Houston Chronicle Sunday

April marks another positive month for Houston home sales

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Consumers kept the Houston real estate market humming in April, with singlefami­ly home sales and pricing experienci­ng another month of gains and housing inventory reaching the highest level since last August.

The strongest growth in sales activity took place among homes priced from $750,000 and higher (considered the luxury market), followed by homes in the $250,000 to $499,999 range.

For the luxury market, which took the brunt of the energy slump, April marked a sixth consecutiv­e month of rising sales.

A total of 6,583 single-family homes sold in April versus 6,387 a year earlier, according to the latest monthly report produced by the Houston Associatio­n of Realtors (HAR). That represents a 3.1 percent increase. New listings buoyed inventory levels from a 3.6-month supply to four months.

“The Houston real estate market had another strong showing in April among sales and rental properties alike, and as we had hoped, inventory levels got a healthy boost,” said HAR chair Cindy Hamann with Heritage Texas Properties. “The latest Texas Workforce Commission employment update states that 13,300 jobs were created throughout greater Houston in March, the most since September 2015, so we remain optimistic about the local economy.”

The single-family home median price (the figure at which half of the homes sold for more and half sold for less) climbed 4.6 percent to $228,000.

That marks the highest median price ever for an April. The average price rose 4.7 percent to $291,770, which also represents an April high.

April sales of all property types in Houston totaled 8,014, up 4.2 percent from the same month last year. Total dollar volume for properties sold in April increased 8.1 percent to $2.2 billion. April monthly market comparison The Houston real estate market saw

across-the-board gains in all measuremen­ts during the month of April, with single-family home sales, total property sales, total dollar volume, inventory and pricing all up compared to April 2016.

Month-end pending sales for singlefami­ly homes totaled 8,381, up 15 percent compared to last year.

Total active listings, or the total number of available properties, jumped 13.5 percent from April 2016 to 39,567.

Single-family homes inventory grew from a 3.6-month supply to four months. For perspectiv­e, housing inventory across the U.S. also currently stands at a 3.8-month supply, according to the latest report from the National Associatio­n of Realtors (NAR).

Single-family home sales totaled 6,583, up 3.1 percent from April 2016, when it was 6,387. The median price rose 4.6 percent to an April high of $228,000. The average price climbed 4.7 percent to $291,770 — also a record high for an April.

Days on market (DOM), or the number of days it took the average home to sell, declined slightly to 55 days versus 56 last year. Inventory rose from a 3.6-month supply to four months, matching a level not seen since August 2016.

Broken out by housing segment, April sales performed as follows: $1 - $99,999 decreased 34.5 percent, $100,000 - $149,999 decreased 11.4 percent, $150,000 - $249,999 increased 4.8 percent, $250,000 - $499,999 increased 11.3 percent, $500,000 - $749,999 increased 3.5 percent, and $750,000 and above increased 15.8 percent.

Existing-home sales totaled 5,507 in April, up 2.4 percent versus the same month last year.

The average sales price increased 6.3 percent to $275,103 while the median sales price jumped 7 percent to $213,850.

Townhome and condominiu­m sales were up again in April, with 599 units selling versus 577 a year earlier. That represents an increase of 3.8 percent.

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