The rate of existing homes sales increased between Q109 and Q209 in 39 states, according to a survey by the National Association of Realtors (NAR). The seasonally adjusted annual rate of national sales of existing single-family homes and condos rose to 4.76m units in Q209, up 3.8% from 4.58m units in Q109, but is 2.9% lower than the 4.9m unit pace in Q208. NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said the sales gains appear to be sustainable. “With low interest rates, lower home prices and a first-time buyer tax credit, we’ve been seeing healthy increases in home sales, which are a hopeful sign for the economy,” he said in a statement. “There have been sustained sales gains in Arizona, Nevada and Florida, as well as diverse areas such as Maryland, the District of Columbia and Nebraska. More recently, we’ve seen strong double-digit gains in Idaho, Utah, New Mexico, Washington, Hawaii, New York, New Jersey, Maine, Vermont, Wisconsin, Indiana, South Dakota and Montana.” Yun believes continued increases home sales will promote activity in the overall economy. “Given the need for related goods and services, each home sale pumps an additional $63,000 into the economy – that’s how the housing engine traditionally pulls us out of recession,” he said. “In addition, sales are drawing down inventory and that will help stabilize home values, which in turn will lessen foreclosure pressure and boost credit availability for other sectors of the economy.” But median home prices continued to decline in 129 of 155 metropolitan statistical areas (MSA) from Q109 to Q209. The national median existing single-family home price was $174,100, down 15.6% from Q208. Distressed sales made up 36% of Q209 transactions. But NAR president Charles McMillan said there is a sliver lining to the continued decline in prices — increased affordability. “Housing affordability is hovering near record highs and there’s a wide selection of homes,” he said. Write to Austin Kilgore.
Most Popular Articles
Why housing demand is up and inventory is down in 2026
Pending sales rose to 75,856 vs 72,039 in 2025 as inventory turned negative year over year with mortgage rates near 6.58%.
Jun 13, 2026
-
When will home sales finally return to normal?
Jun 16, 2026 -
HUD tests a new Operation Breakthrough for today’s housing crisis
Jun 23, 2026 -
SERHANT. expands into Texas with 13 founding agents
Jun 23, 2026 -
Keys to the housing market for the rest of 2026
Jun 20, 2026 -
Fannie Mae to expand title pilot program, Pulte says
Jun 24, 2026
Latest Articles
The next credit gap: When BNPL, rent and trended data collide
As credit scoring modernizes with alternative data like rent and BNPL, consumers face a growing information gap. Financial counseling must be integrated into the lending process to help borrowers navigate these new rules.
-
ROAD work ahead
-
FHFA pushes GSEs to embrace chattel loans in Duty to Serve proposal
-
The checklist real estate agents need for estate sale referrals and timing
-
From recovery to real estate: Tracy Jones Team climbs to No. 1 in Ohio
-
AARP awards $8.3M in senior-focused housing and community improvement grants