Homeowners in PANIC as stark map shows just five sellers' markets left – spelling price drops almost everywhere else
Horror is settling in for American homeowners as the gap between buyers and sellers grows even wider, leaving house-hunters with almost all the power.
A buyer's market occurs when homes for sale outnumber buyers, putting shoppers in a strong position to negotiate lower prices, ask for concessions, and take their time finding the right property.
The reverse holds in a seller's market, where scarce listings and heavy competition drive prices above asking and leave buyers with little leverage.
According to Redfin, nationwide there were 47 percent more sellers than buyers in December — placing the country as a whole firmly in buyer's market territory. It is the widest gap in a decade, and a sign that price cuts are likely to spread.
The strongest buyer's markets last month were concentrated in the Sun Belt, while all five seller's markets were clustered in the Northeast and Midwest.
'The Sun Belt isn't doomed, but it is going through a necessary reset,' Daryl Fairweather, Redfin's chief economist, told the Daily Mail.
'These metros benefited enormously from pandemic–era migration and low rates, which encouraged rapid construction,' she explained. 'Now, inventory growth is outpacing buyer demand, tipping markets firmly in buyers' favor.'
Austin, Texas, stood out as the most lopsided market in December, with an estimated 128 percent more sellers than buyers — nearly two homes on the market for every would-be purchaser.
Austin, Texas (pictured), stood out as the most lopsided market in December, with an estimated 128 percent more sellers than buyers
Daryl Fairweather, chief economist for Redfin
Fort Lauderdale followed close behind at 125 percent, with Nashville (111 percent), Miami (103 percent) and San Antonio (103 percent) rounding out the list of metros where inventory heavily outpaced demand.
Nassau County, New York, once again topped the list as December's strongest seller's market, with roughly 33.4 percent fewer homes available than buyers in the hunt — creating a tight, competitive scramble for listings.
Montgomery County, Pennsylvania (-32.3 percent), Newark, New Jersey (-29.5 percent), Milwaukee (-26.1 percent) and New Brunswick, New Jersey (-19.3 percent) followed, all marked by lean inventory and bidding wars that tilted the advantage firmly toward sellers.
'It's possible we see even fewer sellers markets in the near term, but unlikely that every metro tips fully into buyers–market territory at once,' said Fairweather.
'Some areas will always have structural constraints — limited inventory, strong local economies, or unique desirability — that keep them more competitive.'
This latest housing updates comes after Realtor.com revealed that 26 of the country's 50 biggest metro areas are now seeing home prices lower than they were a year ago.
For the first time in nearly three years, the median US listing price has also slipped below $400,000, a key psychological level that had held firm since the pandemic boom.
While prices are down 0.6 percent nationally, that average disguises much steeper falls across large swathes of the country.
Currently 26 of the country's 50 biggest metro areas are now seeing home prices lower than they were a year ago
Nassau County, NY, is the strongest seller's market (pictured: homes in Nassau County)
Again, the worst example is Austin, where prices have plunged 7.3 percent over the past year to $462,000, the biggest drop of any major metro.
Sellers across the country have also been forced to cut prices after watching their homes sit on the market for months while stubborn buyers hold all the negotiating power.
While this may seem like welcome news for frustrated buyers, it is actually a warning sign for the wider economy.
Falling prices make homeowners feel poorer, pull down household spending, drag on confidence, and can trigger deeper trouble in markets already stretched by high mortgage rates and shrinking savings.
For most Americans, their home is their biggest asset. Even a small 1 percent national price dip can erase billions in household wealth.
