Nationally, home prices hit an all-time high in June 2024, and we estimate that prices may have bucked seasonal trends and climbed slightly higher in July.*
In July, the average 30-year mortgage rate declined for the third month, falling to 6.78%, a 0.44% drop from the 2024 high reached in early May. The Fed is poised to start cutting rates in September, which tends to be around the time the housing market really slows before the holidays.
Sales fell 5.4% month over month and year over year, while inventory rose to its highest level since 2020. The combination of rising prices and high interest rates has kept sales historically low. Although the market is shifting in buyers’ favor, we still expect sales to decline for the rest of the year.
In June, prices rose for the fifth month in a row, reaching all-time highs. Typically, home prices begin to fall in July, but this year may be different. Currently, we estimate data to show that the national median home price rose very slightly in July. We are confident, at least, that prices have not fallen 5% from June to July, which means that July was the 13th consecutive month of year-over-year price growth. Despite the seasonal price dip, which is surely coming in the second half of the year, year-over-year price growth will almost certainly continue for months to come.
Different regions and individual houses vary from the broad national trends, so we’ve included a Local Lowdown below to provide you with in-depth coverage for your area. As always, we will continue to monitor the housing and economic markets to best guide you in buying or selling your home.
The median single-family home price fell 2.6% month over month, while condo prices rose 17.3% and reached the highest price level in two years. We expect price contraction for the rest of the year, which is the seasonal norm.
Active listings and new listings declined in San Francisco month over month, bringing inventory to a record low once again. We expect inventory to decline and the overall market to slow further as we make our way through the second half of the year.
Months of Supply Inventory fell for both single-family homes and condos. In July, MSI indicated a sellers’ market for single-family homes and a balanced market for condos.
In the North Bay, single-family home prices in Napa, notably, reached a record high in July 2024. Persistently low inventory relative to the high demand in the area has more than offset the downward price pressure from higher mortgage rates. Prices in the North Bay generally haven’t experienced larger drops due to higher mortgage rates, and as mentioned in the Big Story, higher mortgage rates are contributing to prices staying high. Year to date, in July, the median single-family home price rose across the North Bay. Year over year, prices increased most significantly for single-family homes in Napa, up 23%. Prices typically peak in the summer months, so we don’t expect new all-time highs for the rest of this year. However, we do expect some minor price contraction in the coming months. Additionally, demand is high enough that it will create price support as supply declines in the second half of the year.
High mortgage rates soften both supply and demand, but home buyers and sellers seemed to tolerate rates near 6%. Now that rates are declining again, sales could get a little boost, but the housing market typically begins to slow this time of year.
The 2024 housing market has looked progressively healthier with each passing month. We’re far enough into the year to know that inventory levels are about as good as we could’ve hoped. In 2023, single-family home inventory followed fairly typical seasonal trends, but at significantly depressed levels. Low inventory and fewer new listings slowed the market considerably last year. Even though sales volume this year was similar to last, far more new listings have come to the market, which has allowed inventory to grow. In July 2024, the number of homes for sale was 24% higher than last year and 1% higher than in July 2022.
Typically, inventory begins to increase in January or February, peaking in July or August before declining once again from the summer months to the winter. It’s looking like 2024 inventory, sales, and new listings will resemble historically seasonal patterns, and at more normal levels. Now that we’re more than halfway through the year, we expect inventory, sales, and new listings to decline through the rest of the year.
Months of Supply Inventory (MSI) quantifies the supply/demand relationship by measuring how many months it would take for all current homes listed on the market to sell at the current rate of sales. The long-term average MSI is around three months in California, which indicates a balanced market. An MSI lower than three indicates that there are more buyers than sellers on the market (meaning it’s a sellers’ market), while a higher MSI indicates there are more sellers than buyers (meaning it’s a buyers’ market). MSI trended higher in the second half of 2023, hovering between a balanced market and a sellers’ market. MSI in the North Bay market has trended horizontally for the past nine months. However, in July, single-family home MSI fell, implying the market shifted more favorably toward sellers, while condo MSI rose above three months of supply, indicating the market is more balanced.
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