HomeTop StoriesWhat to look for in 2025 housing market predictions

What to look for in 2025 housing market predictions

A house for sale in Nashville.

Housing is not cheap, whether you buy or rent.

In October, the median sales price for a single-family home in the U.S. was $437,300, up from $426,800 a month earlier, according to the latest U.S. Census data.

Meanwhile, the average U.S. rent in October was $1,619, about the same or 0.2% higher than a year ago and 0.6% lower than a month earlier, according to Redfin, an online real estate brokerage.

While it may be difficult to pinpoint exactly how the housing market will evolve in 2025, several economists offer predictions about what is likely to happen next year in a new report from Redfin, an online real estate brokerage firm.

“If the housing market were to collapse, it would have collapsed by now,” said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin. “The housing market has been so resilient to interest rates rising so high.”

Here are five predictions for the housing market for 2025, according to Fairweather and other economists.

The average asking price for a home in the US is likely to increase by 4% over time of 2025, a pace similar to that of the second half of this year, Redfin said.

The 4% annual pace is a “normalization” compared to the accelerated growth last seen in 2020, Fairweather said.

Earlier in 2024, the pace of home price growth slowed to pre-pandemic levels. In other words, while prices were still rising, the rate of price growth was not as fast as in previous years.

Despite predictions that growth will slow, there may still be some volatility in prices.

In fact, home price growth could remain flat, or less than 1%, in the spring of 2025 for home buying, said Selma Hepp, an economist at CoreLogic.

But the possibility that President-elect Donald Trump implements some of his economic policies could drive home prices much higher, said Jacob Channel, senior economist at LendingTree.

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“We have some mixed signals at the moment about what may or may not happen to house prices,” he said.

Blanket tariffs on foreign goods and materials and mass deportations could lead to higher construction costs and slower housing activity. If fewer homes are built in a market with limited supply, prices could go much higher, Channel said.

Nationally, the average asking rent in the U.S. over the course of a year will likely remain flat through 2025 as new rental inventory becomes available, Redfin said.

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