The U.S. supply of homes for sale rose at a record annual pace for the sixth month in a row, up 67.8% year over year in February, signaling the housing market’s continued rebalancing, according to the Realtor.com® Monthly Housing Trends Report released today. Despite the significant increase in inventory over last year’s record lows, home prices are still growing, albeit at a slower pace of 7.8% over last February, a sign of still-high hopes from home sellers entering the market.
What it means for homebuyers, sellers, and the housing market
In a market with conditions that don’t particularly favor buyers or sellers, both will likely have to make compromises to make a deal happen. As mortgage rates continue to fluctuate and increase the cost of buying a home, it’s important for sellers to price their home appropriately to attract buyers in the market. For buyers, it’s critical they make the best offer they can on a home that fits their needs and budget. Realtor.com®‘s mortgage calculator can help home shoppers estimate monthly payments quickly and easily as rates change from week to week.
“The number of homes for sale on the market is up significantly from a year ago, even though fewer homeowners have listed their home for sale in recent months. High home prices and mortgage rates continue to cut into buyer interest and homes are taking more than three weeks longer to sell than last year,” said Danielle Hale, Chief Economist for Realtor.com®. “With a smaller pool of buyers today and more competition from other homes on the market, homesellers will likely need to adjust their price expectations in the market this spring.”
“For many, shopping for a new home often begins or picks up as we head into the warmer months, which is right around the corner,” said Clare Trapasso, executive news editor at Realtor.com®. “Potential buyers looking to take advantage of more homes to choose from and a less competitive pace also have more negotiating power than they did a year ago. So if a home has been on the market a while without receiving any offers, they may want the seller to contribute to their closing costs, make expensive repairs, or even buy down their mortgage rate.”
February 2023 Housing Metrics – National
Metric |
Change over Feb. 2022 |
Change over Feb. 2019 |
Median listing price |
7.8% (to $415,000) |
+40.1 % |
Active listings |
67.8 % |
-47.5 % |
New listings |
-15.9 % |
-23.9 % |
Median days on market |
+23 days (to 67 days) |
-17 days |
Share of active listings with price reductions |
+7.6 percentage points (to 13.3%) |
-2.7 percentage points |
More options despite fewer sellers entering the market
The supply of homes for sale continued to rise in February at a record annual pace, driven mostly by low interest from buyers facing high home and mortgage costs rather than an influx of new homes for sale to the market. Despite a significant increase in the number of homes for sale in recent months as existing home sales and demand slow, there are still fewer homes available to buy nationwide on a typical day than there were a few years ago.
- In February, the U.S. supply of active listings for sale rose at a record annual pace for the sixth month in a row, up 67.8% compared to last year, but it is still well below pre-pandemic levels (-47.4% compared to the February 2017-2019 average). Both newly-listed homes (-15.9%) and pending listings, or homes under contract with a buyer (-24.7%), declined year-over-year.
- Across the 50 largest metros, the number of homes for sale was up 86.0% compared to last February, with the most growth in active listings in the South (+141.4%).
- Among the 50 largest U.S. metros, 49 markets saw active inventory gains in February compared to last year, but only Las Vegas, Austin, Texas, and San Antonio saw higher levels of inventory compared to typical February 2017–2019 levels. Hartford, Conn. (-8.8%) was the only metro to see inventory decline on a year-over-year basis.
- Six metros saw the number of newly listed homes increase over last year, led by Raleigh, N.C. (+14.8%), Dallas (+10.3%) and San Antonio (+10.2%). The largest yearly decline in newly listed homes were in western metros, including San Jose, Calif. (-43.3%), San Francisco (-39.4%), and Seattle (-36.8%).
Home price growth continues to level off as more sellers drop their asking price
While home prices were up in February compared to last year, year-over-year asking price growth has remained in the single digits for three months in a row, suggesting that home prices are continuing to moderate and cool down from last year’s record highs. While mortgage rates are down from their November highs, rates rebounded this month and with higher home prices compared to last February, the typical monthly mortgage payment is roughly $630 more than it was a year ago. As a result of these cost pressures, the slowdown in the demand for homes means more than twice as many sellers cut their asking price in February compared to last year.
- The U.S. median listing price was $415,000 in February, up from $406,000 in January, and 7.8% higher than a year ago.
- Among the 50 largest U.S. metros, the biggest annual listing price gains were in Midwest metros (+11.9%, on average). The metros with the biggest asking price increases were Milwaukee (+48.8%), Memphis (+42.7%), and Virginia Beach (+16.3%); however, in these metros the mix of inventory also changed and more larger, expensive homes are for sale today.
- In February, 13.0% of active listings had their price reduced, up from 5.4% a year ago. Southern metros (+10.3 percentage points) saw the largest increase in the share of listings with price reductions.
