Current Market Data
Prices in the Boston metro area were up 7.0% over February 2020 with “normal” market condition indicators.
Home prices posted monthly and yearly gains in January across the U.S. as well, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Indices.
“The demand for a home purchase is widespread, multiple offers are prevalent, and days-on-market are swift, but contracts are not clicking due to record-low inventory.” — NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun
While pandemic headlines had many leaving cities and moving to the suburbs or looking for additional space in their current home, interest in tiny homes was little remarked upon.
A record number of homes sold above the asking price last month as home sale prices hit an all-time high.
Cape Cod home sales continued to rise in February as interest in homes in vacation areas remained strong.
Single-family home sales and median sales prices continued to rise as inventory hit record lows once again.
Much of the year-over-year increase in home sales was supported by continued robust activity in the Southeast, which saw a 20.2% rise to an annual rate of 458,000 transactions.
“Despite the drop in home sales for February — which I would attribute to historically-low inventory — the market is still outperforming pre-pandemic levels.” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun
In February, 36% of homes sold above the asking price as the decline in homes for sale hit a record low.
The Greater Boston Association of Realtors says the numbers offer an early sign of an extremely active spring local housing market.
Eighty-eight percent of all homebuyers said they used an agent as a source of information during their search, and 91% of millennials age 22 to 30 said the same.
Bigger is better when it comes to houses on the market, according to a new report from Realtor.com.
Brokers remain optimistic despite low inventory of homes, the ongoing pandemic and iBuyers.
It is not “first comes love, then comes marriage,” but for many women, “first comes homeownership,” according to First American Chief Economist Odeta Kushi.
Homebuyers are taking advantage of remote-work policies as interest in vacation towns and suburbs spikes.
