Lil Lively - Realtor

Lil Lively - Realtor Your Voice in Real Estate. 5280 Five Star Professional Award winner. You can count on straight talk & total commitment to the success of your transaction.

02/26/2026

Top News

YAY!! 30-year fixed mortgage rate drops below 6%
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 5.98% this week—its lowest point in three-and-a-half years. The drop could potentially unlock millions of new buyers who had been sidelined by affordability constraints when rates hovered around 7% just over a year ago. An analysis of National Association of REALTORS®' Metro Market Dashboard shows that an additional 5.5 million households now stand to qualify for a mortgage.

02/02/2026

Wall Street Journal:
In 100 words

The U.S. housing market is increasingly favoring buyers, with 62% of homes sold in 2025 purchased below their original listing price—the highest share since 2019, according to Redfin. Average discounts reached about 8%, the largest since 2012, and sellers are offering concessions such as closing-cost assistance and mortgage-rate buy-downs. High prices and elevated mortgage rates have sidelined many buyers, creating a record gap between sellers and buyers. As a result, remaining buyers have more leverage and choice. Buyer-friendly conditions are strongest in Southern markets like Florida and Texas, where housing supply is higher.

The Housing Market Is Swinging Toward Buyers

Nearly two-thirds of home buyers last year purchased at discount to original listing price, highest proportion since 2019

Many home shoppers have given up on the depressed housing market, where sales are stuck at a 30-year low. But those buying are enjoying discounts at the highest rate in years.

About 62% of buyers last year purchased a home below the original listing price. That was the highest proportion since 2019, according to a new analysis by the real-estate brokerage Redfin.

The average discount for the homes that sold below their original listing price was around 8%—the largest since 2012.

Buyers are also obtaining concessions from sellers, including cash that can be used for closing costs or to buy down a buyer’s mortgage rate.

The proliferation of discounts and incentives offer the latest evidence that the housing market is tilting back in the buyer’s favor. From 2020 to 2022, it was a robust seller’s market as rock-bottom mortgage rates attracted hordes of buyers. Cutthroat bidding wars were routine, and buyers went to great lengths to ingratiate themselves with sellers.

Now, the situation has flipped. The U.S. housing market had over 600,000 more sellers than buyers in December, the biggest such gap on record in seasonally adjusted data going back to 2013, according to Redfin.

Many would-be buyers are sidelined by high home prices and elevated mortgage rates, and home-buying demand is low. For those who are still able to buy, they have more homes on the market from which to choose and more power to negotiate.

“When there is this gap between what sellers expect and what buyers can afford, it’s the buyers that end up negotiating that lower price,” said Daryl Fairweather, Redfin’s chief economist. “Sellers aren’t the ones that dictate prices—it’s buyers that do.”

Fairweather said she expects a small increase in home sales this year, after sales of previously owned homes held last year at the lowest level since 1995.

“Buyers and sellers are going to be more on the same page about what an appropriate price will be,” Fairweather said.

The market gained some momentum in recent months. Mortgage rates are lower than they were a year ago, making purchases more affordable. Sales of existing homes jumped 5.1% in December, the biggest gain in nearly two years, while home-price growth slowed.

The market is the most buyer-friendly in Southern markets, especially Florida and Texas, where new-home construction in recent years contributed to a bigger supply of homes for sale.

In the Florida metro areas of West Palm Beach, Fort Lauderdale and Miami, at least 85% of home buyers in 2025 paid under the original listing price, according to Redfin.

Buyers were the least likely to get a discount in Newark, N.J., where 32% paid under the original listing price, followed by San Francisco and San Jose, Calif., both at 39%. New construction in those markets has been limited.

Because home purchases are so expensive, buyers are being picky. Even in cities where the inventory is lower than normal, homes that are priced too high can sit on the market, according to real-estate agents.

“Sellers that think we’re still living in a 2021 world where you could overprice your home and still get multiple offers—that’s just not happening right now,” said Joselin Malkhasian, a real-estate agent in Waltham, Mass.

Homes that need renovation are sitting because buyers are hesitant to take on potentially costly projects, according to agents. The number of home-purchase contracts being canceled has increased, partly because of buyers who back out of deals after inspections.

