Washington, D.C. Housing Supply Rose 23% in June—One of the Biggest Jumps on Record
Redfin reports inventory is increasing in the nation’s capital faster than it is nationwide partly because some former federal workers are trying to offload their homes
Pending home sales in
The homes that are selling in the nation’s capital are taking longer to do so than in the past; the typical D.C. home that went under contract in June did so in 36 days, up from 26 days a year earlier. That’s one reason total inventory is rising; stale listings are piling up. Additionally, fewer homes are selling above asking price: About one-third (
Widespread layoffs of federal employees and budget cuts for programs that rely on government funding have reshaped
“The local market is recalibrating and the pace of sales is slowing, partly due to federal job cuts,” said Marshall Park, Redfin’s senior market manager in
Move-in ready, fairly priced single-family homes in desirable locations are still selling quickly with multiple offers, Park said. It’s also worth noting that the majority of D.C. residents don’t work for the federal government and their finances aren’t directly dependent on the current administration.
Rising inventory and flat sales are reflective of a larger nationwide trend, though the number of homes for sale is rising faster in D.C. than nationally. In the
Inventory is increasing and demand is lackluster nationwide for several reasons. One, record-high home prices are encouraging homeowners to sell and discouraging house hunters from buying. Two, economic uncertainty about things like tariffs and a potential recession are scaring off would-be buyers from making a major purchase. And three, the mortgage-rate lock-in effect has started to ease, as people who bought with ultra-low rates are starting to sell their homes.
Inventory is likely rising faster in
D.C. Home-Sale Prices Are Starting to Fall
Home prices in
Prices are still rising on a year-over-year basis. The median home-sale price in D.C. was up over
On the rental side, prices are holding up, with the median D.C. asking rent rising
New Listings Are Stagnating
While the total pool of housing supply in
Some would-be sellers in D.C. are opting against putting their homes on the market because they’re taking note of the buyer’s market. The slight decline in D.C. listings reflects a trend that is happening nationwide, though D.C.’s decline is smaller. In the
If new listings in
June 2025 Housing Market Highlights: |
||
|
||
June 2025 |
Year-over-year change |
|
Median sale price |
|
|
Pending home sales |
5,818 |
- |
Homes sold |
5,553 |
|
New listings |
6,328 |
|
Total homes for sale (active listings) |
20,016 |
|
Months of supply |
2.4 |
0.5 |
Median days on market |
36 |
10 |
Share of homes that sold above final list price |
|
-12.1 pts. |
Average sale-to-final-list-price ratio |
|
-1.1 pts. |
Pending sales that fell out of contract, as % of overall pending sales |
2.1 pts. |
To view the full report, including charts, please visit:
https://www.redfin.com/news/washington-dc-housing-supply-increases
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Source: Redfin