Homebuyers are seeing glut of inventory in more expensive areas

Strong demand is leading more people in prime areas to try selling their homes

Counterclockwise from top: San Jose, Seattle, Boston, and New York (Credit: iStock)
Counterclockwise from top: San Jose, Seattle, Boston, and New York (Credit: iStock)

Home inventory is going up in some of the most in-demand areas in the country.

A Realtor.com report found that listings in the California area of San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara rose by 44 percent year-over-year, the country’s largest increase, according to Mansion Global. In Seattle and its suburbs, there were 29 percent more homes on the market this July than last July.

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Other cities that saw large inventory increases were San Diego—18 percent—Dallas—15 percent—Boston—5 percent. New York saw a 2 percent increase, while Los Angeles and Miami both actually saw slight decreases of 1 percent each.

The median listing price was at a record high in July of $299,000, a 9 percent increase year-over-year, and homes in the country took an average of 59 days to sell—five days faster than the year before.

Housing inventory overall still dropped by 4 percent year-over-year, but inventory for houses more than $350,000 rose by 5.7 percent. [Mansion Global]  – Eddie Small

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