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Home Buying Blues: Why January's Sales Dropped
USAThursday, February 27, 2025
Rising home prices and elevated mortgage rates have kept many prospective home shoppers on the sidelines, especially first-time buyers. They accounted for 28% of all homes sold last month, matching the share in January 2024, but down from 31% in December. The annual share of first-time buyers fell last year to a record-low 24%. It’s been 40% historically.
If mortgage rates don't ease from current levels, first-time buyers will continue to struggle. “because housing affordability is not there, ” Yun said.
Forecasts from several economists mostly call for the average rate on a 30-year mortgage to remain above 6% this year, with some economists including an upper range as high as 6. 8%.
Home shoppers who could afford to buy at current mortgage rates or pay all-cash to sidestep financing altogether had more homes to choose from last month. There were 1. 18 million unsold homes at the end of last month, up 3. 5% from December and up 16. 8% from January last year.
That translates to a 3. 5-month supply at the current sales pace, up from a 3. 2-month pace in December and a 3-month pace at the end of January last year. Traditionally, a 5- to 6-month supply is considered a balanced market between buyers and sellers.
One reason the inventory of homes for sale has been rising is properties are taking longer to sell. Homes typically remained on the market for 41 days in January before selling — the longest since before the pandemic. In December, homes were typically on the market 35 days before they sold.
Despite the improved inventory, sellers still generally have the edge over buyers. Some 15% of homes purchased last month sold for above their list price. And, on average, homes received 2. 6 offers last month.
Yun expects there could be 1. 5 million homes on the market when the spring homebuying season gets going, but noted the U. S. needs there to be closer to 2 million properties for sale.
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