
Nationwide January Listings Bump Just Barely Touches CT
The local residential real estate market is getting a slight boost according to a new report from Realtor.com, but not much of one.
The local residential real estate market is getting a slight boost according to a new report from Realtor.com, but not much of one.
Nation-wide, a bump in new listings is giving hope to homebuyers and sellers alike. But not in Connecticut’s three biggest housing markets.
With most homeowners who might have sold in other years sitting tight, the share of newly-built homes in many Connecticut housing markets has jumped dramatically in a single year.
New data from brokerage and online listings portal Redfin suggests Hartford’s housing market is staying competitive, even as for-sale listings are shrinking.
The share of consumers who think it’s a less-than-optimal time to buy or sell a home keeps ticking upwards as interest rates rise and housing affordability drops.
William Raveis Inc. has launched a new service it says will help buyers compete with all-cash offers in an incredibly tight real estate market.
The number of new single-family homes that hit the market in the Hartford area in August is down over the same month last year.
Nearly 1,000 new single-family listings hit the market in June in Greater Hartford, on par with pre-pandemic patterns, and slightly exceeded May’s tally, but the region is still seeing a very tight market, according to new data from the Greater Hartford Association of Realtors.
At least some element of seasonality appears to have returned to the Boston-area housing market last month: Redfin’s monthly report on competition its agents’ offers faced found a slightly less frenzied atmosphere.
A new report from Zillow shows that nearly two-thirds of Hartford homes sold in one week or less last month, with three-quarters going pending within two weeks.
As the COVID-19 pandemic entered its dying days in Connecticut, Greater Hartford saw an increase in both new single-family listings and overall inventory in April according to the Greater Hartford Association of Realtors.
It’s the biggest question in Connecticut real estate today: Will we ever get enough single-family inventory on the market to slow down massive price increases?
William Raveis Real Estate has become the latest brokerage to launch an iBuyer-like service in Connecticut amid the tightest single-family housing market in living memory.
The Greater Hartford’s inventory of single-family homes for sale was down 52 percent year-over-year in February, the Greater Hartford Association of Realtors announced Wednesday.