“There’s definitely sellers who are willing to negotiate way more now than they were the last couple of years,” said Jason Moon, a real-estate agent in northwestern Indiana.

Jon and Hannah Vokal started house hunting in the Austin, Texas, area in 2024, but they thought homes were overpriced at the time.

Since then, “The general lowering of buyer demand has made the market a good bit more favorable,” Jon Vokal said. “This is the best environment that I think I’ve been in as a buyer so far.”

In January, they had an offer accepted for a three-bedroom home for 4% below the listing price. “We’re superexcited,” he said.

It's been so long since a balanced market....it feels abnormal
10/31/2025

It's been so long since a balanced market....it feels abnormal

08/05/2025

Here's a snapshot of the Denver Market for July ’25 vs July ‘24

Active Listings:
13995 vs 10585, +32%
Homes: 9705 vs 7370, +32%
Condos: 4290 vs 3215, +33%
Historical average number of active listings is 15379 (1985-2024), with the record-high being 31989 (2006) and record-low 4056 (2021).
Historically, active listings increase by an average of 5.6% from June to July. The decrease of 0.09% this year suggests that the seasonal peak in inventory is behind us

New Listings:
5360 vs 5155, +4%
Homes: 3915 vs 3725, +5%
Condos: 1445 vs 1425, +1%

Pending:
3840 vs 3600, +7%
Homes: 2920 vs 2715, +7%
Condos: 920 vs 885, +4%
Nationwide, spring pending sales hit a 13-year low

Closed:
3660 vs 3930, -7%
Homes: 2815 vs 2945, -4%
Condos: 845 vs 990, -14%

Price:
$700k vs $707k, -1%
Homes: $780k vs $791k, -1%
Condos: $425k vs $457k, -7%
Denver led the nation in price reductions in June, with 37% of sellers lowering their list price

DOM (Days on Market):
40 vs 30, +33%
Homes: 36 vs 28, +29%
Condos: 54 vs 35, +54%

Discounts:
98.7% vs 99%, -0.3%

Mortgage:
With today’s prices, buyers need to earn approximately $127k annually in order to afford monthly mortgage payments on a median-priced home (up from $79k in 2021)

Thanks Gwen!
07/22/2025

Thanks Gwen!

06/03/2025

Market was supposed to recover; What happened?
Summary:
At the start of 2025, the U.S. housing market seemed poised for recovery, but Trump’s unexpected trade tariffs in April triggered economic uncertainty and rising mortgage rates, dampening buyer confidence.
Despite increased inventory, many buyers are backing out amid fears of job instability, while sellers, locked into low mortgage rates, resist price cuts. The result is a stagnant market: more listings, fewer sales, and growing cancellations. Even in cities like Austin, where prices have dropped, homes linger unsold. With limited new housing supply and economic unease, both buyers and sellers remain hesitant—leaving the market frozen and increasingly inaccessible to many.

