Most buyers since COVID couldn’t afford the house just like 2008.
Especially with mortgage rates where they are. https://t.co/I9OLqLUANX
— QE Infinity (@StealthQE4) September 16, 2025
It would take a heart of stone to read about these F*cked Borrowers who can't sell their overpriced houses, & not laugh
byu/Boo_Randy_II inHouseBuyers
Markets don't seem to have a lot of confidence rate cuts are going to help the mortgage market
byu/Boo_Randy_II ineconomy
Grocery prices spike to highest level in 3 years…
44 of biggest 50 metros flashing grave warning that house price crash next…
Housing markets across the US are showing signs of trouble as homes linger on the market longer in 44 out of 50 major US metros.
The worst hit area is Miami, where houses are now sitting unsold for nearly three months — almost four weeks longer than a year ago.
Across the country, the typical home spent 60 days on the market in August, seven days longer than a year ago and above pre-pandemic norms, according to a new Realtor.com report.
Buyers remain hesitant, held back by high prices, shifting mortgage rates, and fears of a financial downturn.
At the same time, supply is building. A steady stream of new construction is pulling demand away from existing homes, while cancellations have hit record highs as more buyers back out of deals at the last minute.
Sellers are responding by cutting prices or pulling listings altogether, hoping to wait out the slowdown.
It doesn’t yet amount to a nationwide crash, but the widespread cooling suggests home has raised fears it is on the horizon.
In some hot spots, the delays are steep: Miami homes took 90 days to sell in August, up from 74 last year. Orlando sat at 77 days, up from 63, Tampa was also at 77, up from 64, Jacksonville was at 74, up from 61, and Austin, was at 72, up from 65 in August 2024.