Tensions Cloud a Spring Market That Was Just Finding Its Footing, According to Realtor.com® March Housing Report
Prices fall for the fifth straight month and inventory keeps climbing, but rising mortgage rates and economic uncertainty threaten to derail the season
"The worry heading into April is that geopolitical tensions could cause history to repeat itself," said
|
Metric |
|
Change over
|
Change over |
Change over |
Change over |
|
Median listing price |
|
3.0 % |
-2.2 % |
35.9 % |
4.0 % |
|
Active listings |
964,477 |
5.4 % |
8.1 % |
-13.6 % |
172.4 % |
|
New listings |
439,000 |
21.2 % |
0.7 % |
-8.1 % |
0.9 % |
|
Median days on market |
57 |
-13 |
4 |
-8 |
24 |
|
Share of active listings with price reductions |
16.2 % |
1.0 |
-1.2 |
1.3 |
10.5 |
|
Median List Price Per Sq.Ft. |
|
1.0 % |
-2.5 % |
50.9 % |
5.8 % |
A More Buyer-Friendly Spring Takes Shape, Despite Headwinds
Despite the recent rise in rates, a few important differences point to a more buyer-friendly market than a year ago. Inventory and time on market have been growing for over two years, and the national median list price fell 2.2% year over year to
"Even with rates moving higher, buyers are in a better position than they were a year ago," said
Inventory Continues to Grow, At a Slight Pace
Active listings rose 8.1% year over year to 964,477, up slightly from a 7.9% year over year increase as last month. The nationwide inventory recovery continues to stall out. In
"Inventory is still rising, but at a pretty modest, single-digit pace," said Krimmel. "We remain well below pre-pandemic norms nationally, and the gap is especially acute in the Northeast. Until supply in undersupplied markets catches up meaningfully, buyers there will continue to face a more competitive and expensive environment than what the national numbers suggest."
New Listings Edge Up Nationally
New listings jumped 21.2% from February to 439,000, a larger-than-typical seasonal surge and rose 0.7% year over year. March typically sees the biggest month-over-month jump in new listings of the entire buying season, averaging an 18% increase since 2017; this year it exceeded 20%. The metros with the strongest new listing growth year over year were
"New listings jumped more than 20% from February to March, above the historical seasonal norm, and that's an encouraging sign of seller confidence," said Krimmel. "But what happens in April is the real test. March typically sets the table for the spring season, and last year we saw that momentum collapse almost immediately when economic uncertainty hit. Whether sellers stay engaged or pull back will tell us a great deal about where this market is headed."
Prices Soften as Homes
The median time on market reached 57 days in March, four days longer than a year ago, marking the 24th consecutive month of year-over-year deceleration in sales pace. Homes are still selling 5 days faster than pre-pandemic norms. Price cuts edged down year over year, with 16.2% of listings seeing a reduction compared to 17.4% a year ago — suggesting sellers are coming to market at more realistic prices rather than listing high and cutting later, a meaningful behavioral shift from 2025.
"Homes are taking longer to sell for the 24th month in a row, and yet the share of listings with price reductions is actually down year over year," said Krimmel. "That combination tells us sellers are recalibrating. They are pricing more accurately at the outset rather than testing the market and cutting later. For buyers, that's a more straightforward environment to navigate than we saw through much of 2025."
Looking Ahead
The key variable to watch heading into April is new listings. Whether March's momentum carries forward will be a leading indicator of seller confidence — and since most sellers are also buyers, it could be an indicator of demand as well. Last spring, tariff-driven uncertainty and recession fears hit in early April, sidelining both sellers and buyers and setting up what proved to be a slower summer. The concern now is that geopolitical tensions could cause history to repeat itself. If sellers pull back next month, the market risks another spring that fails to launch.
