Updated
Updated · Community Advocate · Jul 1
Only 1 in 3 Top 50 Metros Favor Sellers by 2025 as Housing Supply Loosens
Updated
Updated · Community Advocate · Jul 1

Only 1 in 3 Top 50 Metros Favor Sellers by 2025 as Housing Supply Loosens

2 articles · Updated · Community Advocate · Jul 1

Summary

  • Realtor.com data show the national housing market has turned broadly more buyer-friendly, with just one-third of the top 50 metros still favoring sellers by the end of 2025.
  • Growing inventory drove the shift as construction and new listings expanded supply, moving the market away from the seller-dominated conditions seen in 2021.
  • Sun Belt metros including Austin, Tampa and San Antonio have cooled the most after building booms gave buyers more choices and negotiating leverage.
  • Northeast and Midwest cities such as Rochester, Hartford and Buffalo remain tighter seller markets because they saw less new construction and continued inventory shortages.
  • The report says local supply-demand conditions now matter more than the national trend, making pricing and offer strategy increasingly market-specific for buyers and sellers.

Insights

Is the 2026 'buyer's market' a myth for Americans facing record-high homeownership costs?
Sun Belt cities built aggressively to cool their markets, but will this oversupply lead to a deeper price crash?
With a national housing surplus growing, why are affordable starter homes becoming even harder to find?