Are Home Prices Really Dropping? Why National Headlines Are the Wrong Place to Look

April 21, 20265 min read

Are Home Prices Really Dropping? Why National Headlines Are the Wrong Place to Look

The Question Everyone Is Asking and the Answer That Actually Helps

Are home prices dropping? It is the question showing up in buyer conversations and news feeds everywhere following a data point that generated significant media attention. The First American Home Price Index showed a 0.2 percent decline in home prices in February compared to the year before, marking the first year-over-year drop since 2012.

So yes, on a national level prices have technically dipped. That is a real and statistically notable data point. But here is where most of the coverage fails the people who actually need useful information to make real decisions. The national number is not a local number and treating it like one is one of the most dangerous things a homebuyer can do when navigating one of the largest financial decisions of their life.

Why the National Average Tells You Almost Nothing Useful

Real estate has never been a national market. It has always been a collection of local markets each operating according to its own supply and demand dynamics, its own inventory levels, its own buyer competition, and its own price trajectory. A national average aggregates all of those different realities into a single number that accurately describes none of them and is directly applicable to almost none of the specific decisions buyers and sellers are actually trying to make.

Right now the gap between markets is wider than it has been in years and that makes the national average even less useful as a guide to local conditions than it would normally be.

What the Local Data Is Actually Showing

Cities like Las Vegas, Seattle, Cincinnati, and Washington DC have seen active listings jump more than 20 percent year over year. More supply entering those markets means more competition among sellers, longer days on market, and genuine downward pressure on prices in those specific areas. If you are buying in one of those markets right now the data is genuinely and meaningfully working in your favor and the negotiating leverage you have is real and usable with the right strategy.

San Francisco, Chicago, Miami, and Orlando are telling a completely different story. Active listings in those markets are actually lower than they were a year ago. Less inventory means more competition among buyers, sellers who have little reason to make significant concessions, and prices that are holding firm or continuing to move higher. The softness that the national headline implies is largely absent on the ground in these markets and buyers who arrive expecting seller flexibility based on what they read nationally will be surprised and underprepared.

As Brian Faeth explains the same country produces completely different outcomes depending on where you are. A headline that says prices are dropping does not tell you anything useful if you are buying in a market where inventory is tighter than it was a year ago and sellers have no financial reason to negotiate meaningfully.

Why This Distinction Matters So Much for Buyers

The stakes of using the wrong information in a real estate decision are not abstract. They show up in offer strategies that are miscalibrated to actual market conditions, in expectations that do not align with what sellers will accept, in timing decisions made on false assumptions about where local prices are heading, and in missed opportunities that existed but were never recognized because the buyer was operating on national data rather than local reality.

A buyer in a high-inventory market who hesitates because the national story sounds uncertain may be passing on genuine leverage that exists right now and that will not last indefinitely. A buyer in a tight-inventory market who expects seller concessions because the national narrative talks about price declines will write offers that get rejected and wonder why the market is not cooperating with what they read.

In both cases the problem is the same. Local decisions being made with national information that does not apply to the actual market where the purchase is happening.

What Actually Matters for Your Decision

The questions that produce useful answers are not national ones. They are specific. What is inventory doing in the market where you are looking right now? How long are homes sitting before going under contract at the price points you are targeting? Are sellers making concessions or holding firm on the types of properties you are interested in? What do recent comparable sales tell you about where values actually are in the specific zip codes and property types relevant to your search?

Those questions have specific answers that are available right now and those answers are what should be shaping your strategy, your offer, and your timing. Not a national index that averages together dozens of markets with nothing in common.

As Brian Faeth points out what actually matters is your market, your zip code, your price range, and your property type. Everything else is context at best and noise at worst.

Get a Straight Answer Based on What the Data Actually Says Where You Are

Brian Faeth reviews local market data on a consistent and ongoing basis and works with buyers to understand what is actually happening in their specific market rather than what the national narrative implies. The goal is straightforward. Make decisions based on accurate local information rather than headlines about a market that may not apply to your situation at all.

Reach out to Brian Faeth to find out what is actually happening where you are buying right now and what it means for your offer strategy, your negotiating position, and your timing.


Sources

FirstAmerican.com NAR.realtor CNBC.com Zillow.com MortgageNewsDaily.com

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