The housing market has not been this kind to buyers in years - at least in certain cities.
Eight major metro areas have tipped into buyer's market territory this spring according to Realtor.com, meaning there are enough homes for sale that buyers can take their time, negotiate price cuts, and push for concessions like seller-paid closing costs or repairs.
Where Buyers Have Power
Four of the eight markets are in Florida - Jacksonville, Miami, Orlando, and Tampa - while the other four are Atlanta, Austin, Nashville, and Riverside, California.
All eight shifted from balanced markets to early buyer's markets over the past year, with sellers who got multiple offers in 2024 now waiting longer and cutting prices to attract interest. In Tampa, the median days on market has climbed to 68 from 42 a year ago.
Austin has seen a similar shift, with inventory up more than 25% year over year as the pandemic-era boom fades.
Why It Is Happening
Inventory is the driver. National active listings are up about 10% year over year, with some of these eight metros seeing 20% or more growth in available homes.
Higher mortgage rates have kept some buyers on the sidelines, which means homes sit longer without offers. At the same time, more sellers are listing because they cannot wait any longer for rates to drop.
The combination of more supply and weaker demand is exactly what tips a market from favoring sellers to favoring buyers.
Insurance costs are playing a role too, particularly in Florida. Homeowners insurance premiums have risen sharply in the state over the past two years, with some policyholders seeing increases of 40% or more.
The average annual premium in Florida now tops $4,200, more than double the national average, after back-to-back hurricane seasons drove insurers to raise rates or leave the market entirely.
That additional cost makes ownership more expensive and is pushing some potential buyers to look at other states entirely, while sellers who want to leave Florida are adding even more inventory to an already growing supply.
The Broader Context
These eight metros were some of the hottest markets in the country during 2021 and 2022, when remote work sent buyers flooding into Sun Belt cities with lower taxes and more space. Now that the migration wave has slowed and inventory has caught up, the power balance is shifting back toward buyers.
Nationally, the housing market is still tilted toward sellers in most areas - but these eight cities show where the cracks are forming. Real estate analysts at Redfin noted that the pattern is consistent - markets that saw the biggest price gains during the pandemic boom are now seeing the fastest inventory growth as affordability catches up with demand.
What to Watch
These eight metros are a leading signal for the rest of the market. If inventory keeps climbing and buyers hold their leverage through summer, prices in these areas could start to soften - a shift from "offer over asking" to "offer under asking" that is already happening in parts of Florida and Texas.
For investors in homebuilders and real estate stocks, the direction of inventory matters more than mortgage rates right now.
