Looking for a Newly Constructed Home? You Have Good Timing
After several years of a frenzied housing market characterized by many more home buyers than sellers, builders may finally be taking note.
The number of newly constructed homes for sale and sold shot up 6.2 from September to October, according to the seasonally adjusted numbers in a joint report by the U.S. Census Bureau and U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. They jumped 18.7% annually.
“It’s pretty good news. Sales are up pretty strong,” says Chief Economist Danielle Hale of realtor.com®. “Homeowners can potentially trade up to a new home and put their current home up for sale. That would increase the number of existing homes for sale.”
That’s a boon for first-time buyers and other wannabe home buyers on a budget. Existing homes, i.e., those that have previously been lived in, are usually less expensive than newly built abodes.
For example, new homes are about 26.6% more costly, at $312,800, than existing homes, at a median $247,000, according to the most recent National Association of Realtors® report.
Monthly median new home prices dipped a little, by about 3.7, hitting $312,800 in October. But that’s up 3.3% from the same month a year ago.
The number of more affordable residences under $200,000 stayed steady, at just about 13 of all of the new construction, according to the report. The bulk of the new abodes, 53, were between $200,000 and $399,999. About 17 were between $400,000 and $499,999 and 17 were also a cool $500,000 and up.
The biggest increase in the number of new homes on the market were in the Northeast, where they jumped 30.2 month-over-month and 64.7 year-over-year. That was followed by the Midwest, which saw a 17.9% monthly rise and a 16.2% annual increase.
Next up was the West, which experienced a 6.4% monthly bump and 20.1% surge from October 2016, and the South, where the number of new homes went up 1.3% month-over-month and 14 year-over-year. The South was likely hampered by Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, which temporarily halted construction.