U.S. existing home sales accelerated to a 4.17 million annualized rate in May, the strongest pace since December, as buyers capitalized on a brief dip in mortgage rates during April.
Sales of previously occupied homes rose 3.2% in May from the prior month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.17 million units, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. The reading topped the 4.07 million pace economists had expected, according to FactSet, and marked a 3.2% increase from a year earlier.
"The spring selling season finally gained traction as buyers who had been sidelined by affordability constraints moved in when rates dipped into the low 6% range," Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors, said.
Sales rose from a year earlier in the Midwest, South and West but fell in the Northeast, NAR data showed. The median U.S. home price climbed 1.3% from a year ago to $429,300, extending the streak of annual price increases to 35 consecutive months.
The pickup suggests the housing market may be stabilizing after two years of stagnation, though the pace remains well below the historic norm of roughly 5.2 million units. With mortgage rates climbing back above 6.5% in May, the sustainability of demand through the second half of 2026 remains uncertain.
A Market Driven by Rate Sensitivity
The May sales surge largely reflects contracts signed in April, when the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate fell to about 6.44%, according to Redfin data. That temporary reprieve unlocked demand that had been suppressed by affordability pressures, producing the strongest sales pace since late 2022.
Yet pending home sales — a more current indicator reflecting contracts signed in real time — were essentially flat in May, rising just 0.1% from April. The divergence between closed and pending transactions signals that higher borrowing costs are already weighing on buyer activity again, Redfin economists noted.
The last time the market showed a similar pattern was in early 2024, when a spring rate dip spurred a brief sales pickup that faded as rates reverted higher within two months.
Inventory Improves but Affordability Remains Stretched
Supply conditions are improving. New listings rose 1.4% month over month in May to 396,181 properties, the highest level since 2022, while active inventory reached nearly 1.48 million homes, the most since 2020, Redfin data show. The growing stock gives buyers more options and modestly more negotiating leverage.
Still, affordability constraints persist. Home prices have risen on an annual basis for 35 straight months, and the median sales price of $429,300 is more than double the pre-pandemic level. Just under 60% of homes sold below their original list price in May, down for the sixth consecutive month, suggesting sellers are pricing more realistically from the outset.
For the Federal Reserve, the housing data adds to a mixed picture of an economy that remains resilient but uneven. Stronger housing activity could reinforce the case for holding rates steady, while any renewed softening would bolster arguments for cuts later this year. Overnight index swaps currently price less than a 30% probability of a rate reduction at the Fed's September meeting.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.