This episode of Connecticut Real Estate Market Weekly Insights unpacks the latest single-family home data, highlighting rising prices, tight inventory, and strong buyer demand across mid-tier price ranges. It also explores new affordable housing efforts in shoreline towns, key takeaways from the federal “One Big Beautiful Bill,” and notable legal and economic developments impacting the market.
In this episode of Connecticut Real Estate Market Weekly Insights, we examine how the Connecticut housing market performed in June 2025, focusing specifically on single-family homes. The median sale price reached $500,000—up 6.4% from last year—while the number of homes sold rose nearly 5% year over year. The average sale price topped $688,000, with homes selling for an average of 4.5% over asking and spending a median of just 13 days on the market. The most competitive segments were homes priced between $200,000 and $599,000, but even luxury homes saw notable activity.
Inventory remains tight, with only 1.42 months of supply overall, well below the 5–6 months considered a balanced market. Especially constrained were the $200K–$599K ranges, while listings above $3 million leaned more toward buyer's market conditions. Price drops occurred on 30% of active listings, with the largest reductions seen at the top and bottom of the price spectrum.
The episode also breaks down buyer migration trends, noting that most sellers left for Florida or New York, while most out-of-state buyers came from New York and Massachusetts. Despite increasing prices, over 20% of buyers still came from outside Connecticut.
Interest rates ticked up across all loan types, with 30-year fixed loans closing at 6.75%. The episode dives into recent news, including accelerating affordable housing developments in shoreline towns like Clinton, Guilford, Madison, and Old Saybrook through the 8-30g zoning statute.
We also discuss the major provisions of the “One Big Beautiful Bill,” which permanently makes mortgage insurance premiums tax-deductible, expands low-income housing tax credits, preserves investor-friendly tax deductions, and temporarily increases the SALT cap to $40,000. However, no new first-time buyer credits or down payment assistance were included.
Additional stories include a New Haven eviction case dismissed due to a paperwork error, the latest economic data showing declines in personal income and spending, and nationwide housing trends such as increased pending home sales, a slight drop in mortgage rates, and rising affordability challenges. Buyers now need nearly $18,000 more in annual income to afford a median-priced home nationwide, pushing more people toward renting.
To wrap up, the episode emphasizes that while Connecticut remains a strong seller’s market, outcomes vary by price tier and town, making local market knowledge critical for buyers and sellers.