Buyers Purchasing Below Market Value in 59 Percent of U.S. Markets According to RealtyTrac April Home Sales Report

IRVINE, CA--(Marketwired - May 28, 2015) - RealtyTrac® (www.realtytrac.com), the nation's leading source for comprehensive housing data, today released its April 2015 U.S. Home Sales Report™. RealtyTrac analyzed average sales prices and estimated market values at time of sale for single family homes and condos sold in April in 315 U.S. counties to identify the nation's hottest seller's markets, best buyer's markets and those markets evenly balanced between buyers and sellers.

"Nationwide, in April single family homes and condos sold for almost exactly 100 percent of their estimated full market value on average -- indicating a good balance between supply from sellers and demand from buyers," said Daren Blomquist, vice president at RealtyTrac. "At the local level, however, most markets tipped in favor of either sellers or buyers -- although there were some Goldilocks markets exhibiting a 'just right' balance between buyers and sellers." (See local market quotes below.)

Sellers getting more than market value in 27 percent of markets
Out of 315 counties nationwide with a population of at least 100,000 and at least 100 sales in April, there were 85 (27 percent) where homes on average sold for at least 101 percent of their estimated full market value -- led by Alameda and San Francisco counties in the Bay Area of California (both with average sale prices at 108 percent of estimated full market values), the District of Columbia in the Washington, DC metro area (107 percent), Forsyth County, North Carolina in the Winston-Salem metro area (107 percent) and Yolo County, California in the Sacramento metro area (107 percent).

Buyers purchasing below market value in 59 percent of markets
Out of 315 counties studied, there were 186 (59 percent) where homes on average sold for less than 100 percent of their estimated full market value -- led by Saint Louis City, Missouri (77 percent), Baltimore City, Maryland (78 percent), Beaver County, Pennsylvania in the Pittsburgh metro area (82 percent), Bartow County, Georgia in the Atlanta metro area (84 percent), and Chittenden County, Vermont in the Burlington metro area (85 percent).

Homes selling at market value in 14 percent of markets
In the 315 counties studied there were 44 (14 percent) where homes on average sold for 100 percent of their estimated full market value -- including Maricopa County, Arizona In the Phoenix metro area, Riverside County in inland Southern California, Montgomery County, Maryland in the Washington, DC metro area, Fulton County, Georgia in the Atlanta metro area, and Wake County, North Carolina in the Raleigh metro area.