Market Datavs. 1 year ago
30-year mortgage6.49%▼ -0.23 pts15-year mortgage5.82%▼ -0.04 pts10-year Treasury4.58%▲ +0.15 ptsMortgage spread1.91 pts▼ -0.38 ptsMedian list price$430k▼ -2.5%List $/sqft$228▼ -2.1%Days on market53 +0 daysActive listings1.1M▲ +1.9%New listings463k▲ +2.4%Pending sales506k▲ +4.9%Housing starts1.18M▼ -8.7%Building permits1.41M▼ -0.4%New-home sales580k▼ -6.8%Existing-home sales4.09M▲ +2.8%Months of supply10.3▲ +0.6 moMortgage delinquency1.89%▲ +0.12 pts
as of Jul 2026
Housing Market

Mid-Atlantic Home Sales Jump 7.3% to a Record Median Price

Bright MLS: June sales rose 7.3% as the Mid-Atlantic median hit a record $460,000 β€” with higher-income buyers doing the driving.

Mid-Atlantic Home Sales Jump 7.3% to a Record Median Price

The Mid-Atlantic housing market carried its spring momentum straight into summer. Closed sales across the Bright MLS service area rose 7.3% year over year in June to 23,278, while the median sold price hit a record $460,000 β€” up 2.3% from a year ago β€” the multiple listing service reported.

The engine, by Bright’s own telling, is the top of the market. β€œThe Mid-Atlantic market continues to be driven by higher-end sales,” said Bright MLS chief economist Lisa Sturtevant. β€œHigher-income and repeat-buyers are most active, while moderate-income and first-time buyers are often shut out.”

June in the Mid-Atlantic

  • Closed sales: 23,278, up 7.3% year over year.
  • Median sold price: $460,000 β€” a record for the region, up 2.3%.
  • New pending sales: 22,817, up 3.9%.
  • New listings: 25,649, up 8.2% β€” sellers are returning.
  • Active inventory: 49,413, up 12.8%; homes still move in a median of 11 days.

A functioning market with an asterisk

The Mid-Atlantic is delivering what most regions are still waiting for: rising supply met by rising demand, with prices appreciating at a sustainable clip rather than a speculative one. Even with mortgage rates hovering near 6.5%, buyers transacted β€” Bright notes some may be acting now out of concern rates rise later in the year.

The asterisk is who gets to participate. When the buyer pool skews to higher incomes and repeat purchasers with equity, records at the median coexist with first-time buyers priced out at the entry level β€” the same two-speed pattern in the national luxury data and the entry-level inventory story. An 11-day median market time says competition remains fierce for what’s well-priced.

Regionally, the report reinforces the divergence running through every 2026 dataset: supply-constrained Eastern markets posting records while asking prices fall fastest in the West and South. The Mid-Atlantic sits firmly on the strong side of that line β€” a seller’s region within a negotiator’s country.

What it means

Sellers in the Bright footprint have data-backed pricing power, but the 12.8% inventory gain says the cushion is thinning: more competition arrives every month. Buyers face a market that rewards preparation β€” preapproval, quick decisions and clean offers β€” because 11-day market times leave little room for hesitation. And entry-level buyers may find the region’s townhome and condo segments the more realistic doorway while detached-home records keep climbing.

The velocity numbers deserve their own line: a median of 11 days on market means half the region’s June sales went under contract inside two weekends. That is not the tempo of a market waiting on rate cuts β€” it is buyers who have accepted 6.5% as the price of admission and are competing on speed instead. Bright’s read that some purchasers are moving now for fear of higher rates later inverts the wait-and-see psychology that froze 2023–2024.

The forward indicators support continuation rather than cooling: 22,817 new pending contracts (up 3.9%) will convert into late-summer closings, and the 8.2% rise in new listings suggests sellers β€” many of them the same higher-income households buying β€” are finally confident enough to move. Rising listings feeding rising sales at rising prices is the definition of a market clearing properly.

For first-time buyers boxed out of the detached market, the region still offers side doors: condos and townhomes trade at deep discounts to the record-setting single-family median, and down-payment assistance eligibility runs broad in Maryland and Pennsylvania β€” preparation, per RealtyWire’s first-time buyer checklist, is what converts an 11-day market from threat to opportunity.

FAQ

Which states does Bright MLS cover?

The Bright service area spans the Mid-Atlantic, including Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Delaware, southern New Jersey, Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

Is a record median price the same as record home values?

Not exactly β€” the median moves with the mix of what sells. With higher-end sales driving activity, part of the record reflects more expensive homes changing hands, not identical homes appreciating 2.3%.

Why are sales rising here while national sales are flat?

Supply and incomes. The region added listings (+8.2%) without oversupplying, and its buyer pool skews toward higher-income households less deterred by 6.5% mortgage rates.

Sources

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