From HousingWire:
NAR March existing home sales hit slowest pace since 2009
After rising in February, existing home sales slowed again in March, according to data released Monday by the National Association of Realtors (NAR).
Existing home sales fell 3.6% month-over-month in March to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.98 million. Year-over-year this represents a 1.0% decline and the slowest pace of March home sales since 2009.
According to NAR’s chief economist Lawrence Yun, lower consumer confidence and softer job growth are to blame for the decline in sales pace.
As the pace of home sales slowed, inventory had the chance to accumulate, rising 3.0% from a month prior, finishing March with 1.36 million units for sale, representing a 4.1 months’ supply at the current sales pace. Compared to a year prior, inventory was up 2.3% in March.
“Inventory remains a major constraint on the market,” Yun said in a statement. “The inventory-to-sales ratio, or supply-to-demand ratio, is below historical norms. An additional 300,000 to 500,000 homes for sale would help bring the market closer to normal conditions and allow consumers to make purchase decisions without feeling rushed.”
Yun attributed the 1.4% annual increase in the median existing home sales price, which hit $408,800 in March, to the constrained inventory. This increase represents the 33rd consecutive month of annual price increases.
While the pace of home sales slowed in March, the median time on market for properties declined month-over-month dropping from 47 days in February to 41 days in March. Annually, this is up 11 days from the 36 days recorded in March 2025. The share of first time homebuyers remained flat on a yearly basis, but declined two percentage points to 32% in March, while the share of all cash transactions also fell on a monthly basis, dropping from 31% a month ago to 27% in March, up from 26% in March 2025.
Regionally, the sales pace for existing homes fell month-over-month in all four regions, with the Northeast (430,000 units) recording the largest decline at 8.5%, followed by the Midwest (-4.2% for a sales pace of 920,000 units ), the South (-3.1% for a sales pace of 1.86 million units) and the West (-1.3% for a sales pace of 770,000 units). On an annual basis, existing home sales were down in the Northeast (12.2%) and the Midwest (3.2%), but up in the South (2.2%) and the West (1.3%).

