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Airport Traffic Now Predicts Housing Demand, Realtor.com Says

Published May 3, 2026
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Aerial view of an airport with parked airplanes, terminal building, control tower, and city skyline in the background under a clear sky.
Summary:
  • A new Realtor.com piece says year-over-year flier growth at major US airports points to where housing demand is moving next.
  • Tampa, Nashville, and Orlando are leading the country in US flier growth, with rises of 4.7% to 7.2%.
  • Global traffic into Austin has fallen 21.5%, the steepest drop of any major metro.

Housing data lags. Sales close 60 days after a buyer says yes. Prices print months after that.

There is one number that moves first. Realtor.com just put a spotlight on it: airport traffic.

The Idea

Real estate cash follows people. People show up at airports first.

The case from Realtor.com is simple. Year-over-year flier growth at major US airports is a real-time read on which cities are gaining work, talent, and new folks.

The data shows up before any of that hits a home sale. The set covers six months of flier growth across the top 50 metro areas.

That is per US flight data. There are two lenses to it.

US flights track work travel and in-person deals. Foreign flights track global work ties, talent flow, and tourism.

The Cities That Are Rising

US flight growth is in the Sun Belt and a few Midwest hubs.

Six-month year-over-year US flier growth, top 5 metros:

  • Tampa, FL: +7.2%
  • Nashville, TN: +6.6%
  • Orlando, FL: +4.7%
  • Chicago, IL: +3.5%
  • Detroit, MI: +3.2%

That is a real signal for office and rental demand, per the piece. Tampa and Nashville have been quietly building their pull for years.

The flight data backs it up. Foreign growth points to a different list.

San Diego is leading at +23.8%. Then Salt Lake City, Providence, Boston, and Philadelphia. The story there is global hiring and high-end office demand.

The Cities That Are Falling

The same data flags a list of metros where the wind has shifted.

The big one is Austin. Foreign flight traffic is down 21.5% over the past six months.

That is by far the steepest drop on the list. It is a sharp turn for a market that was the country's hottest tech hub of the boom.

The drop hints that global tech growth there is cooling. The chill is now showing up in the work-trip data too.

Bottom 5 metros, US traffic:

  • Las Vegas, NV: -6.8%
  • Charlotte, NC: -5.7%
  • Baltimore, MD: -5.4%
  • Philadelphia, PA: -4.9%
  • Dallas-Fort Worth, TX: -4.3%

Las Vegas at the bottom hints that work and event travel is cooling. Phoenix, Orlando, Miami, and Baltimore also softened on the foreign side.

Why It Matters

Most housing data looks back. By the time a sale prints, the move has already happened.

Flight data does the other way. It shows where money is going to land before it lands.

For investors planning their next office, rental, or single-family bet, that head start is the whole game. The rise in Tampa or the drop in Austin shows up in flight stats months before any sale closes.

That can be the gap between a top-tier buy and a late one.

Worth Noting

The next housing cycle will be won by investors watching the runways, not the closing tables.

For now, that means betting more on Tampa and Nashville and pulling back from Austin and Vegas.

Disclosure

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