Relief in sight for homebuyers in high-priced West Coast cities

It's been tough being a homebuyer on the West Coast. Prices have been surging for years as house hunters fight for the few available listings. Now the tide could be shifting.

As sellers come off the sidelines to lock in gains, they're starting to boost inventory. New data by brokerage Redfin Corp. shows that supply in several U.S. markets is rising in the places that need it the most, like Seattle, Portland, Ore., and San Jose, Calif.

West Coast prices
A resident walks in front of townhomes in the Pulte Homes Inc. Pepper Lane development in San Jose, California, U.S. Photographer: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg

The rise in inventory in these West Coast housing markets has slowed the torrid price increases in the region and, in turn, in the U.S. as a whole, where prices grew at their slowest pace since December 2016.

The cooling includes the pace of sales as well. While sales increased in June in many of the nation’s biggest markets, including Chicago (9.8%), Washington (5.7%) and Houston (2.4%), declines out west were so sharp they dragged the national figure down to a drop of 3.3%.

The pain isn't over. The inventory shortage is still very real in many West Coast markets — some have only a few months of supply. And if the skyrocketing trajectory of prices has eased, the increases still consistently outstrip wage growth. The median home in San Jose sold for $1.23 million in June.

Bloomberg News
Home prices Housing markets Housing inventory Purchase Redfin
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