HOUSTON — Summer wrapped up on a high note for the Houston real estate market, as August delivered gains in both sales volume and prices. Housing inventory held steady month-over-month, but is tracking slightly below year-ago levels. While prices were the highest for an August, they fell short of the all-time records set in June.
Single-family home sales totaled 7,505 units, up 1.1 percent versus August 2013, according to the latest monthly report prepared by the Houston Association of Realtors (HAR). Months of inventory, which estimates how long it will take to deplete current active housing inventory based on the previous 12 months of sales activity, matched July’s 3.0-months supply, but was down slightly compared to the 3.3-months supply of last August. It is significantly below the current national supply of 5.5 months of inventory.
The average price of a single-family home rose 6.4 percent year-over-year to $275,369. The median price—the figure at which half the homes sold for more and half for less—jumped 10.4 percent to $206,000….
August sales of all property types totaled 8,953 units, a 1.7-percent increase compared to the same month last year. Total dollar volume for properties sold rose 6.8 percent to $2.3 billion versus $2.2 billion a year earlier.
“The Houston housing market is going strong as we transition from summer to fall, and enough new listings have hit the market over the past month to keep inventory levels stable,” said HAR Chair Chaille Ralph with Heritage Texas Properties. “One of the factors that continues to fuel real estate and our local economy in general is the ongoing creation of jobs. Houston is definitely a desirable destination for many people across the country.”
In its September 2014 Economy at a Glance report, the Greater Houston Partnership stated that the Houston metropolitan area created 112,200 jobs in the 12 months ending July 2014, which represents a 4.0 percent annual growth rate. That puts Houston ahead of the nation’s major metros for job growth, ahead of Dallas-Ft. Worth (3.9 percent) and Miami (3.3 percent).
August Monthly Market Comparison
The Houston housing market saw growth in all measurement categories in August, with total property sales, total dollar volume and average and median pricing all up when compared to August of 2013.
Month-end pending sales for all property types totaled 4,360. That is statistically flat compared to last year and may potentially signal a slowdown in sales activity when the September numbers are tallied. Active listings, or the number of available properties, at the end of August was 29,574 and is 9.9 percent lower than last year.
Houston’s housing inventory, while slightly lower on a year-to-year basis, has held steady at a 3.0-months supply since July. It is down from the 3.3-months supply of August 2013 and below the current 5.5-months supply of inventory across the U.S. reported by the National Association of Realtors.
CATEGORIES | AUGUST 2013 | AUGUST 2014 | CHANGE |
Total property sales | 8,806 | 8,953 | 1.7% |
Total dollar volume | $2,183,032,391 | $2,332,065,189 | 6.8% |
Total active listings | 32,834 | 29,574 | -9.9% |
Total pending sales | 4,363 | 4,360 | -0.1% |
Single-family home sales | 7,422 | 7,505 | 1.1% |
Single-family average sales price | $258,733 | $275,369 | 6.4% |
Single-family median sales price | $186,510 | $206,000 | 10.4% |
Single-family months inventory* | 3.3 | 3.0 | -9.4% |
* Months inventory estimates the number of months it will take to deplete current active inventory based on the prior 12 months sales activity. This figure is representative of the single-family homes market.
Single-Family Homes Update
August single-family home sales totaled 7,505. That is up 1.1 percent from August 2013 and represents the third highest one-month sales volume of the year.
Home prices reached record high levels for an August. The single-family median price jumped 10.4 percent from last year to $206,000 and the average price rose 6.4 percent year-over-year to $275,369. Transactions overall closed at a near-record pace. The number of days a home took to sell¬, or Days on Market, was 46. In July it reached a record low of 45 days.
Broken out by housing segment, August sales performed as follows:
- $1 – $79,999: decreased 30.7 percent
- $80,000 – $149,999: decreased 12.8 percent
- $150,000 – $249,999: increased 2.8 percent
- $250,000 – $499,999: increased 13.4 percent
- $500,000 – $1 million and above: increased 15.7 percent
HAR also breaks out the sales performance of existing single-family homes for the Houston market. In August, existing home sales totaled 6,608. That is 0.2 percent ahead of the same month last year. The average sales price increased 5.7 percent year-over-year to $260,031 while the median sales price jumped 9.3 percent to $192,000.
Townhouse/Condominium Update
After a 3.1 percent year-over-year decline in July, sales of townhouses and condominiums edged up 1.1 percent in August versus one year earlier. A total of 663 units sold last month compared to 656 properties in August 2013. The average price declined 2.6 percent to $195,234 and the median price dropped 5.0 percent to $142,500. Inventory was down to a 2.6-months supply versus a 3.2-months supply a year earlier.
Lease Property Update
Demand for lease properties remained strong in August. Single-family home rentals rose 8.8 percent compared to August 2013, while year-over-year townhouse/condominium rentals increased 1.7 percent. The average rent for a single-family home was up 4.8 percent to $1,830 and the average rent for a townhouse/condominium rose 5.2 percent to $1,584.
- Single-family home sales rose 1.1 percent versus August 2013;
- Total property sales were up 1.7 percent year-over year;
- Total dollar volume climbed 6.8 percent, increasing from $2.2 billion to $2.3 billion on a year-over-year basis;
- At $206,000, the single-family home median price achieved a record high for an August;
- At $275,369, the single-family home average price also reached an August high;
- Days on Market for single-family homes was 46, the second lowest level of all time;
- The local supply of homes is holding steady with inventory flat at a 3.0-months supply month-over-month. That compares to a 3.3-months supply locally last August and the current national average of 5.5 months, as reported by the National Association of Realtors;
- Rentals of single-family homes rose 8.8 percent year-over-year and the cost of renting those homes increased 4.8 percent to $1,830.
- Townhouse/condominium rentals edged up 1.7 percent, with rents rising 5.2 percent to $1,584.