"March arrived with real momentum, rates below 6%, listings climbing, and cautious optimism building around the spring season," said
|
Region |
Active Listing Count, YoY |
New Listing Count, YoY |
Median |
Median |
Median List Price Per SF, YoY |
Median Days on Market, Y-Y (Days) |
Price Reduced Share |
Price Reduced Share, Y-Y (Percentage Points) |
|
Northeast |
7.9 % |
-1.2 % |
|
-3.6 % |
0.4 % |
4 |
9.1 % |
-0.2 |
|
Midwest |
13.6 % |
-1.3 % |
|
-0.1 % |
1.4 % |
2 |
12.4 % |
-0.1 |
|
South |
5.8 % |
2.1 % |
|
-2.5 % |
-3.5 % |
4 |
18.4 % |
-1.9 |
|
West |
10.6 % |
2.4 % |
|
-1.2 % |
-1.4 % |
2 |
17.3 % |
-0.7 |
|
National Average |
8.1 % |
0.7 % |
|
-2.2 % |
-2.5 % |
4 |
16.2 % |
-1.2 |
|
Metro |
Active Listing Count YoY |
New Listing Count, YoY |
Median |
Median |
Median List Price Per SF, YoY |
Median Days on Market, YoY (Days) |
Price Reduced Share |
Price Reduced Share, YoY (Percentage Points) |
|
|
8.2 % |
-5.6 % |
|
3.1 % |
-0.1 % |
3.5 |
19.5 % |
-1.2 |
|
|
9.9 % |
-8.0 % |
|
-7.9 % |
-7.1 % |
9 |
20.9 % |
-1.3 |
|
|
17.9 % |
-4.4 % |
|
-3.4 % |
0.1 % |
7.5 |
14.1 % |
1.0 |
|
|
11.3 % |
9.2 % |
|
3.8 % |
1.1 % |
1.5 |
15.3 % |
-0.9 |
|
|
15.3 % |
15.4 % |
|
-4.6 % |
0.0 % |
4.5 |
9.5 % |
-0.7 |
|
|
19.1 % |
13.4 % |
|
-1.3 % |
2.3 % |
5.75 |
6.3 % |
0.9 |
|
|
25.3 % |
16.5 % |
|
0.0 % |
-1.6 % |
5.5 |
19.6 % |
-1.6 |
|
|
-0.8 % |
0.1 % |
|
0.6 % |
1.7 % |
-1 |
9.8 % |
-0.9 |
|
|
22.4 % |
4.1 % |
|
3.0 % |
1.7 % |
7.75 |
13.3 % |
0.0 |
|
|
14.0 % |
1.2 % |
|
0.4 % |
2.4 % |
2 |
12.4 % |
-0.6 |
|
|
15.8 % |
-0.1 % |
|
0.0 % |
-2.2 % |
4 |
17.7 % |
-0.3 |
|
|
5.5 % |
-1.7 % |
|
-0.8 % |
-1.9 % |
2.5 |
20.8 % |
-2.6 |
|
|
9.4 % |
-8.4 % |
|
-1.4 % |
-3.1 % |
3 |
20.6 % |
-3.8 |
|
|
24.2 % |
3.5 % |
|
-2.1 % |
1.2 % |
2.5 |
13.2 % |
1.7 |
|
|
-5.7 % |
-7.8 % |
|
1.1 % |
-1.4 % |
8.5 |
4.7 % |
-0.9 |
|
|
13.0 % |
2.3 % |
|
-4.0 % |
-2.7 % |
4.5 |
17.7 % |
-0.5 |
|
|
27.0 % |
8.5 % |
|
-0.8 % |
6.3 % |
7 |
19.8 % |
0.8 |
|
|
-16.4 % |
-11.0 % |
|
-2.3 % |
-2.0 % |
1 |
22.0 % |
-5.7 |
|
|
25.8 % |
8.2 % |
|
1.1 % |
0.0 % |
-6.5 |
11.3 % |
0.2 |
|
|
18.4 % |
6.1 % |
|
-0.4 % |
-2.2 % |
7.5 |
21.1 % |
-0.5 |
|
|
9.6 % |
-0.3 % |
|
-7.0 % |
-3.4 % |
3 |
12.9 % |
-0.4 |
|
|
34.0 % |
11.3 % |
|
-5.6 % |
1.5 % |
3.5 |
17.9 % |
2.2 |
|
|
14.5 % |
17.4 % |
|
-10.3 % |
-6.3 % |
4 |
18.8 % |
-1.7 |
|
|
-8.6 % |
-10.8 % |
|
-2.5 % |
-1.9 % |
6.5 |
16.3 % |
-5.0 |
|
|
17.9 % |
