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Homes continue to sell at record pace



Housing data for the four-week period ending April 4 showed asking prices and pending sales flatten, suggesting homebuyer demand and sale prices may be peaking. The U.S. median home-sale price increased 17 percent year-over-year to $338,225 and newly listed homes rose 16 percent to $351,851, both an all-time high.

The median home-sale price increased 17% year over year to $338,225, an all-time high.

Asking prices of newly listed homes rose 16% year over year to $351,851, an all-time high, but were flat from the four-week period ending March 28. During the same period in 2019, asking prices rose 0.8%.

Pending home sales were up 47% from the same period in 2020, and up 24% from the same period 2019, which was a more typical year for the housing market. Pending sales were essentially flat from the four-week period ending March 28, posting a 0.1% increase, the smallest since the four-week period ending January 17. Between the same periods in 2019, pending sales rose 5%.

New listings of homes for sale were up 5% from the same period in 2020, and down 14% from the same period in 2019.

Active listings (the number of homes listed for sale at any point during the period) fell 42% from the same period in 2020 to a new all-time low. This is the largest decrease on record in this data, which goes back through 2016.

59% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within the first two weeks on the market. This is a new all-time high for this measure since at least 2012 (as far back as Redfin’s data for this measure goes). During the 7-day period ending April 4, 58% of homes sold in two weeks or less.

46% of homes that went under contract had an accepted offer within one week of hitting the market, an all-time high and up from 30% during the same period a year earlier.

Homes that sold during the period were on the market for a median of 25 days, the lowest time on market on record since 2012. This was 15 days less than the same period in 2020, and 22 days less than the same period in 2019.

42% of homes sold for more than their list price, an all-time high. This was 16 percentage points higher than the same period a year earlier, and 20 points higher than the same period in 2019.

The average sale-to-list price ratio, which measures how close homes are selling to their asking prices, increased to 100.5%, an all-time high and 2 percentage points higher than a year earlier.

For the 7-day period ending April 4, the seasonally adjusted Redfin Homebuyer Demand Index—a measure of requests for home tours and other services from Redfin agents—was up 147% from the same period a year ago, when housing demand was near the lowest point it would hit during the pandemic. Compared with the same one week period in 2019, demand is up 57%. Week-over-week, demand was down 2.1%, compared to a 1.3% increase during the same period in 2019.