- Sales growth is highest in the $750,000 to $1 million price tier, and homes priced at $500,000 or more were 11.6 percent of sales in May, but even after declines in distressed sales, one out of every six homes sold was priced at less than $100,000.
- Median prices in May were in the $100,000 to $250,000 price category in the Midwest and South but fell into the higher $250,000 to $500,000 category in the Northeast and West. Looking at all homes in the country, the median falls into the $100,000 to $250,000 price range.
- The median price is the point at which the middle-priced home sold. By definition, half of homes in an area sold at a higher price and half of homes sold at a lower price than the median.
- By price tier, sales were up from a year ago in all price categories in all regions except in the lowest price tier, although the Midwest was an exception to this categorization; sales were up slightly in the under $100,000 category in that region.
- Sales in the lowest price tier began to show less growth and even decline in some areas in 2012. Unsurprisingly, this was the same period when we saw the biggest tapering off in reports of distressed sales in our survey of practitioners. Still, even after the decline in sales in this category and growth in higher price tiers, one out of every six homes sold nationally is priced less than $100,000.
- In April, sales growth was highest in the higher price tiers but the highest growth tier varied by region. In May, the highest-growth price tier for all regions was the $750,000 to under $1 million category. In fact, in the Midwest and West, sales in that price tier were up more than 50 percent from a year ago.
- Strength in the upper price tiers has brought the share of homes-priced greater than $500,000 among those sold to 11.6 percent in May. As discussed with last month’s release, inventory is more plentiful in these price tiers, construction seems limited, and distressed sales are anticipated to continue to drop, expect the share of higher priced homes among those sold to remain above the 10 percent level for the duration of the summer selling season, and possibly into the off-season.