Housing Market Update: New Listings of Homes For Sale Surpass 2019 Levels

Housing Market Update: New Listings of Homes For Sale Surpass 2019 Levels

by and
Updated on October 26th, 2022

Even though more homes are hitting the market, homebuyers appear to have tapped out of the market as pending sales continued to slip.

Sellers are coming back to the housing market. The number of homes newly listed for sale surpassed 2019 levels for the first time since the start of the year during the four weeks ending July 4. Despite a long-awaited increase in the supply of homes for sale, homebuying demand continued to slip, leaving the market feeling a few degrees cooler.

Pending sales posted their smallest year-over-year increase in almost a year, and fell twice as fast month over month as they did during this same time in 2009. The Redfin Homebuyer Demand Index—a measure of requests for home tours and other services from Redfin agents—also fell 1.2% week-over-week, and there was a similar decline in mortgage purchase applications.

Leading Demand Indicators

Despite the softening, the housing market is still very much tilted in sellers’ favor. Home prices are at record highs and more than 20% above the level they were a year earlier, and homes continued to sell faster than ever, with the typical home lasting just 15 days on the market. However, days on market have been flat for the past four weeks after falling for 18 straight weeks between February and June, and the share of homes sold above list price has flatlined after sharply rising over the same period.

Unless otherwise noted, the data in this report covers the four-week period ending July 4. Redfin’s housing market data goes back through 2012.

“Many buyers have backed away from the housing market and are waiting until more and better homes are listed,” said Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather. “Buyers don’t have the same sense of urgency that they did at the beginning of the year. They aren’t racing to buy before prices increase, because asking prices have already increased and stabilized. And they aren’t racing to buy before mortgage rates go up, because rates have dropped back below 3% and are likely to stay low. With more new listings starting to come on the market, buyers who threw in the towel may want to look again because the market is tilting more in their favor.”

Key housing market takeaways for 400+ U.S. metro areas:

Data based on homes listed and/or sold during the period:

  • The median home-sale price increased 22% year over year to $364,430, a record high.
  • Asking prices of newly listed homes were up 12% from the same time a year ago to a median of $359,500. This was down 1.1% from the four-week period ending June 27.
  • Pending home sales were up 17% year over year, the smallest increase in almost a year, since the four-week period ending July 19, 2020. Pending sales were down 6% from the four-week period ending May 30, compared to a 3% decrease over the same period in 2019.
  • New listings of homes for sale were up 4% from a year earlier, and were up 3% from the same period in 2019. This was the first time new listings have surpassed 2019 levels since the beginning of the year.
  • Active listings (the number of homes listed for sale at any point during the period) fell 32% from 2020—the smallest decline since the four-week period ending February 7—but have climbed 8% since their 2021 low during the four week period ending March 7.
  • 54% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within the first two weeks on the market, well above the 45% rate during the same period a year ago, but down 2.7 percentage points from the high point of the year, set during the four-week period ending March 28.
  • 40% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within one week of hitting the market, up from 32% during the same period a year earlier, but down 3 percentage points from the high point of the year, set during the four-week period ending March 28.
  • Homes that sold were on the market for a median of 15 days, an all-time low that has been flat for the last four weeks, and down from 39 days a year earlier.
  • A record 55% of homes sold above list price, up from 27% a year earlier.
  • The share of homes for sale with price drops rose to 4%, continuing to surpass 2020 level, and climbing closer to 2019 levels (4.6%).
  • The average sale-to-list price ratio, which measures how close homes are selling to their asking prices, increased to 102.4%. In other words, the average home sold for 2.4% above its asking price. This measure is an all-time high and 3.7 percentage points higher than a year earlier.

Other other leading indicators of homebuying activity:

Refer to our metrics definition page for explanations of all the metrics used in this report.

Home Sale Prices Up 22% From 2020

Asking Prices on New Listings Up 12% From 2020

Pending Sales Up 17% From 2020

New Listings of Homes Up 4% From 2020

Active Listings of Homes For Sale Down 32% From 2020

54% of Pending Sales Under Contract Within Two Weeks

40% of Pending Sales Under Contract Within One Week

Days on Market Fell to a Record Low of 15 Days

Over Half of Homes Sold Above List Price

4% of Listings Had Price Drops

Sale-to-List Price Ratio Passes 102%

Redfin Homebuyer Demand Index Up 12% From 2020

Avatar

Tim Ellis

Tim Ellis has been analyzing the real estate market since 2005, and worked at Redfin as a housing market analyst from 2010 through 2013 and again starting in 2018. In his free time, he runs the independently-operated Seattle-area real estate website Seattle Bubble, and produces the "Dispatches from the Multiverse" improvised comedy sci-fi podcast.

Email Tim
Avatar

Taylor Marr

Taylor Marr is the deputy chief economist on the research team at Redfin. He is passionate about housing and urban policy and an advocate for increased mobility and affordability. He laid the framework for our migration data and reports and diligently tracks the housing market and economy. Before Redfin, Taylor built financial market index funds for Vanguard at the University of Chicago. Taylor went to graduate school for international economics in Berlin, where he focused on behavioral causes of the global housing bubble and subsequent policy responses. Taylor’s research has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and The Economist. He was also recently the President of the Seattle Economics Council and collaborates frequently with the Fed, HUD, and the Census Bureau. Follow him on Twitter @tayloramarr or subscribe to his weekly newsletter on Substack here: https://taylormarr.substack.com

Email Taylor

Be the first to see the latest real estate news:

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

By submitting your email you agree to Redfin’s Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Scroll to Top