03/27/2026
Everyone sees this and thinks “crash”…
That’s not what’s happening.
This is a shift in leverage.
For the first time in years:
• Buyers can negotiate
• Inspections are back
• Sellers may need to contribute
That’s a normal market.
The real issue? Affordability.
Rates above 6% are freezing demand.
👉 If you’re a homeowner and the property’s becoming a burden… this window matters.
👉 If you’re an investor… deals are starting to show up again.
We’re seeing more sellers choose certainty over waiting.
If you’re even considering selling, comment “OFFER” or DM me.
No pressure—just clarity on your options.
The U.S. housing market just hit a milestone nobody was expecting.
Home sellers now outnumber buyers by 630,000. The largest gap ever recorded.
Think about what that actually means.
For the last several years buyers have been the ones getting crushed. Bidding wars. Waived inspections. Homes selling $50,000 over asking before the weekend was over. Sellers held every single card.
That era is ending.
When sellers outnumber buyers by 630,000 the entire dynamic shifts. Sellers start competing for buyers instead of the other way around. Price reductions become more common. Homes sit longer. Contingencies come back. Negotiations happen again.
For buyers who have been sitting on the sidelines watching this market with frustration, this is the most encouraging data point in years.
But here's the reality check.
More sellers than buyers does not automatically mean prices are crashing. It means the pace of appreciation slows. It means you might actually get an inspection again. It means a seller might contribute to your closing costs for the first time since 2020.
A balanced market is what a healthy housing market is supposed to look like.
The missing ingredient is still affordability. Mortgage rates sitting above 6% are keeping millions of qualified buyers on the sidelines regardless of how much inventory exists. Until rates come down meaningfully or prices correct significantly the demand side of this equation stays suppressed.
More sellers than buyers is a start.
But the buyers need to actually be able to afford the houses for this market to truly turn.