For more options, buyers need to go South
– San Jose, Calif., metro leads the nation as the toughest market to find a home with just four homes for sale per every 1,000 homeowner households
– The median listing price for the top 20 toughest markets is 40 percent higher than the average major metro
– Florida dominates list of easiest markets to find a home, with Fort Myers at the top with nearly 38 for sale listings for every 1,000 households
– Easiest markets are healthy and growing with abundant supply of homes

SANTA CLARA, Calif.Feb. 18, 2020 /PRNewswire/ — The nation’s record low housing inventory is making shopping for a home in Buffalo and Rochester, N.Y.Columbus, Ohio, and Salt Lake City feel more like the tech hubs of San Francisco, Silicon Valley and Seattle, according to a new analysis issued today by realtor.com® that ranks the toughest and easiest markets to find a home.

Based on the analysis, San Jose, Calif., led the list of toughest markets to buy a home with four listings per 1,000 homeowner households. San Jose is followed in rank order by San FranciscoRochester and Buffalo, N.Y., and Seattle, which had an average of 5.2, 6.1, 7.1 and 7.2 for sale homes per 1,000 households, respectively. This compares to the national average of 16 listings per thousand owner-occupied homes.

At the other end of the spectrum, the top 20 easiest markets to buy a home had an average of 22 for sale listings per 1,000 households. Fort Myers, Fla., topped the list of easiest markets to buy with nearly 38 listings per 1,000 households. It was followed by two other Florida markets — Miami/Fort Lauderdale with 31.8 listings per 1,000 households and Deltona/Daytona Beach/Ormond at 30.9 listings per 1,000 households. Bridgeport/Stamford/Norwalk, Conn., with 29.7 listings per 1,000 households, and North Port/Sarasota/Bradenton with 25.8 listings per 1,000 households, rounded out the top five easiest markets to buy a home.

“While the nation’s housing supply continues to hit new lows just in time for the spring home-buying season, local market differences remain,” said realtor.com® Chief Economist Danielle Hale. “Although the toughest list is sprinkled with some of the markets you expect, others may be a surprise — they represent markets where housing is still affordable, but quality of life makes them attractive markets, especially for first-time buyers.”

Hale added, “We also found that ‘easiest’ doesn’t mean that a market is struggling. Buyers searching in easier markets generally benefit from a combination of strong availability of homes for-sale and, with some exceptions, healthy, yet more moderate price growth.”

To determine the toughest and easiest markets to find a home, realtor.com® looked at the  density of home listings in each market relative to the available stock of owned homes in the area and compared that to the number of active listings in a market per 1,000 households during the fourth quarter of 2019.

Toughest Markets to Find a Home
The top 20 toughest markets include a diverse geographic mix of larger established metros and up-and-comers where housing is still relatively affordable. They are concentrated in three regions of the country — eight metros from the West, six from the Midwest and six from the Northeast. None of the markets are located in the South, which dominates the list of top 20 easiest markets to find a home.

California led the national list of toughest markets, with six of the top 20 toughest markets coming from the state. Ohio followed with three markets — ColumbusCincinnati and Akron — making the top 20 toughest markets list.

The scarcity of homes is reflected in the market prices, and the trend in most of the toughest markets is toward even fewer homes for sale. The average median listing price for the top 20 toughest markets was $480,830 in January, 40 percent higher than the average median price of the top 100 largest markets. In addition, 17 of the top 20 toughest markets began 2020 with double-digit annual declines in available inventory, with a handful of markets seeing more than a 30 percent drop, including San JoseSan FranciscoSeattleSalt Lake City and San Diego.

Realtor.com®‘s ranking of the top 20 toughest markets to find a home

Rank

Metro

Listings
Per 1000
Households

Jan. 2020
Active
Listing
Count
YoY

Jan. 2020
Median
Listing Price

Jan. 2020
Median
Listing
Price YoY

1

San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, Calif.

4

-37%

$1,099,550

10%

2

San Francisco-Oakland-Hayward, Calif.

5.2

-30%

$907,550

10%

3

Buffalo-Cheektowaga-Niagara Falls, N.Y.

6.1

-16%

$197,950

10%

4

Rochester, N.Y.

7.1

-21%

$218,450

15%

5

Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, Wash.

7.2

-32%

$599,675

6%

6

Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, Wis.

7.7

-13%

$287,500

6%

7

Columbus, Ohio

8.1

-9%

$285,000

13%

8

Salt Lake City, Utah

8.3

-39%

$459,500

14%

9

Boston-Cambridge-Newton, Mass.-N.H.

8.4

-23%

$590,000

10%

10

Springfield, Mass.

