Real Estate

Many Americans say now it’s not the best time to buy a home



Housing market cools amid prime season

Spring is supposed to be the best season for house hunters to purchase their dream home. Instead, more than half of Americans say now isn’t the right time.

A recent Gallup poll of about 1,000 U.S. adults found that just 21% of respondents believe now is a good time to buy a house. That’s the fewest ever since Gallup started taking the poll in 1978. 

“Opinions of the housing market are bleak and generally similar among all major subgroups, including by region, urbanicity, homeownership status, income, education and party identification,” Gallup said in its poll results. “Fewer Americans now than ever before believe it is a good time to buy a house.”

Gallup attributes the predominately negative view to home prices, which have been elevated for the past two years, and rising interest rates on home loans, which have more than doubled during the pandemic. The two trends have turned buying a home into a vanishing dream for millions of Americans, a recent report by Redfin shows. 

The median home sales price was $436,800 during the first quarter of 2023, according to Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis data. That compares to $433,100 during the same period a year prior, and $369,800 during the first quarter of 2021. Economists have said home prices are climbing for two reasons: Homebuilders haven’t finished enough new units to keep up with demand and homeowners have grown skittish about selling their home for fear of having to buy another property at a higher mortgage rate.


Mortgage rates driving lower housing supply, slowing market

Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve continues its year-long battle against inflation, recently raising its benchmark interest rate another quarter-point higher, which has also sent mortgage rates upward. The average interest rate on a 30-year fixed home loan hit 6.35% last week, Fed data shows, compared to 5.3% a year ago and 2.94% the year before that. The Fed’s move has caused rates for credit cards and auto loans to skyrocket as well.

“Because it is so expensive to borrow money, the demand for homes decreases and sellers are adjusting pricing to meet the velocity of the market,” Peggy Olin, CEO of real estate brokerage firm OneWorld Properties in Florida, told CBS MoneyWatch.

Instead of the typical flourish of activity from homebuyers, this spring will likely bring lower home sales and price swings “because people are less confident in the market and less able to purchase homes,” she said. 



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