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Median home prices are getting more expensive as the pandemic winds down - Fox Business

Houses in the U.S. sold for a median "all-time high" of $344,625 on April 18, according to Redfin.

The discount real estate brokerage released an update to its housing market report on Friday, which suggested that current price tags on residential properties are a result of a competitive market and supply shortage.

Redfin’s reported median for April 2021 is 18% higher than the home sale price median the brokerage recorded during the same four-week period (ending on April 18) last year – $290,668.

BIDDING WARS HEAT UP AMID RED-HOT HOUSING MARKET

While the median home buying prices went up by nearly one-fifth in the 400-plus metro areas Redfin analyzes, the median asking price home sellers were trying to get was $356,175 – which the brokerage also considers an all-time high. During the height of the pandemic in April 2020, asking prices hit a notable low of $299,275.

Twelve months after asking prices for U.S. homes took a dive, Americans are reportedly buying up properties quicker than they have in the past.

THE TOP 10 US HOUSING MARKETS

By April 18, 2021, homes that were sold in the last four weeks had been on the market for a median of 21 days, which Redfin says is the "shortest time on market since 2012." Compared to the same period in 2020, purchased homes were on the market for a median of 37 days.

Fifty-eight percent of buyers nabbed a new home within the first two weeks of the property being listed. Meanwhile, another 46% of buyers secured a new home within the first week of the property’s listing.

HOUSING SHORTAGE CROPS UP AS MILLENNIALS START BUYING HOUSES

Although some sellers have been willing to part ways with their home as the coronavirus pandemic winds down, Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather says many homeowners aren’t rushing to sell.

"With a third of American adults now fully vaccinated and still hardly any homes being listed for sale," Fairweather offered in a statement about the report. "Homeowners are staying put because if they move and buy another home they will face a very competitive housing market as buyers, and they don't need to sell to take advantage of record low mortgage rates. They can just refinance their current home." 

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Houses in the U.S. sold for a median "all-time high" of $344,625 on April 18, according to Redfin. (iStock)

He added that a lumber shortage has made it harder for building companies to keep up with American demand for new homes. This logistic issue combined with fewer sellers listing their homes has reportedly driven up purchase prices.

In Fairweather’s own words: "Without more homeowners listing, buyers are scrambling to compete for the limited number of homes on the market, which continues to drive prices up to new heights."

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Redfin isn’t alone in suggesting there is a housing shortage. An analysis from federal home loan mortgage company Freddie Mac estimated that the U.S. was short 3.8 million starter homes by the end of 2020.

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