Home sales underwhelmed in April as elevated mortgage rates and economic jitters kept many buyers on the sidelines; the market barely budged month to month and stood roughly even with last year, signaling a housing scene that isn’t yet responding to small improvements in affordability.
Existing home sales rose a mere 0.2% from March, reaching a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 4.02 million, a figure that reads like steady oxygen rather than a burst of life. That flat line reflects a tug of war: slightly better affordability on paper meets the reality of high borrowing costs and households that are cautious about committing to big purchases right now. Many homes that closed in April were actually put under contract in March, when rates were higher, so the data partly reflects earlier market conditions. Consumer mood also matters; various measures show sentiment sitting at deep lows, which gnaws at buyer confidence and spending plans.
Regional patterns made the national stalemate look a bit patchy: the South and the Midwest showed month-over-month gains, while the Northeast stayed flat and the West saw declines. Those splits tell a familiar story of local economics and inventory playing outsized roles now that national trends are subdued. In markets where inventory eased a bit and prices stayed reasonable, activity ticked up, but places with tight supply or higher sticker prices saw buyers pause. The mixed regional picture means national stats mask a lot of local variation that buyers and sellers should watch closely.
Inventory did improve, rising 5.8% from March to 1.47 million homes for sale, the healthiest April supply since 2019 but still well below the pre-pandemic norm of 1.83 million. Incremental supply relief helps but doesn’t flip the script instantly; it takes sustained increases and clearer rate relief to unlock a bigger wave of transactions. The current inventory boost mainly offers more choices for the few buyers who are ready, rather than jerking the market into a new gear. Sellers who are weighing timing should be realistic: more listings can mean more competition and softer pricing pressure in some areas.
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“Lower mortgage rates, better affordability — I thought would do the trick,” NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun said. “Yet the sales number, at least as of April, is still not rising in any meaningful way. So that’s surprising to me.”
Mortgage rates eased from their recent peaks during April but remain above the levels seen before the outbreak of the Iran war, leaving many would-be buyers still facing elevated financing costs. That gap between headline rate moves and the real carrying cost for a mortgage keeps decisions complicated for households budgeting for monthly payments. Lenders’ pricing, local tax and insurance costs, and buyers’ expectations about job security all factor into whether a lower advertised rate translates to more closed deals. For now, even a modest drop in rates hasn’t been enough to spur broad-based buying.
The upshot is a market stuck in neutral: slight structural improvements are visible, but not powerful enough to change behavior widely. Policymakers, lenders, and buyers are watching the same levers—rates, supply, and sentiment—but until those three move in sync, sales will likely keep hovering around current levels. That means many Americans will keep renting, waiting, or trading cautiously in a housing market that feels fragile even when the headline numbers look steady.
