How migration is dividing the housing market in two

It can be tricky talking about the national housing market when different parts of the country have very different market dynamics. Nationally, home prices will finish 2024 with an increase of about 5% over the previous year, despite historically low home sales and that there are 27% more homes unsold on the market than there were last year at this time.

When tracking housing inventory in 2024 and 2025, we noticed one big macroeconomic trend dividing the U.S. into two separate markets.

What is that trend? It’s migration. Not immigration. We are talking about migration — Americans moving across the country. For years, Americans have been moving to the Sunbelt. From Chicago to Arizona and Texas, from New York to Florida. In the last two years, especially in 2024, they’ve stopped moving. Inventory has built dramatically in the South and — at the same time — the number of unsold homes available in the Midwest and Northeast are still very tight. Some markets in the south, like Austin, Tampa, and Phoenix have more homes for sale now than they’ve seen in years. On the other hand, some markets in the north, like Chicago and Boston, have just barely more homes unsold than even during the pandemic.

The country is divided in two. If you live in the South, it can be tempting to look around and see doom in the housing market. If you live in the Northeast, you look around and say, ‘Homebuyers still have it tough.’

Let’s take a look at the data for the last week of November 2024.

Inventory is up

There were 707,000 single-family homes on the market heading into the Thanksgiving weekend. That is roughly 27% more unsold homes on the market than last year at this time. This is right where we’ve been expecting inventory to end the year. There are now only 18% fewer homes unsold available on the market than in November of 2019. We’re almost back to the pre-pandemic levels of inventory. We expect unsold inventory to keep growing in 2025 — though not by 27% again. Depending on the macro economy and the whims of the mortgage markets, we could see inventory return close to those old normal levels by the end of next year.

chart visualization
chart visualization

As I mentioned the country is bifurcated — the North and the South. If you’re in Dallas, you’ll notice that there are more homes for sale now than any time in the last decade. If you’re in Chicago, you’ll notice that there are 60% fewer homes for sale than there used to be.

When we’re analyzing the supply of homes for sale in 2025, keep your eyes on this bifurcation. I expect that we see some loosening of this migration freeze next year. That will help inventory in the North to grow a bit and tighten up inventory in the South.