Google searches for “homes for sale” were up about 30% from their November low during the week ending January 14, but down about 26% from a year earlier.

 

Key housing market takeaways for 400-plus metro areas

  • The median home sale price was $350,000, up 0.9% year over year, the biggest gain in a month.
  • The median asking price of newly listed homes was $357,200, up 3.9% year over year, the biggest increase in two months.
  • The monthly mortgage payment on the median-asking-price home was $2,262 at the current 6.15% mortgage rate. That’s unchanged from a week earlier and down $245 from the October peak. Monthly mortgage payments are up 30% from a year ago.
  • Pending home sales were down 29.1% year over year. That’s the first sub-30% drop in three months.
  • Among the 50 most populous metros, pending sales fell the most in Las Vegas (-63% YoY), Phoenix (-56.3%), Austin, Texas (-53.7%), Nashville (-52.9%) and Jacksonville, Florida (-52.4%). Though they fell in all 50, they declined least in Chicago (-12.8%), Pittsburgh (-20.1%), San Francisco (-23.2%), Boston (-24.4%) and Cleveland (-25%).
  • New listings of homes for sale fell 20% year over year.
  • Active listings (the number of homes listed for sale at any point during the period) were up 21.8% from a year earlier, the biggest annual increase since at least 2015.
  • Months of supply—a measure of the balance between supply and demand, calculated by dividing the number of active listings by closed sales—was 4 months, up from 3.7 months a week earlier and 2 months a year earlier.
  • 29% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within the first two weeks on the market, up slightly from the week before but down from 36% a year earlier.
  • Homes that sold were on the market for a median of 45 days. That’s up two weeks from 31 days a year earlier and the record low of 18 days set in May.
  • 21% of homes sold above their final list price, down from 40% a year earlier and the lowest level since March 2020.
  • On average, 4.3% of homes for sale each week had a price drop, up slightly from a week earlier but down from 5.3% a month earlier.
  • The average sale-to-list price ratio, which measures how close homes are selling to their final asking prices, fell to 97.9% from 100.1% a year earlier. That’s the lowest level since March 2020.