New Home Sales Continue To Climb In 2023

New home sales started 2023 on a positive note, rising 7.2% from December to a seasonally adjusted annual pace of 670,000 homes, according to data published by the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of House and Urban Development (HUD) on Feb. 17. This marks the second consecutive month of increases and the strongest sales pace since March 2022. On a year-over-year basis, new home sales are still down 19.4%.

January marked a surge of people signing contracts to buy new homes. The increase in contract-signings can be attributed to a decline in mortgage rates in January after a run-up in rates in October and November. The uptick in the sales pace resulted in just 439,000 new homes remaining on the market at the end of the month, representing 7.9 months of supply of the current sales pace, down from 8.7 months in December.

“The backlog of new construction homes continues to emerge into the market just in time for the spring shopping season,” Nicole Bachaud, Zillow’s senior economist said in a statement. “Many home builders are offering incentives to buyers, sweetening the deal just enough to bump sales from the month prior.”

As a result of incentives, such as price drops, the median new home sales price dropped from $465,600 in December to $427,000 in January, despite increase in demand.

Regionally, on a month-over-month basis the sales pace was down in the Northeast (25,000 homes), Midwest (67,000 homes), and the West (127,000 homes), with the Northwest recording the largest drop at 97.4%. The South (451,000 homes) was the only region to rise on a monthly basis, jumping 17.1%. On a yearly basis, all regions recorded drops in annual sales pace, with the West recording the largest drop at 46.9%.

Looking ahead, experts are optimists about the spring selling season for new construction. “There are still  large chunks of new construction homes currently under construction, and when those homes hit market, especially over the next few months, we will see spring home buyers. Those who can afford the higher newly constructed price tags, having more options and opportunities to break into homeownership.” Bachaud said.

In our opinion, smart buyers should hire an experienced Realtor, with plenty of awareness of the current new homes’ opportunities, as well as, the residential resale market, so they can get the best option and a bump for their money!