the state of the CT housing market: why is inventory so low?
/The start of spring historically means the housing market heats up in Connecticut. However, for those looking, there’re not a lot of options out there.
Read MoreThe start of spring historically means the housing market heats up in Connecticut. However, for those looking, there’re not a lot of options out there.
Read MoreWestchester continues to experience sale declines due to record-low inventory, according to Houlihan Lawrence‘s Q3 market report. As the Westchester housing market fails to meet buyers’ needs, both home sales and pending contracts have diminished. According to the report, home sales in Westchester were down 20% while median sale price went up 6.7%
Read MoreDuring the second quarter of 2023, New York City’s real estate market has been as volatile as our stock market. While the market for ultra-luxury apartments, both condo and co-op, has remained slow, the smaller units, which were having a run in April and much of May, have now sunk into the doldrums as well.
Read MoreA low inventory of homes for sale and high interest rates are creating a catch-22 in Connecticut’s real estate market: to push prices down would require more houses to go up for sale, but people don’t want to list their houses because prices are high, according to local real estate experts.
Read MoreHot off Connecticut's record mansion sale and with a few more big deals in the works, overall home prices continued to inch up in July as buyers sifted through a historically low number of properties on the market.
Read MoreThe latest Market Trends Housing Report from the Colorado Association of Realtors shows the single-family home inventory in the seven-county Denver metro area dropped 3% between June and July and is 28% lower than in July 2022.
Read MoreIt’s a statistic that, not long ago, homebuyers could have only dreamed of: The median price of a single-family home in the Denver area dropped by more than $90,000.
Read MoreDenver home buyers are still facing a shortage of properties to purchase.
Read MoreAs Connecticut’s spring real estate market nears the finish line, in some towns half of the houses sold in May went to contract in five days or less — and in a few select locales, in the span of a weekend.
Read MoreDenver’s red hot housing market continues to generate record sale prices.
A new report from OJO Labs lists Denver as the second most competitive housing market out of the nation’s 50 largest metro areas. Denver saw seven in 10 homes sell for above list price in April, second only to the San Francisco Bay area.
Read MoreAccording to the Denver Metro Association of Realtors (DMAR), the average home is staying on the market for just four days. The month of March saw appreciation at a staggering 9 percent, and the average purchase price is now $705,000.
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