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Real Estate

2026 Real Estate Market Forecast and Investing Outlook

July 5, 2026By MLS Campus6 min read
Housing Market · 2026 Outlook
2026 Real Estate Market Forecast

Where are home prices, mortgage rates, and sales headed in 2026 — and is it a good time to buy, invest, or start a real estate career? Here is the data-backed outlook, drawn from the latest NAR, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac reports.

Last updated: July 2026. Housing figures change frequently — this page reflects the most recent NAR, Fannie Mae, and Freddie Mac data and is refreshed as new reports are released.
Quick answer

As of mid-2026, the U.S. median existing-home price is about $429,300 (up ~1.3% year over year), the 30-year fixed mortgage rate is in the mid-6% range (~6.4%), and inventory has risen to about 4.5 months of supply. For the rest of 2026, forecasters expect modest price growth (roughly +0.6% to +4%) and rates staying in the mid-6% range — a slower, more balanced market than the pandemic years, not a crash.

The 2026 Housing Market at a Glance

Metric Latest reading (mid-2026) 2026 outlook
Median existing-home price ~$429,300 (+1.3% YoY) Modest growth (+0.6% to +4%)
30-year fixed mortgage rate ~6.4% Stays in the mid-6% range
Housing inventory ~1.55M units / 4.5 months supply Rising — more buyer leverage
Existing-home sales Holding steady ~5 million for 2026 (up from ~4.8M in 2025)

Sources: NAR Existing-Home Sales, Fannie Mae Housing Forecast, and the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (2026).

What Is Driving the 2026 Housing Market?

Several forces are shaping 2026. The rate lock-in effect is easing but still real: millions of homeowners hold mortgages below 4% and are reluctant to sell and re-borrow near 6.5%, which kept resale inventory tight for years. That is finally loosening — supply has climbed to about 4.5 months as more owners list and builders add stock. On the demand side, millennials and older Gen Z are moving through their prime home-buying years, putting a durable floor under demand. The net effect is a market being pulled toward balance: more choice for buyers, but not the price collapse some headlines predict.

Will Home Prices Rise or Fall in 2026?

The short answer: most major forecasters expect prices to keep rising, but slowly — not fall. The median existing-home price has now posted annual gains for 35 straight months. Here is how the leading 2026 forecasts compare:

Forecaster 2026 home-price forecast 2026 mortgage-rate forecast
NAR +4% ~6.0%
Fannie Mae +3.2% ~6.3–6.4%
Mortgage Bankers Assn. (MBA) +0.6% ~6.5%

The spread — from nearly flat (MBA) to +4% (NAR) — reflects genuine uncertainty, but the consensus is continued, slower appreciation rather than a decline.

Where Are Mortgage Rates Headed in 2026?

Mortgage rates are the single biggest swing factor for affordability. According to Fannie Mae and the Freddie Mac survey, the 30-year fixed is expected to stay in the mid-6% range through 2026 — Fannie Mae near 6.3–6.4%, the MBA around 6.5%, and NAR closer to 6.0%. That is well below the 2023 peak but above pre-2022 lows, keeping affordability tight and rewarding buyers who shop rates and sellers who price realistically.

Buyer’s or Seller’s Market in 2026?

Professionals gauge this with months of supply: under 5 months typically favors sellers, around 6 months is balanced, and higher favors buyers. At roughly 4.5 months in mid-2026, the national market still tilts slightly toward sellers — but far less than the ultra-competitive 2–3 month market of 2021–2022. In practice, well-priced homes still sell, but buyers have regained negotiating room, inspection contingencies, and time to decide. Conditions vary sharply by state and price point, so local data matters more than the national headline.

Is Real Estate a Good Investment in 2026?

It depends on your market, your timeline, and your financing. The case for: rising inventory and steadier prices give buyers more negotiating leverage than in years, and real estate remains a proven long-term hedge. The case for caution: mid-6% rates raise carrying costs, so cash flow math is tighter on rentals. Successful 2026 investors focus on cap rates, cash flow, and local fundamentals rather than betting on rapid appreciation. See our state-level takes on investing in Texas real estate and New York real estate.

A shifting market rewards knowledgeable agents — get licensed and get ahead.

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The 2026 Market by State

National numbers hide big local differences. Here is a quick read on the states we serve, with deeper guides for each:

State 2026 snapshot Guides
Florida Stabilizing prices with rising inventory; uniquely shaped by high insurance costs and new 2026 condo reserve rules. Florida 2026 forecast
Texas Strong job and population growth; rising inventory in Austin and DFW is cooling price gains toward balance. Texas 2026 forecast
Maryland Steady demand around the D.C. metro; higher rates are pressuring affordability for first-time buyers. Maryland forecast · MD trends
Virginia Tight inventory in Northern Virginia; more balanced conditions elsewhere in the state. Hottest VA markets · VA inventory playbook
New York A high-value, resilient metro market; co-op and condo rules add nuance for buyers and investors. Investing in NY · NYC co-op strategy

What a Shifting Market Means for New Agents

A more balanced market is actually good news for new agents. Rising inventory means more listings to work, steadier prices mean less frenzied bidding, and buyers who need guidance through higher rates value a knowledgeable agent. The pandemic-era market rewarded anyone with a license; a normalizing 2026 market rewards agents who bring real expertise — which is exactly what a strong pre-license education builds. If you have been waiting for the right time to enter the business, a steadier market is a smart entry point.

Ready to build your real estate career in 2026? Start with MLS Campus.

Start Your Real Estate License →

Frequently Asked Questions

Will home prices drop in 2026?
Most forecasts say no. NAR (+4%), Fannie Mae (+3.2%), and the MBA (+0.6%) all project modest price growth for 2026, not a decline — though gains are far slower than the pandemic era.
Where are mortgage rates headed in 2026?
Forecasters expect the 30-year fixed to stay in the mid-6% range through 2026 — Fannie Mae near 6.3 to 6.4%, the MBA around 6.5%, and NAR closer to 6.0%.
Is 2026 a good time to invest in real estate?
It can be. Rising inventory and steadier prices give buyers more leverage than in recent years, but mid-6% rates raise carrying costs, so focus on cap rates, cash flow, and local fundamentals rather than rapid appreciation.
Is 2026 a good year to become a real estate agent?
Yes for agents who bring value. A more balanced market with rising inventory and steady sales creates real opportunity, and buyers navigating higher rates need knowledgeable guidance.
Which states have the strongest housing markets in 2026?
Growth states such as Texas continue to see strong demand, while metro markets in Virginia, Maryland, and New York remain resilient. Local fundamentals vary widely — see our state guides.
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