8.6

-20%

$277,500

11%

11

Harrisburg-Carlisle, Pa.

8.7

-28%

$242,075

11%

12

San Diego-Carlsbad, Calif.

8.8

-34%

$734,550

11%

13

Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, D.C.-Va.-M.-W.Va.

8.9

-23%

$479,950

11%

14

Oxnard-Thousand Oaks-Ventura, Calif.

9

-23%

$827,525

18%

15

Grand Rapids-Wyoming, Mich.

9.1

-9%

$297,950

7%

16

Madison, Wis.

9.1

-11%

$352,500

3%

17

Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim, Calif.*

9.2

-19%

$843,974

17%

18

Sacramento–Roseville–Arden-Arcade, Calif.

9.2

-28%

$500,000

11%

19

Cincinnati, Ohio-Ky.-Ind.

9.3

-24%

$267,450

12%

20

Akron, Ohio

9.4

-6%

$147,950

-2%

Easiest Markets to Find a Home
The South dominates the list of easy places to find a home. Florida metros claimed four of the top five spots and seven of the top 20 easiest markets to find a home. Connecticut has three markets represented, while South Carolina and Texas each have two.

The average median listing price for the top 20 easiest markets was $356,345 in January 2020, 3 percent higher than the average median price of the nation’s 100 largest markets. Despite having a good supply of inventory, asking prices are growing and the number of for sale listings is dropping. For instance, the Fort Myers metro saw asking prices grow 8 percent year-over-year in January, while inventory declined 22 percent during the same period, which was in line with national market demand.

Realtor.com®‘s ranking of the top 20 easiest markets to find a home

Rank

Metro

Listings
Per 1000
Households

Jan. 2020
Active
Listing
Count
YoY

Jan. 2020
Median
Listing Price

Jan. 2020
Median
Listing
Price
YoY

1

Cape Coral-Fort Myers, Fla.

37.9

-22%

$325,045

8%

2

Miami-Fort Lauderdale-West Palm Beach, Fla.

31.8

-11%

$413,050

5%

3

Deltona-Daytona Beach-Ormond Beach, Fla.

30.9

-13%

$288,300

0%

4

Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk, Conn.

29.7

-16%

$712,050

-2%

5

North Port-Sarasota-Bradenton, Fla.

25.8

-20%

$375,050

7%

6

Jacksonville, Fla.

21.8

-10%

$317,545

5%

7

Charleston-North Charleston, S.C.

21.7

-13%

$422,500

7%

8

Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, Va.-N.C.

20.9

-26%

$310,000

11%

9

Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise, Nev.

19.9

-6%

$323,532

3%

10

New York-Newark-Jersey City, N.Y.-N.J.-Pa.

19.5

-8%

$550,050

6%

11

Baton Rouge, La.

19.2

-1%

$239,950

0%

12

Des Moines-West Des Moines, Iowa

19.1

3%

$263,950

-8%

13

Houston-The Woodlands-Sugar Land, Texas

18.4

-5%

$304,105

-2%

14

San Antonio-New Braunfels, Texas

18.2

8%

$287,795

-1%

15

Lakeland-Winter Haven, Fla.

17.6

-9%

$235,325

5%

16

Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, Conn.

17.4

-19%

$275,000

6%

17

New Haven-Milford, Conn.

16.8

-21%

$259,950

0%

18

Urban Honolulu, Hawaii

16.7

-9%

$655,050

-6%

19

Palm Bay-Melbourne-Titusville, Fla.

16.5

-24%

$299,950

6%

20

Greenville-Anderson-Mauldin, S.C.

16.4

-3%

$268,700

2%

Methodology
Households refer specifically to owner-occupied household counts sourced from Claritas estimates based on Census data. Listing per 1,000 households calculations were performed using data from Q4 2019. The latest listing price and active listings year-over-year data are from January 2020.

About realtor.com®
Realtor.com® makes buying, selling and living in homes easier and more rewarding for everyone. Realtor.com® pioneered the world of digital real estate 20 years ago, and today through its website and mobile apps is a trusted source for the information, tools and professional expertise that help people move confidently through every step of their home journey. Using proprietary data science and machine learning technology, realtor.com® pairs buyers and sellers with local agents in their market, helping take the guesswork out of buying and selling a home. For professionals, realtor.com® is a trusted provider of consumer connections and branding solutions that help them succeed in today’s on-demand world. Realtor.com® is operated by News Corp [Nasdaq: NWS, NWSA] [ASX: NWS, NWSLV] subsidiary Move, Inc. under a perpetual license from the National Association of REALTORS®. For more information, visit realtor.com®.

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SOURCE realtor.com

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