Home Sales

Price, inventory, sales volume, and days on market by state. Each state shows three small bars at its center: home value, active listings, and days on market, scaled relative to the most-extreme year-over-year move across all available states for that metric. Hover for the exact numbers; click to open the state's dashboard.

Updated June 8, 2026Source: Redfin, Zillow and FHFA via FRED

Grading
Rank each state against the others. Top performers green, worst red.
Home valueActive listingsDays on marketgood directionbad direction(direction varies by metric — e.g., rising days on market is bad)

Across our coverage

Where are the most homes being sold?

  1. 1.Idaho+10.6%
  2. 2.Montana+5.4%
  3. 3.Kentucky+4.4%
  4. 4.New Hampshire+3.0%
  5. 5.Indiana+2.7%
  6. 6.Arizona+2.0%
  7. 7.Ohio-0.6%
  8. 8.Florida-0.6%
  9. 9.Minnesota-0.7%
  10. 10.Tennessee-1.3%

Homes sold · Fastest growth in monthly closings vs. the same month last year.

i

Where are the fewest homes being sold?

  1. 1.Rhode Island-21.0%
  2. 2.New York-17.2%
  3. 3.New Jersey-12.2%
  4. 4.Nebraska-11.7%
  5. 5.West Virginia-11.6%
  6. 6.Michigan-11.5%
  7. 7.Utah-11.0%
  8. 8.Connecticut-10.7%
  9. 9.Texas-8.4%
  10. 10.Massachusetts-8.1%

Homes sold · Largest drop (or slowest growth) in monthly closings vs. the same month last year.

i

Where are home prices increasing the most?

  1. 1.New Mexico+10.4%
  2. 2.West Virginia+8.0%
  3. 3.Connecticut+7.1%
  4. 4.Alabama+7.1%
  5. 5.Wisconsin+6.5%
  6. 6.Illinois+5.9%
  7. 7.Mississippi+5.8%
  8. 8.Maryland+5.5%
  9. 9.Ohio+5.4%
  10. 10.Pennsylvania+5.3%

Median sale price · Largest rise in monthly median sale price vs. the same month last year.

i

Where are home prices falling the most?

  1. 1.Utah-0.6%
  2. 2.Hawaii-0.3%
  3. 3.Washington-0.2%
  4. 4.Oregon-0.1%
  5. 5.Arizona+0.5%
  6. 6.Massachusetts+0.9%
  7. 7.South Carolina+1.2%
  8. 8.Colorado+1.3%
  9. 9.Minnesota+1.4%
  10. 10.Montana+1.4%

Median sale price · Largest drop (or slowest growth) in monthly median sale price vs. the same month last year.

i

Where are homes taking the longest to sell?

  1. 1.Washington+26.7%
  2. 2.Nebraska+22.7%
  3. 3.New Hampshire+22.6%
  4. 4.North Carolina+20.9%
  5. 5.Maryland+17.2%
  6. 6.New York+13.5%
  7. 7.New Mexico+12.8%
  8. 8.Mississippi+11.9%
  9. 9.Nevada+10.6%
  10. 10.Arkansas+10.4%

Median days on market · Median time-to-contract has stretched out the most vs. the same month last year.

i

Where are homes selling the fastest?

  1. 1.Iowa-9.8%
  2. 2.Kansas-5.0%
  3. 3.Louisiana-3.5%
  4. 4.New Jersey-2.8%
  5. 5.Wisconsin-2.2%
  6. 6.Florida-1.5%
  7. 7.Hawaii-1.1%
  8. 8.California0.0%
  9. 9.Connecticut0.0%
  10. 10.Idaho0.0%

Median days on market · Median time-to-contract has shortened the most (or grown the least) vs. the same month last year.

i

Coverage · strongest price growth first

Methodology

Median sale price, active inventory and days on market come from Redfin Data Center statewide series, supplemented by the FRED mirrors of those series where published. Zillow's home value index provides the price-level cross-check and FHFA's house price index supplies the long-run price trend used on the state detail pages.

Year-over-year change is the primary lens on every card and map because housing is strongly seasonal: spring always beats winter, so comparing a month against the same month a year earlier is the only fair read. Dollar figures are nominal, not adjusted for inflation.

44 states have complete coverage across all three metrics. The remaining states show whatever their sources publish, and gaps display as "—" rather than estimates.

Sources