The Sun (Lowell)

Home sales are through the roof

17-year-high reached for February; median price still over $400,000

- By Michael Norton

Single-family home sales last month sold at a pace not seen for 17 years in Massachuse­tts, and the median sale price has now sat above $400,000 for a year.

The Warren Group on Thursday released its latest market snapshot and reported that sales in February were up nearly 13% over February 2020, the last month not marked by the COVID-19 pandemic. The 3,026 homes sold last month were the most for any February since 2004.

Sales last month surged in particular in the Cape Cod communitie­s of Barnstable County, where 293 homes were sold, up 55% from the 188 home sales recorded in February 2020.

Massachuse­tts home prices have been going one way -- up -and that also continued in a big way last month. The median sale price for a single-family home surged 17% on a year-over-year basis to a record $445,000, up from $380,000 in February 2020.

Property-tax bills for singlefami­ly homes in Massachuse­tts are going up, too, but not at the same rates since increases in those bills are limited by law.

The median single-family tax bill for fiscal 2021 is $5,537, an increase of $175, or 3.3% from fiscal 2020, the Department of Revenue reported this month. A cluster of communitie­s, mostly west of Boston, feature average tax bills of more than $10,000 per year.

Basing its conclusion­s on data submitted by 322 of the state’s 351 cities and towns, the DOR’S Division of Local Services also reported the average value of a single-family home in Massachuse­tts is $468,034, an increase of $14,866, or 3.3% from fiscal 2020.

The combinatio­n of high demand and low inventory has been a constant in the Massachuse­tts market, leaving sellers in a strong place but requiring buyers to compete with each other, driving up sales, and prices. On the inventory side, government officials are working to implement a new housing production law.

“Whether you’re a first-time homebuyer, a retiree looking to downsize or looking to your ‘forever’ home, good luck, because the competitio­n is fierce, and prices reflect that,” Tim Warren, CEO of The Warren Group, said in a statement accompanyi­ng the latest data.

The arrival of COVID-19 last March caused a temporary setback in sales, but the market has roared back. Compared to the pre-pandemic months of January and February 2020, year-todate home sales in 2021 are up 10.7%, and the year-to-date median home-sale price is up more than 15%.

Condo sales have not been as brisk, but Warren said “we could be in for a surprise in the coming months.”

“With stage four of Gov. Charlie Baker’s reopening plan scheduled for March 22, the Red Sox,

Celtics and Bruins starting to allow fans back into games, and almost a million people vaccinated against COVID-19, a return to normalcy in major metro areas is on the horizon, which will make condos much more appealing to buyers again,” Warren said.

Year-to-date, there have been 3,161 condo sales, an 8.1% increase from the first two months of 2020, with a median sale price of $410,000, a 2.5% increase. Condo sales in February were up 3.9% over February 2020, and the median condo sale price of $419,000 was a record for that month.

 ?? Courtesy state division OF local services ?? home sales in February were hot across the state.
Courtesy state division OF local services home sales in February were hot across the state.

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