Existing home sales in the United States rose by 1.7% from the previous month to an annualized rate of 4.09 million in February of 2026, ahead of market expectations that they would fall to 3.89 million. Despite the rebound, unsold inventory rose by a sharper 2.4% to a total of 1.29 million, which is equivalent to 3.8 months of supply at the latest sales rate. Sales price of existing homes inched higher by 0.3% from the previous year to $398,000, despite the drop in mortgage rates since the period. “Housing affordability is improving, and consumers are responding,” said NAR Chief Economist Dr. Lawrence Yun. “Still, there is a long way to go to return to pre-pandemic levels of transaction activity. There are more than 6 million more jobs than in 2019, yet home sales per year are down by one million. Despite the modest gain in home sales, actual housing demand remains muted relative to wage growth and job gains.”. source: National Association of Realtors
Existing Home Sales in the United States increased to 4090 Thousand in February from 4020 Thousand in January of 2026. Existing Home Sales in the United States averaged 4065.11 Thousand from 1968 until 2026, reaching an all time high of 7250.00 Thousand in September of 2005 and a record low of 1370.00 Thousand in March of 1970. This page provides the latest reported value for - United States Existing Home Sales - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news. United States Existing Home Sales - data, historical chart, forecasts and calendar of releases - was last updated on March of 2026.
Existing Home Sales in the United States increased to 4090 Thousand in February from 4020 Thousand in January of 2026. Existing Home Sales in the United States is expected to be 4100.00 Thousand by the end of this quarter, according to Trading Economics global macro models and analysts expectations. In the long-term, the United States Existing Home Sales is projected to trend around 4000.00 Thousand in 2027, according to our econometric models.