
The U.S. housing market is beginning to show signs of a slowdown as elevated mortgage rates continue to pressure affordability and sideline potential buyers. After years of rapid price growth and fierce competition, new data suggests demand is softening in several key markets, with homes taking longer to sell and price increases leveling off.
Buyers are increasingly hesitant to commit, faced with borrowing costs that remain near multi-year highs. Monthly payments have climbed significantly compared to just a few years ago, forcing many would-be homeowners to delay purchases or adjust expectations. First-time buyers, in particular, are feeling the strain.
Sellers, meanwhile, are entering a more balanced market environment. While inventory remains relatively tight, the urgency that once defined the market has cooled. Price cuts, once rare, are becoming more common in certain regions as sellers adapt to shifting conditions.
Economists say the market is not crashing, but recalibrating. Much will depend on the Federal Reserve’s next moves and whether mortgage rates begin to ease later this year. For now, the housing market appears to be entering a new phase—one defined less by frenzy and more by caution.























