20.4 % |
|
3.4 % |
5.0 % |
2 |
10.9 % |
1.9 |
|
|
15.0 % |
0.3 % |
|
-4.7 % |
-1.4 % |
2.5 |
10.7 % |
0.5 |
|
|
18.3 % |
15.7 % |
|
-1.1 % |
-1.2 % |
5.5 |
15.9 % |
-0.9 |
|
|
3.5 % |
-0.6 % |
|
-3.8 % |
0.4 % |
3 |
7.4 % |
0.4 |
|
|
12.6 % |
4.1 % |
|
0.2 % |
-0.9 % |
7.5 |
18.2 % |
0.0 |
|
|
-0.5 % |
-4.5 % |
|
-0.2 % |
-2.6 % |
7 |
21.1 % |
-3.6 |
|
|
7.6 % |
-2.6 % |
|
0.3 % |
0.6 % |
4 |
11.6 % |
-0.1 |
|
|
6.4 % |
1.3 % |
|
-4.4 % |
-1.2 % |
3 |
29.7 % |
-3.0 |
|
|
10.2 % |
-4.0 % |
|
0.4 % |
1.8 % |
2.5 |
14.5 % |
0.7 |
|
|
11.4 % |
10.5 % |
|
-4.2 % |
-2.2 % |
-2 |
23.1 % |
0.3 |
|
Providence- |
0.6 % |
-1.6 % |
|
0.9 % |
9.8 % |
11.5 |
8.6 % |
-0.3 |
|
|
15.1 % |
13.4 % |
|
1.1 % |
-1.3 % |
1.5 |
17.7 % |
-2.0 |
|
|
8.2 % |
16.7 % |
|
-0.7 % |
1.7 % |
-5.5 |
9.4 % |
-0.8 |
|
|
0.9 % |
-0.7 % |
|
-1.0 % |
-1.6 % |
3 |
16.7 % |
-1.1 |
|
|
3.2 % |
10.1 % |
|
-0.6 % |
0.4 % |
3 |
14.3 % |
-2.3 |
|
Salt |
5.0 % |
5.0 % |
|
-2.7 % |
-0.8 % |
-0.5 |
21.0 % |
-0.6 |
|
|
12.4 % |
10.6 % |
|
-3.3 % |
-4.6 % |
0.5 |
23.7 % |
-1.3 |
|
|
5.4 % |
2.0 % |
|
-2.6 % |
-3.7 % |
2 |
14.9 % |
-1.4 |
|
|
-6.0 % |
-0.1 % |
|
3.7 % |
-2.3 % |
-2 |
10.3 % |
-1.4 |
|
|
17.4 % |
1.2 % |
|
-0.9 % |
-3.5 % |
1.5 |
11.5 % |
2.6 |
|
|
42.5 % |
3.5 % |
|
2.6 % |
-1.2 % |
2.5 |
15.4 % |
4.2 |
|
|
11.1 % |
-5.2 % |
|
-3.1 % |
1.6 % |
6.5 |
12.6 % |
0.1 |
|
|
0.5 % |
-16.1 % |
|
0.0 % |
-1.7 % |
8.5 |
25.9 % |
-3.0 |
|
|
10.4 % |
-0.1 % |
|
-3.6 % |
-1.5 % |
6.5 |
23.5 % |
-0.7 |
|
|
7.4 % |
-1.7 % |
|
3.1 % |
1.8 % |
-2.5 |
14.3 % |
-0.9 |
|
|
15.5 % |
0.6 % |
|
-5.4 % |
-3.7 % |
6 |
12.0 % |
-0.3 |
Methodology
Realtor.com housing data as of
Beginning with our
With the release of its
Methodology for cancellations: A contract cancellation is counted if a listing was pending on one day and then back to active the next. It may miss a few that have been entirely delisted.
About Realtor.com
®
Realtor.com
® pioneered online real estate and has been at the forefront for over 25 years, connecting buyers, sellers, and renters with trusted insights, professional guidance and powerful tools to help them find their perfect home. Recognized as the No. 1 site trusted by real estate professionals, Realtor.com® is a valued partner, delivering consumer connections and a robust suite of marketing tools to support business growth. Realtor.com® is operated by
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