Is This Actually a Good Time to Buy a Home? The Data Says Yes and Here Is Why
Is This Actually a Good Time to Buy a Home? The Data Says Yes and Here Is Why
You Keep Hearing the Market Is Shifting. Here Is What the Numbers Actually Show.
The claim that the housing market is shifting in buyers favor has been circulating long enough that it is starting to sound like background noise. But the data behind it is worth looking at directly because the numbers are telling a specific and meaningful story for buyers who are ready to act on what they are seeing.
What the Data Is Actually Showing
A record 34 percent of sellers cut their list price in February. That is the highest level of seller price reductions seen in years and it reflects a genuine and measurable shift in who holds the leverage in the current negotiating environment.
Inventory has crossed pre-pandemic levels in many parts of the country. Buyers who spent several years navigating a market with almost no options are now finding real choices available in price ranges and neighborhoods that had little to offer just a year or two ago. That expanded selection is not a minor convenience. It fundamentally changes how buyers can approach the search and the decision making process.
The lock-in effect that kept so many homeowners frozen in their low-rate mortgages is officially easing. More sub-5 percent rate holders are deciding to list anyway despite the rate they are giving up and that decision is adding supply to markets that have been constrained by that reluctance for an extended period.
Why This Combination Creates Real Negotiating Power
When sellers cut prices and inventory grows the negotiating dynamic shifts in a way that goes well beyond the headline list price. As Tom Seaman explains the most significant financial benefits for buyers in the current environment often show up in the terms of the transaction rather than just the purchase price itself.
Closing cost credits that reduce what buyers need to bring to the closing table. Seller-funded rate buydowns that lower the monthly payment for years or for the life of the loan. Repair credits that address inspection findings without requiring buyers to absorb those costs out of pocket after closing. These concessions can save thousands of dollars and in many cases matter more to the overall financial picture than a modest reduction in the purchase price.
Less competition also means buyers can take their time in a way that was not realistic during the peak competitive years. Proper inspections can happen without waiving contingencies under pressure. Due diligence can be thorough rather than compressed into a 24-hour window. Decisions can be made thoughtfully rather than reactively with multiple competing offers creating urgency that works against the buyer.
What the Lock-In Effect Easing Means for Buyers
The gradual release of the lock-in effect is one of the most important structural changes in the current market and it is worth understanding clearly. Homeowners who refinanced or purchased at rates below 5 percent were effectively frozen in place for the past two years because selling meant accepting a significantly higher rate on their next mortgage. Many who would otherwise have moved stayed put rather than absorb that financial penalty.
As more of those homeowners decide to move regardless the supply constraint that has kept competition elevated begins to loosen. That loosening is contributing to the inventory growth buyers are seeing now and it is one of the primary reasons the current environment looks meaningfully different from what buyers experienced at the height of the seller's market.
What Buyers Should Be Doing Right Now
The buyers who are capturing the best opportunities in the current market are not the ones waiting for conditions to improve further before they start preparing. They are the ones who are already pre-approved, already clear on their budget across a realistic range of rate scenarios, and already positioned to act decisively when the right home appears.
In a market where more homes are available and sellers have genuine motivation to make deals happen the advantage goes to the prepared buyer who can move with confidence rather than the unprepared buyer who needs time to get their financing organized after finding a home they want.
Tom Seaman works with buyers to get fully prepared and positioned to capture the opportunities that the current market shift is creating. Reach out to Tom Seaman to find out what your numbers look like and how to structure your approach to take full advantage of where the market stands right now.
Sources
NAR.realtor Realtor.com Zillow.com MortgageNewsDaily.com Forbes.com


