January 14, 2026
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U.S. Existing‑Home Sales in 2025 Remain at 30‑Year Low Despite Late‑Year Rate Dip

New National Association of Realtors data show U.S. existing‑home sales totaled 4.06 million in 2025, essentially unchanged from 2024 and the lowest level since 1995, as record‑high prices and mortgage rates near 7% for much of the year kept many buyers out. The national median existing‑home price rose another 1.7% to $414,400—marking a 30‑month streak of year‑over‑year price gains—while December’s median of $405,400 set a record for that month. Mortgage rates eased late in the year, with the average 30‑year rate falling to 6.15% by December, helping push December sales to a 4.35 million annualized pace, up 5.1% from November and the fastest in nearly three years. Inventory ticked up to 1.18 million homes, a 3.3‑month supply that is still far below the 5–6 months considered a balanced market, reflecting more than a decade of underbuilding and a lock‑in effect from owners sitting on lower‑rate mortgages. The article notes that the Trump administration has floated measures such as 50‑year mortgages, a ban on large institutional homebuyers and a $200 billion mortgage‑bond purchase program to lower borrowing costs, but economists cited say these would likely have only limited impact on the structural shortage and affordability crisis.

Housing Market and Affordability U.S. Economy

📌 Key Facts

  • Existing‑home sales were 4.06 million in 2025, essentially flat from 2024 and the lowest level since 1995.
  • The 2025 national median existing‑home price rose 1.7% to $414,400; December’s median was $405,400, a record for that month.
  • The average 30‑year mortgage rate ended 2025 at 6.15%, down from around 7% a year earlier, helping December sales rise 5.1% month‑over‑month to a 4.35 million annual rate.
  • There were 1.18 million unsold homes at the end of December, equal to a 3.3‑month supply, still well below the pre‑pandemic norm of roughly 2 million and a 5–6‑month supply.
  • NAR’s Lawrence Yun forecasts a 14% jump in existing‑home sales in 2026, more optimistic than other economists’ projections of 1.7%–9% growth.

📊 Relevant Data

Net international migration accounted for 2.8 million people, or 84% of the U.S. population increase of 3.3 million between 2023 and 2024, contributing to increased housing demand.

Migration Drives Highest Population Growth in Decades — U.S. Census Bureau

In Q3 2025, the homeownership rate was 74.2% for non-Hispanic White households, 45.7% for Black or African American households, and 61.8% for Asian, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander households.

Q3 2025, Housing and Homeownership: Homeownership Rate — FRED Economic Data (Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis)

In 2024, mortgage denial rates were 21% for Black applicants and 17% for Hispanic applicants, compared to 11% for White applicants and 9% for Asian applicants.

Black Homeownership Rate Sees Largest Annual Increase Among Racial Groups But Still Trails White Homeownership Rate — National Association of Realtors

Immigration accounted for up to 100% of housing demand growth in some U.S. regions between 2021 and 2024, contributing to elevated rental prices and broader affordability pressures.

New HUD Study Exposes Impact of Biden Border Crisis on Housing — U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

Challenges in housing construction include regulatory barriers, shortages of construction workers, and rising building material and land costs, contributing to the ongoing supply shortage.

Four Key Findings from the 2025 State of the Nation's Housing Report — Enterprise Community Partners

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January 14, 2026
9:07 PM
2025 home sales stuck at 30-year low
PBS News by Alex Veiga, Associated Press