Existing-Home Sales Hit Highest Level Since December
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NAR's May 2026 Existing-Home Sales report is out. Here's what the numbers show and how to use them with clients this week.
Existing-home sales just hit their highest level since December, up 3.2% month-over-month and year-over-year to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.17 million.
Prices reached a record high for May even as affordability improved across every region.
Here’s what NAR’s May 2026 Existing-Home Sales report shows and how to use it with clients this week.
What the Numbers Show
Existing-home sales rose 3.2% from both last month and a year ago, landing at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.17 million in May. That’s the highest sales pace since December, with momentum showing up in three of four regions month-over-month and year-over-year.
The national numbers:
$429,300 median price, up 1.3% YoY, a record high for May
35th consecutive month of year-over-year price increases
1.55 million units of inventory, up 3.3% from April, 4.5-month supply
Housing Affordability Index at 105.6, up from 97.5 a year ago
6.44% average 30-year fixed rate, down from 6.82% a year ago
35% of sales to first-time buyers, up from 30% a year ago
1% distressed sales, down from 3% a year ago
Even with rates ticking up slightly from April, they’re still running nearly 40 basis points below where they were a year ago, and income gains are outpacing home price growth in most of the country.
That combination pushed the Affordability Index up more than eight points year-over-year First-time buyer share climbing to 35% is a direct reflection of that: when affordability improves, buyers who’ve been sitting out start shopping around.
Distressed sales sitting at just 1% is worth flagging for any client who’s been asking whether a wave of foreclosures is coming. The numbers say no.
What to Watch
Not every corner of this report is pointing in the same direction, and those nuances are worth knowing before you walk into a conversation.
The regional splits:
Northeast: sales down 8.0% YoY despite a 4.2% price increase; median price $534,900
Midwest: sales up 6.4% MoM and 2.0% YoY; median price $336,300
South: sales up 3.2% MoM and 5.9% YoY; median price $373,100
West: sales flat MoM, up 5.6% YoY; the only region where prices dipped YoY, down 0.7% to $625,900
Other signals to track:
Median days on market: 29 days, down from 32 last month but up from 27 a year ago
Investor and second-home buyer share at 14%, down from 17% a year ago
Cash sales at 25%, down from 27% a year ago
The West is the one region where the price story flipped. Sales are up year-over-year, but the median price slipped 0.7%, the only regional decline in the report.
The Northeast is the inverse: prices are up 4.2% but sales are down 8% from a year ago, suggesting buyers in that market are still running into a price wall even when they want to move.
Days on market are up year-over-year from 27 to 29 as inventory continues to build. It’s not a red flag yet, but it’s a data point to keep in your back pocket when sellers ask about timing.
Housing Market - June 10, 2026 - Sarah Lentz
https://nowbam.com/existing-home-sales-hit-highest-level-since-december/
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