- Listing prices declined in eight markets, led by Austin (-8.0% year-over-year), New Orleans (-7.0%), and Pittsburgh (-6.9%). In those markets, the median price-per-square-foot also declined on a yearly basis, signaling that price declines weren’t from a rise in smaller homes for sale but by sellers adjusting their expectations and sales price.
Homes take three weeks longer to sell than last year
The housing market has cooled considerably since the height of the pandemic, when buyer demand outmatched the record low supply of homes for sale and bidding wars were common. In February, homes took more than three weeks longer to sell than they did at this time last year, despite an uptick in buyer sentiment in January. The continued slower pace of home sales signals a return to a more balanced housing market and what was considered normal before the pandemic, and it gives buyers more time to decide if a house is right for them.
- The typical home spent 67 days on market in February, 23 days longer than this time last year, but still 20 days faster than in February 2017-2019, on average.
- Relative to the national pace, time on market was lower across the 50 largest U.S. metros in February (56 days, on average) and was 19 days slower than the February 2022 pace.
- Compared to last year, 47 out of 50 metros saw an increase in time on market with larger metros in the West seeing the greatest increase (+26 days). Austin, Texas (+52 days), Raleigh, N.C. (+51 days), and Las Vegas and Denver (+38 days) saw the greatest increases in time on market.
- Only one market saw shrinking time on market and two were unchanged from last year: Hartford, Conn. (-2 days), Cincinnati, Ohio (+0 days), and Buffalo, N.Y. (+0 days).
February 2023 Housing Metrics – 50 Largest U.S. Metro Areas
Metro Area |
Median Listing Price |
Median Listing Price YoY |
Median Listing Price per Sq. Ft. YoY |
Active Listing Count YoY |
New Listing Count YoY |
Median Days on Market |
Median Days on Market Y-Y (Days) |
Price Reduced Share |
Price Reduced Share Y-Y (Percentage Points) |
$400,000 |
2.2 % |
1.5 % |
80.5 % |
-20.4 % |
52 |
15 |
14.9 % |
9.8 pp |
|
$533,000 |
-8.0 % |
-8.2 % |
335.1 % |
5.8 % |
72 |
52 |
25.4 % |
21.2 pp |
|
$323,000 |
7.5 % |
4.2 % |
23.1 % |
-22.9 % |
52 |
13 |
11.3 % |
4.2 pp |
|
$272,000 |
3.5 % |
6.1 % |
63.8 % |
-20.3 % |
66 |
23 |
13.2 % |
7.1 pp |
|
$799,000 |
6.7 % |
-3.5 % |
30.2 % |
-23.9 % |
38 |
13 |
9.9 % |
5.0 pp |
|
$227,000 |
8.3 % |
4.9 % |
31.6 % |
0.0 % |
65 |
0 |
5.4 % |
2.1 pp |
|
$397,000 |
1.9 % |
2.9 % |
136.6 % |
-4.1 % |
57 |
29 |
13.7 % |
7.9 pp |
|
$338,000 |
4.0 % |
-3.5 % |
10.8 % |
-24.4 % |
47 |
6 |
9.6 % |
3.5 pp |
|
$360,000 |
13.4 % |
4.7 % |
19.9 % |
-17.4 % |
54 |
0 |
9.6 % |
4.2 pp |
|
$199,000 |
10.9 % |
6.2 % |
27.8 % |
-6.6 % |
57 |
5 |
11.6 % |
5.0 pp |
|
$360,000 |
10.8 % |
4.1 % |
38.9 % |
-9.9 % |
42 |
17 |
12.3 % |
7.2 pp |
|
$435,000 |
5.6 % |
2.1 % |
208.2 % |
10.3 % |
61 |
29 |
15.9 % |
12.7 pp |
|
$630,000 |
-2.8 % |
-2.6 % |
116.8 % |
-17.0 % |
44 |
38 |
13.1 % |
10.9 pp |
|
$229,000 |
6.5 % |
3.4 % |
40.8 % |
-14.6 % |
59 |
22 |
14.3 % |
5.7 pp |
|
$396,000 |
9.4 % |
3.1 % |
-8.8 % |
-18.9 % |
