

You can download weekly housing market data from our data page.

Visualization showing weekly housing trends May 22, 2021

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Realtor.com Housing Market Forecast 2021

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