Raleigh Home Prices Cool 6 % From Peak



Raleigh Home Prices Now vs. the Peak

Although Raleigh home prices remain elevated by historical standards, the latest sales data shows the market has slipped from its recent high. Nationally, mortgage rates near 6.7% have kept monthly payments high and softened buyer demand. Redfin data also shows homes spent a median of 71 days on the market in January 2026.

Peak-to-Now Price Pullback

January 2026 median sale price was $395,000, down 1.2% year over year, versus Zillow’s January 31, 2025 median of $431,250.

This gap signals cooling from the peak even as Zillow’s average value edged up 0.4% to $435,263. Empower’s average sold price held near $466,397 overall.

Signals Under Pressure

Redfin’s median price per square foot rose 1.4% to $223, indicating smaller homes and mix shifts can mask softness.

Higher Mortgage Rates have constrained affordability, a key driver in this Historical Context of slower demand.

Tier data still shows wide dispersion, from $223,548 in the bottom tier to $1,497,996 in luxury.

Why Raleigh Listing Prices Fell 6.7

As inventory rebuilt and buyers gained negotiating power, Raleigh’s median listing price slid to $450,000 in January 2026.

That’s down 6.7% year over year.

Inventory Shock

Active listings jumped 23.7% to 1,407 homes.

This happened even as newly listed homes fell 14.9%.

More choice, including new construction options, weakened sellers’ pricing leverage.

Like Denver’s surge to 8,500 homes of inventory, rising supply has shifted negotiating power toward buyers.

Discounting Pressure

With mortgage rates still restraining affordability, homes sat longer.

Median days on market rose to 74.

Price cuts spread to 17.2% of listings.

Sellers captured about 95% of the original list price as over-list closings dropped to 9.2%.

Raleigh Diverges Nationally

The 6.7% drop far exceeded the national decline of 0.1%.

That points to a more pronounced local normalization.

FRED tracked $440,000 in January and $458,020 in October 2025.

Those figures align with Wake County’s 4.3% slide to $450,000.

Raleigh Sold Prices: What’s Still Holding Up

Listing prices have retreated, but closed sale prices in Raleigh are showing firmer footing.

Disruption: Sale prices resist the slide

Median sale price hit $415,000 in January 2026.

Average value was $440,127, only 0.4% lower year over year.

Price per square foot rose 1.4% to $223.

Lower priced homes are drawing steadier demand than premium listings.

Anxiety: Negotiation cools without collapsing

The sale to list ratio averaged 98.1%.

Buyers are still paying near ask as buyer confidence stabilizes.

Only 9.2% closed above list.

Sellers netted about 95% of original asking price.

Tech hiring and healthcare job growth are supporting absorption.

This is happening despite strategic price cuts on 17.2% of listings.

Competitive bidding is now roughly half of pre-COVID frequency in many transactions.

Raleigh Inventory, Days on Market, and Leverage

While sale prices have stayed relatively firm,

inventory and market times are signaling a shift in leverage across Raleigh.

Inventory Shock

Active listings were 4,244 in January 2026, below October’s 5,699 yet higher than the previous year.

January inventory rose 23.7% year over year to 1,407, beating the national 10% gain and altering supply dynamics.

Wake County held about 2.5 months supply, with the Triangle near 4, still short of the 5 to 6 months typically considered balanced.

Time on Market, Pricing Pressure

Days on market increased to 40 from 31 last January, with some segments near a 66-day median.

Price reductions touched 17.2% of listings and the median sale-to-list ratio was 0.981.

Buyer negotiation power is resurfacing, and seller concessions are becoming more common.

Wake County Price Tiers and Today’s Best Deals

Where the pricing stress is showing first is in the lower and middle bands, even as the top end remains volatile.

Wake County closed January 2026 at a $450,000 median, down 4.3% year over year.

Wake County Tier Fault Lines

Starter homes center at $325,237.

The mid tier is $439,996.

Luxury sits near $1,497,996, above the national luxury median of $1,341,493.

Raleigh Price Ladder

Bottom tier is $223,548.

The high tier is $677,916.

Raleigh overall median is $435,712, down 2.8%.

Today’s Best Deals Turn Selective

Sale to list runs 98.5%.

This leaves 1.5% to 2% negotiation room.

Submarkets such as Cary and Apex show cuts and buyer incentives.

Deal Signals

A $250K sale cleared 8% under list, highlighting neighborhood bargains.

Assessment

Conclusion

Raleigh’s peak-era pricing has broken, with listings down about 6 percent and sellers facing longer marketing windows.

Closed-sale prices remain firmer, reflecting limited forced selling and continued demand in well-located neighborhoods.

Rising inventory and slower absorption are shifting leverage toward buyers, especially in higher-priced tiers and homes needing updates.

Near-term outcomes hinge on mortgage rates, job growth, and how quickly new supply reaches the market.

Wake County’s mid-range segments show resilience, while luxury weakens noticeably.



https://www.unitedstatesrealestateinvestor.com/raleigh-home-prices-cool-6-from-peak/?fsp_sid=35299

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