In Springfield, Illinois, one 1,500-square-foot home just pulled 96 showings, 28 offers, and a sale $60,000 above asking. All in four days.
Welcome to America's new hottest housing markets. Both happen to be named Springfield.
Springfield, MA: The Affordability Win
Springfield, Mass took the top spot on the Realtor.com hot list for the second month in a row. The pitch is simple: it's Boston without Boston prices.
The median list price in Springfield, MA is $365,000. Boston's is $832,500 - about double the U.S. average and the fifth-most pricey in the country.
It also helps that Springfield sits 90 miles southwest of Boston. That's close enough to keep a foot in the metro area without paying for one. Homes there typically go under contract in 23 days.
For the company moves Wall Street is pricing in - delivered each weekday in Market Briefs, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.
Springfield, IL: The Price Surge
Springfield, Illinois isn't on the same path - it's on a steeper one. April prices are up 26.6% from a year ago. The city now sits at #13 on the list.
It's also the cheapest entry point in the top 20, with a median list price near $250,000.
That price floor is what fuels the bidding wars. When the top of the market in Springfield, IL costs half what it does almost anywhere else on the list, demand stacks up fast.
Why The Northeast Owns The List
Sixteen of the top 20 hot markets sit in the Northeast. That isn't a fluke - it's a math problem.
Boston, New York, and the corridor between them have priced families out. Those families don't stop wanting to live near jobs and schools. They just want to spend less doing it.
The list now leans on that math. Big metros push buyers out. Cheaper cities nearby pull them in.
"The two cities represent distinct market narratives," Realtor.com analyst Hannah Jones told Fox Business. One is a Boston-adjacent suburb riding spillover demand. The other is a Midwest market where fast price growth points to a sharp jump in buyer interest.
In plain English: one Springfield wins on price next to a big-city neighbor. The other wins on price next to almost anywhere else on the map.
What To Watch
The story under both Springfields is the same. Buyers are voting with their wallets, and the smaller cities of the Northeast are catching the spillover.
The mix of high-cost coastal hubs pushing buyers into nearby metros, plus low-cost Midwest towns now getting noticed, is the same trend across the rest of the top 20.
That trend doesn't reverse fast. Boston's median list price has been near or above $800,000 for a while. As long as that holds, the spillover keeps flowing.
The premium for a big-city zip code isn't gone. It is just getting harder to defend.
That's the new map for the U.S. housing market right now.
Sign up for Market Briefs and get the daily on real estate, stocks, and crypto - and a 45-minute investing course thrown in as a bonus.
