The U.S. housing market is expected to continue cooling throughout 2023 as rising mortgage rates further dampen buyer demand and lead to slower sales in once popular markets, but according to Zillow, some housing destinations are better prepared to weather a downturn than others. With strong forecasted home value growth, a healthy local economy, fast-moving inventory, and a growing share of prospective buyers, Charlotte, NC is predicted to be the hottest housing market of 2023.
On the contrary, markets like San Jose, Sacramento, Minneapolis, and Denver will likely see annual home value declines and slower market activity after topping the charts of a mid-pandemic housing boom.
Zillow’s list of the hottest markets in 2023 is based on an analysis of forecast home value growth, recent housing market velocity and projected changes in the labor market, home construction activity and number of homeowner households.
Pushing Charlotte to the top of the list is its forecasted annual home price growth, and Cleveland’s second-place rank can be attributed to its high market velocity and job growth. While Pittsburgh is the only market in the top five with forecasted household declines, it makes up for the drop in owner-occupied homes with the fourth-highest ratio of jobs added per new home permitted.
Advertisement
Related Stories
Housing Markets
States Seek Long-Term Solutions to Reform Property Taxes
Rising home prices typically lead to higher property tax assessments, which has been the case in many Mountain West states, prompting lawmakers to grapple with property tax relief
Housing Markets
Metros Where Housing Prices Have Doubled in Less Than 10 Years
Historical data show it's taken less than 10 years for home prices to double in 68 of the country’s 100 largest cities
Affordability
The Disappearing Act That Is Middle-Income Housing
An expert weighs in on the diminishing supply of middle-income housing, which is particularly acute in California, and what to do about it