List of 189 Declining Markets Qtr-Over-Qtr
47% Of US Housing Markets
Declined Qtr-Over-Qtr
Currently, 189 markets (47% of all U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines in property values compared to the prior Quarter.
For the same period last year 187 markets (46%) saw Q-O-Q declines. While the ‘total’ number of declining markets are roughly the same,
List of 104 Declining Markets Qtr-Over-Qtr
26% Of US Housing Markets
Declined Qtr-Over-Qtr
Currently, 104 markets (26% of all U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines compared to the prior Quarter.
In the previous quarter, 73 markets (18%) declined.
148 markets (37%) saw Q-O-Q declines in the year ago period. (Because of possible seasonal variations,
List of 58 Declining Markets Year-Over-Year
58 U.S. Markets Lost Value Year-Over-Year
Currently, 58 markets (14% of ALL U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines over the last year.
In the previous quarter, 72 markets had annual home price declines.
(See the entire list of declining markets below.)
In addition to the list of declining cities below,
Big Movers Report
Every quarter we scan our Hot Market Finder and State Radar tools to see which markets are rising or falling the most.
This ‘Big Mover’ list often foretells major market changes.
Here’s what it looked like for the STATE level:
We compare the current Master Score “percentile”
List of 72 Declining Markets Year-Over-Year
72 U.S. Markets Lost Value Year-Over-Year
Currently, 72 markets (18% of ALL U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines over the last year.
In the previous quarter, 61 markets had annual home price declines (they didn’t even keep up with inflation).
(See the entire list of declining markets below.)
In addition to the list of declining cities below,
[MAP] Ranked County Real Estate Markets
Check out this new county-level real estate map for the entire U.S.
We’re now able to score micro markets (Counties, Zip Codes and Neighborhoods) and RANK them against all the other counties, zip codes and neighborhoods nationwide.
RED = the top 10% of all counties nationwide.
ORANGE = the 80 –
List of 61 Declining Markets Year-Over-Year
61 U.S. Markets Lost Value Year-Over-Year
Currently, 61 markets (15% of ALL U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines over the last year.
In the previous quarter, 68 markets had annual home price declines (they didn’t even keep up with inflation).
(See the entire list of declining markets below.)
In addition to the list of declining cities below,
List of 146 Declining Markets Quarter-Over-Quarter
List of the 146 DECLINING
U.S. Real Estate Markets
Currently, 146 markets (36% of all U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines over the last three months. In the previous quarter, 187 markets (46%) had Quarter-Over-Quarter declines.
‘Quarterly’ home price comparisons are more volatile than ‘Annual’ but also act as early indicators,
9 Hottest COUNTIES for Real Estate Investing
Here’s another quick screenshot of our new micro maps, this time of the 9 hottest COUNTIES for real estate.
See the Latest Real Estate Market Report here.
There are more than 3,000 counties in the U.S. Many are strong investment markets right now.
Some of these counties are just now emerging,
22 Weakest COUNTIES for Real Estate Investing
This quick screenshot shows the weakest COUNTIES for real estate in the U.S.
Note how they’re widely dispersed across the U.S. (The 22 weakest counties are in 17 different states).
That’s not a good sign for any real estate investor in today’s markets.
Hottest Zip Codes for Real Estate
BRAND NEW!
We’re now able to filter through thousands of zip codes and rank them in a single click. It may be the most powerful tool we’ve created in the last 12 years.
All EXISTING PRO members get this new zip code tool (at no extra charge).
If you’re not already a member,
Market Breadth Stable Year-over-Year
68 U.S. Markets Lost Value Year-over-Year
Currently, 68 markets (17% of ALL U.S. real estate) experienced ‘real’ (inflation adjusted) declines over the last year.
In the previous quarter, 74 markets had annual home price declines (they didn’t even keep up with inflation).
(See the entire list of declining markets below.)
In addition to the list of declining cities below,