Boston homes sales are down and prices are up. What's next?
The number of single-family sales in the city declined 42 percent annually in October and 23 percent from September, to 51. The number of condo sales was down 33.5 percent, to 206, compared with October 2018, and down 34 percent from September.
At the same time—and perhaps not uncoincidentally—prices were up. The median single-family sales price was $635,000 in October, up 4.1 percent annually and nearly.5.9 percent monthly. The median condo sales price was $667,500, up 8.5 percent annually and 3.5 precent monthly.
The average sales price per square foot was up annually for both, too, to $416 for single-families and to $773 for condos.
What’s it all mean? The wider regional housing market appears to be tilting in buyers’ favor after years (and years). That’s due to beefier inventory and to potential buyers watching from the sidelines as prices fluctuate. Jim Major, president of the realtors association and an agent with Century 21 North East in Woburn, said these buyers had basically adopted “a wait-and-see attitude until prices settle.”