40 |
-2 |
5.1 % |
1.8 pp |
|
$358,000 |
-0.9 % |
-0.1 % |
61.0 % |
-10.1 % |
55 |
14 |
14.8 % |
7.7 pp |
|
$300,000 |
2.8 % |
2.9 % |
86.2 % |
-5.1 % |
61 |
23 |
14.4 % |
8.7 pp |
|
$390,000 |
2.2 % |
3.5 % |
172.5 % |
5.1 % |
65 |
27 |
19.1 % |
14.6 pp |
|
$442,000 |
14.2 % |
7.4 % |
82.5 % |
-23.1 % |
92 |
31 |
8.8 % |
5.4 pp |
|
$446,000 |
-6.2 % |
-2.1 % |
105.9 % |
-30.4 % |
67 |
38 |
21.9 % |
15.1 pp |
|
$974,000 |
2.6 % |
1.1 % |
51.0 % |
-33.1 % |
53 |
22 |
9.7 % |
5.9 pp |
|
$300,000 |
7.2 % |
2.5 % |
45.4 % |
-12.5 % |
46 |
10 |
12.8 % |
6.2 pp |
|
$323,000 |
42.7 % |
18.4 % |
136.1 % |
-0.7 % |
69 |
29 |
15.0 % |
10.3 pp |
|
$599,000 |
14.7 % |
4.0 % |
87.7 % |
-11.4 % |
69 |
16 |
14.6 % |
10.2 pp |
|
$413,000 |
48.8 % |
22.6 % |
18.1 % |
-23.7 % |
52 |
16 |
9.8 % |
2.3 pp |
|
$435,000 |
8.9 % |
17.1 % |
23.8 % |
-34.2 % |
50 |
16 |
7.2 % |
4.0 pp |
|
$518,000 |
8.9 % |
3.1 % |
299.7 % |
2.2 % |
39 |
24 |
19.0 % |
14.4 pp |
|
$325,000 |
-7.0 % |
-2.9 % |
115.1 % |
-18.1 % |
71 |
2 |
15.4 % |
7.2 pp |
|
$680,000 |
6.7 % |
5.4 % |
5.9 % |
-28.3 % |
84 |
15 |
7.3 % |
2.5 pp |
|
$349,000 |
6.1 % |
3.9 % |
120.8 % |
-14.1 % |
53 |
9 |
14.9 % |
8.3 pp |
|
$435,000 |
9.4 % |
6.9 % |
153.1 % |
-10.9 % |
65 |
30 |
16.1 % |
12.1 pp |
|
$322,000 |
7.5 % |
3.4 % |
23.1 % |
-19.8 % |
67 |
14 |
11.4 % |
4.4 pp |
|
$487,000 |
-2.6 % |
-0.8 % |
208.6 % |
-12.3 % |
62 |
34 |
24.6 % |
19.2 pp |
|
$200,000 |
-6.9 % |
-4.8 % |
29.4 % |
-12.2 % |
89 |
11 |
12.8 % |
4.8 pp |
|
$607,000 |
8.1 % |
-0.8 % |
76.3 % |
-35.2 % |
54 |
25 |
10.1 % |
0.7 pp |
|
$498,000 |
8.9 % |
3.6 % |
26.3 % |
-19.2 % |
45 |
6 |
7.8 % |
4.1 pp |
|
$449,000 |
3.6 % |
-2.4 % |
329.8 % |
14.8 % |
68 |
51 |
13.2 % |
10.7 pp |
|
$392,000 |
6.8 % |
5.4 % |
58.9 % |
-22.4 % |
54 |
15 |
7.9 % |
4.9 pp |
|
$560,000 |
1.8 % |
3.4 % |
94.7 % |
-30.4 % |
66 |
35 |
13.9 % |
9.5 pp |
|
$232,000 |
3.9 % |
5.8 % |
25.0 % |
-1.5 % |
31 |
9 |
7.3 % |
1.9 pp |
|
$605,000 |
-3.8 % |
-4.1 % |
47.9 % |
-34.5 % |
52 |
27 |
12.0 % |
6.5 pp |
|
$340,000 |
1.0 % |
0.0 % |
150.4 % |
10.2 % |
70 |
27 |
17.2 % |
12.9 pp |
|
$932,000 |
9.7 % |
3.3 % |
54.1 % |
-32.7 % |
38 |
11 |
10.1 % |
7.3 pp |
|
$1,009,000 |
1.7 % |
-4.0 % |
24.4 % |
-39.4 % |
33 |
14 |
8.4 % |
5.0 pp |
|
$1,400,000 |
3.2 % |
0.8 % |
29.9 % |
-43.3 % |
30 |
18 |
8.5 % |
6.7 pp |
|
$750,000 |
3.8 % |
0.9 % |
102.4 % |
-36.8 % |
45 |
28 |
10.1 % |
8.2 pp |
|
$272,000 |
3.5 % |
4.8 % |
23.6 % |
-15.3 % |
67 |
16 |
9.7 % |
5.0 pp |
|
$400,000 |
1.4 % |
1.7 % |
224.5 % |
-0.7 % |
60 |
28 |
21.1 % |
16.5 pp |
|
$372,000 |
16.3 % |
7.8 % |
25.4 % |
-19.8 % |
40 |
12 |
12.3 % |
7.3 pp |
|
$585,000 |
10.8 % |
0.1 % |
23.3 % |
-31.8 % |
43 |
10 |
9.0 % |
4.3 pp |
Methodology
Realtor.com® housing data as of February 2023. Listings include the active inventory of existing single-family homes and condos/townhomes/rowhomes/co-ops for the given level of geography on Realtor.com; new construction is excluded unless listed via an MLS that provides listing data to Realtor.com. Realtor.com® data history goes back to July 2016. 50 largest U.S. metropolitan areas as defined by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB).