The Texas housing market in July continues its transition from a frenzied seller’s market to one defined by balance, choice, and strategic pricing. Across all major metros, inventory has expanded sharply — in some cases nearly 40% year-over-year — while prices have stabilized or dipped slightly. Sales activity remains healthy, suggesting buyers are adjusting to higher supply and selective opportunities, while sellers must navigate a more competitive landscape.

Key Statewide Themes

1. Inventory Is Back

Months of inventory now hover between 4.8 and 5.9 across major metros, the most balanced levels in years. This shift is giving buyers more options and more negotiating room.

2. Price Growth Has Stalled — or Reversed

Median prices are flat in Dallas–Fort Worth, down modestly in Austin and Houston, and still climbing in College Station–Bryan. The modest corrections in larger metros point to a market finding its true value after pandemic-era surges.

3. Buyers Are in the Driver’s Seat — but Demand Is Steady

Even with higher supply, closed sales are up in most markets. This signals that demand is still there — buyers just have the time and leverage to be more selective.

4. Longer Timelines, More Negotiation

Days on market are up by 3–10 days year-over-year in most areas, and homes are selling for 93–96% of original list price. Pricing strategy matters more than ever.

Dallas • Fort Worth • Arlington
College Station • Bryan
Austin • Round Rock
Houston • The Woodlands • Sugarland

Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington MSA

Sales up 5% despite flat prices and a 29% jump in listings. A healthy, balanced market driven by strong population growth.

College Station-Bryan MSA

The outlier with prices up nearly 5% and sales up 5%. Steady demand from the university base keeps this market competitive.

Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos MSA

Inventory up 22%, prices down 3%, sales flat. Buyers have room to negotiate; sellers need to price right to stand out.

Houston-Pasadena-The Woodlands MSA

Prices down ~3%, but sales up nearly 9%. Biggest inventory gain (+40%) in the state, creating opportunities for patient buyers.

What This Means

For Buyers: More selection and negotiating power than in years, but still enough competition to keep desirable properties moving quickly.

For Sellers: Pricing realistically is crucial, overpricing risks sitting on the market as buyers have more options.

For Investors: Expanding inventory and softening prices in larger metros present buying opportunities, especially for long-term holds.

Learn More

The Texas Real Estate Research Center is a valuable resource for real estate professionals, investors, and anyone interested in learning more about the Texas real estate market.

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