Market was supposed to recover;
what happened?
By Ronda Kaysen
The New York Times
As 2025 began, the stars were aligning for a housing market rebound. Inflation was easing, the economy looked strong, and mortgage rates were drifting downward. By April, there were more available homes to buy than at any time since January 2020, according to the Federal Reserve of St. Louis. The conditions were ripe for buyers to reemerge, checkbooks in hands, and sellers to negotiate.
Then April 2, President Donald Trump rolled out his expansive global trade tariffs, shocking the stock and bond markets and sparking fears of a recession. Mortgage rates jumped again, hitting 6.89% for a 30-year fixedrate loan May 29, their highest level since early February. The extreme volatility threw cold water on a fragile market. Buyers bailed out.
“There isn’t any urgency to buying right now — if anything it feels more risky to put a down payment into a home when you might not have a job six months from now,” said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist of Redfin.
Real estate agents across the country report a chilled environment, with sellers unwilling to lower their prices and buyers reluctant to make a big purchase as the economy flounders and the costs for a mortgage, insurance and property taxes rise. Even in markets where prices have fallen and inventory is piling up, like Austin, Texas, homes are sitting on the market for months. In fiercely competitive areas, like the New York City suburbs, where prices are still rising and homes sell fast, properties that would have gotten a dozen offers a year ago now get two or three.
“Yes, there is more inventory, but it’s almost like too little too late,” said Selma Hepp, chief economist for Cotality, a real estate data provider.In 2024, there were fewer home sales than in any year since 1995. This year is looking worse. In April, the number of sales of existing homes dropped 2% from April 2024, while the median sale price rose 1.8%, marking 22 straight months of year-over-year price growth, according to the National Association of Realtors. The trade group also reported that pending sales are down from a year ago in every region of the country except the Midwest.
The number of canceled sales (one sign of a skittish market) also rose year over year, according to Redfin, which also found that there were nearly 500,000 more people trying to sell homes in April than there were people trying the buy them — the biggest such gap since Redfin began tracking the data in 2013.
La’Keshia White, a real estate agent in Douglasville, Georgia, said that some of her prospective buyers dropped out of the market after losing federal jobs. Others are nervous and scaling back their budgets to leave more cushion should their financial situation change.
“They used to be content, thinking their jobs are going to be there, but it’s not the same anymore,” White said. In Lewisburg, West Virginia, Leah and Jesse Jones, who were in the market
for a three-bedroom home, lost out on two bids: one to a cash buyer who waived contingencies and the other because the seller wouldn’t lower the price enough. After six months, they’ve paused their search, hoping a downturn might bring home prices down, too.
“I feel like buying a home, owning a home, is becoming a privilege that only the truly wealthy can enjoy,” said Leah Jones, 45, a clinical dietitian.
Yet despite a market full of reluctant buyers, sellers are not under pressure to drop their prices. Almost 60% of households have an interest rate below 4%, according to a study published in the Journal of Finance; selling would mean trading that low rate for a much higher one on a new purchase. Not since the 1980s, when borrowing rates soared into the double digits, have so many Americans been locked into their mortgages, said Lu Liu, an
assistant professor of finance at the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania and an author of the study, describing the conditions as “unprecedented.”
Added to that, the country hasn’t built enough homes since the foreclosure crisis, creating a chronic lack of new housing supply that drags down the market and keeps prices high. “There is no panacea in sight,” Liu said.
Even Austin is stuck, despite starting construction on 102,000 single-family homes between 2020 and 2024, according to Zonda, a data provider. The median sale price there has fallen by 18% since the peak in April 2022, according to Unlock MLS, the multiple listing service for the Austin Board of Realtors.
But buyers still see an overheated market — the median home price jumped 69% from April 2020 to April 2022 — and an uncertain future.
Many sellers, in turn, would rather pull a listing from the market than meaningfully lower the price. “It’s a bit of a frozen market,” said Eric Bramlett, an Austin real estate agent.
In February, John Huffman and Nan Walsh listed their three-bedroom house in East Austin for $950,000, after buying a home in Columbus, Ohio, closer to family. The house hasn’t sold, and though they’ve lowered the price to $925,000, they’re in no hurry to make a deal. “I don’t feel any pressure,” said Huffman, 68.
The couple paid $618,000 for the house in 2017 and have a mortgage with a 2.6% interest rate. If it doesn’t sell, they may rent it out or use it as a winter getaway.

Why still unaffordable?
05/27/2025

Why still unaffordable?

Entry-level starter homes are still subject to rising costs for land and labor, and buyers have to contend with high mortgage rates.

05/06/2025
Some interesting stats.
02/12/2025

Some interesting stats.

10/16/2024

Did my Poll Watcher training. Onward!!

09/27/2024

I am warmed by this latest review. It is an honor to serve!
" Lil was supportive and helpful to me and my partner throughout the whole process of searching for and buying our first home. She clearly explained her role as our agent and answered my many questions about the process and the Denver metro housing market.

From the very first meeting with her, I felt comfortable being honest and upfront about our situation and our preferences; she made sure we knew that she kept our best interests at the forefront.

While looking at homes, Lil would point out positive and negative aspects of the listings, then let us form our own opinions. She would let us know if something was time sensitive, but was never pushy. Knowing that we had the support of an agent with a wealth of knowledge and experience in the Denver real estate market helped us feel confident in our decisions.

Once we found the home we wanted, Lil guided us through the parts of the process she could, and provided resources for the other aspects (inspections, securing a loan, etc). Overall, it was a wonderful experience, and if we ever decide to sell our home and/or buy another, we’ll be calling Lil! " Elizabeth K., Aurora

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Denver, CO

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