US existing home sales unexpectedly fell in June as elevated mortgage rates and record-high prices pushed affordability to its worst level since August 2025.
US existing home sales unexpectedly fell in June as elevated mortgage rates and record-high prices pushed affordability to its worst level since August 2025.

US existing home sales fell 2.4% in June to a 4.09 million annualized rate, missing the 4.20 million consensus, as the median home price hit a record $440,600 and mortgage rates near 6.6% sidelined buyers.
"The back-and-forth in monthly home sales activity, driven by mild fluctuations in mortgage rates, shows how sensitive home buyers are to affordability conditions," said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors.
Sales declined in three of four regions, with the South — the nation's largest existing-home market — posting the steepest drop at 3.6%. The Northeast was the sole region to record an increase. First-time buyers accounted for 33% of transactions, down from 35% in May and well below the 40% share Yun said is needed for a healthy market. Inventory stood at 1.56 million units, up just 1.3% from a year ago and posting its first monthly decline of 2026.
The data highlights a housing market trapped between high borrowing costs and insufficient supply. While the 30-year fixed mortgage rate has retreated from post-conflict highs, it remains about 45 basis points above pre-conflict levels, according to Freddie Mac. Yun described the year-over-year inventory gain as "insignificant," saying the market needs 30% to 40% more supply to meaningfully improve affordability.
Sales have hovered near a 4-million annual pace since 2023, far below the historical norm of about 5.2 million. Through the first half of 2026, seasonally adjusted sales are up only 0.7% compared with the same period in 2025, reflecting a market stuck in a multiyear slump.
The median home price's 1.8% year-over-year gain to $440,600 marks the 36th consecutive month of annual price increases, NAR data show. While the pace of appreciation has slowed sharply from the double-digit gains seen in 2021 and 2022, prices remain elevated by any historical measure. Yun noted that wage growth is now outpacing home price appreciation, offering a modest improvement in affordability relative to a year ago.
Supply Constraints Persist as Policy Response Stalls
The inventory shortage remains the structural bottleneck. The National Association of Home Builders estimates the national housing shortfall at about 1.2 million units, concentrated in entry-level homes. At June's sales pace, the 1.56 million units on the market represent a 4.6-month supply — below the 5-to-6-month range that traditionally signals a balanced market.
A bipartisan housing affordability bill recently passed by Congress includes measures to restrict single-family homeownership by investment firms and streamline environmental reviews for construction. However, President Donald Trump has declined to sign the bill until a separate voting measure is passed, leaving the policy response in limbo.
The path forward hinges on mortgage rates. June's closings largely reflect contracts signed in April and May, when the average 30-year rate ranged from 6.23% to 6.53%. With rates still hovering near 6.6%, the near-term outlook for sales remains subdued. Job growth — more than half a million added since the start of the year — provides a floor under housing demand, but until rates decline meaningfully or inventory expands substantially, a sustained recovery appears unlikely.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.