06/07/2026
A quick pulse check on the Fort Worth market — because the numbers are worth understanding, not fearing.
Citywide, the Fort Worth median held near $340,000 in May with 1,028 homes sold and days on market unchanged from this time last year — a remarkably stable foundation for a market that's been navigating a lot of national noise. Zoom into the neighborhoods and the picture gets more layered. In 76109, the median climbed to $760,000, up 3% year over year. Ridglea Hills saw steady appreciation as well, with a median of $482,500 and a modest uptick in closed sales. Monticello's median rose meaningfully to $779,000, though on a small number of closings — a reminder that in intimate, high-character neighborhoods, a handful of exceptional homes can shape the data in any given month.
Across the board, homes are spending more time on market than this time last year. That's not a red flag — it's breathing room. Buyers have more space to be intentional. And sellers who lead with the right presentation and the right price are still finding the right buyers.
These graphics capture a snapshot in time across broad areas. Your home — your street, your specific features, your moment — may tell a very different story. If you'd like a personalized read on what any of this means for you, I'd love to connect.