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Spring Housing Market Thaw: Rising Rates, Steady Demand, and Improved Inventory in 2026
Published 3 weeks, 2 days ago
Description
The US housing market shows cautious acceleration in early April 2026, with rising mortgage rates challenging affordability but steady demand driving more pending sales.[3][4] Over the past week, 30-year fixed mortgage rates climbed to 6.46%, the highest since September 2025, up from 6.38% in late March, slightly curbing buyer interest especially among first-time buyers.[1][3][4]
Zillows March report, released April 6, reveals newly pending listings surged 4.6% year-over-year and 29.8% from February, the largest March increase in five years, with 281,546 new pendings and 300,398 homes sold, up 3.7% annually.[4] Home values rose 0.8% year-over-year, accelerating from Februarys 0.4%.[4] Inventory continues improving for the 28th month, up year-over-year in many metros, though starter homes remain scarce.[3][4]
Recent deals include a joint venture completing Northern Virginias first office-to-residential conversion in Old Town Alexandria.[2] NextHome marked a decade-long franchise partnership with its Ohio brokerage on April 6.[6] Tradeweb partnered with Maxex for non-agency loan trading rollout in Q2 or Q3.[8]
No major regulatory changes or disruptions emerged in the past 48 hours, though Utah and national markets hold steady amid US-Iran tensions.[7][12] Consumer behavior shifts toward stronger spring demand, with Zillow page views 32% above last March despite rate hikes.[4] Builders respond with rate buy-downs and concessions.[3]
Compared to prior reports, this builds on Januarys 16% jump in purchase applications and contrasts tighter 3-4 month inventory with projections for 4.6 months supply in 2026.[1] Regional pain persists in Sunbelt areas like Florida, where Ocala median prices fell 5.2% to 275,000 in February.[5] Overall, experts foresee modest 1.3-3.5% price growth and 14% sales rise, rejecting crash fears.[1] Atlanta ranks top-5 for first-time buyers.[9]
Leaders like Zillow note resilient demand outpacing supply gains, fostering a thawing spring season without a boom.[4]
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Zillows March report, released April 6, reveals newly pending listings surged 4.6% year-over-year and 29.8% from February, the largest March increase in five years, with 281,546 new pendings and 300,398 homes sold, up 3.7% annually.[4] Home values rose 0.8% year-over-year, accelerating from Februarys 0.4%.[4] Inventory continues improving for the 28th month, up year-over-year in many metros, though starter homes remain scarce.[3][4]
Recent deals include a joint venture completing Northern Virginias first office-to-residential conversion in Old Town Alexandria.[2] NextHome marked a decade-long franchise partnership with its Ohio brokerage on April 6.[6] Tradeweb partnered with Maxex for non-agency loan trading rollout in Q2 or Q3.[8]
No major regulatory changes or disruptions emerged in the past 48 hours, though Utah and national markets hold steady amid US-Iran tensions.[7][12] Consumer behavior shifts toward stronger spring demand, with Zillow page views 32% above last March despite rate hikes.[4] Builders respond with rate buy-downs and concessions.[3]
Compared to prior reports, this builds on Januarys 16% jump in purchase applications and contrasts tighter 3-4 month inventory with projections for 4.6 months supply in 2026.[1] Regional pain persists in Sunbelt areas like Florida, where Ocala median prices fell 5.2% to 275,000 in February.[5] Overall, experts foresee modest 1.3-3.5% price growth and 14% sales rise, rejecting crash fears.[1] Atlanta ranks top-5 for first-time buyers.[9]
Leaders like Zillow note resilient demand outpacing supply gains, fostering a thawing spring season without a boom.[4]
For great deals today, check out https://amzn.to/44ci4hQ
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI