Austin Real Estate Weekly Market Update – December 18, 2025
by: Dan Price, Broker at Team Price Real Estate
Austin's leading data analysis brokerage, where data drives exceptional service
Published on: Thursday, December 18, 2025 at 10:31 am
The Austin housing market continues to shift further toward a supply-driven environment as new listings outpace buyer absorption. Active inventory across the Austin-Area MLS is now up 15.2% year over year, and Months of Inventory has risen from 4.11 to 4.79. While this level is not extreme by historical standards, the direction matters. Supply is rebuilding faster than demand is recovering, creating steady pressure on pricing and transaction velocity.
This week’s data reinforces a market where buyers hold increasing leverage. Homes are taking longer to sell, competition among sellers is intensifying, and negotiation flexibility is expanding. Average prices remain slightly higher than last year, but median prices continue to drift lower, highlighting a familiar pattern: higher-end properties are propping up averages while the bulk of the market faces affordability constraints. The result is a market that rewards precision over optimism. Austin is no longer driven by urgency or scarcity, but by pricing accuracy, patience, and informed decision-making as the market settles into a more balanced and disciplined phase.
Scroll down to view the full Austin Real Estate Market Statistics PDF for December 18, 2025.
Inventory continues to expand across the Austin housing market as supply grows faster than buyers can absorb it. Active listings across the Austin-Area MLS increased from 12,086 last year to 13,918 today, a 15.2% rise in available homes. Months of Inventory climbed from 4.11 to 4.79, a 16.6% increase that represents roughly a 1.2× expansion in supply year over year. This matters because it confirms that inventory growth is not a short-term fluctuation tied to seasonality, but a structural reset where higher inventory levels are becoming a permanent feature of the market. As supply continues to outpace demand, homes are staying on the market longer and buyers are gaining measurable leverage in negotiations.
Within the City of Austin, inventory growth remains strong, though slightly less pronounced than the broader metro. Active listings increased from 3,197 to 3,619, a 13.2% year-over-year gain. Months of Inventory rose from 3.80 to 4.28, a 12.6% increase, equating to roughly a 1.1× expansion in city-level supply. The direction is consistent across both the city and surrounding suburbs: more listings, slower turnover, and a market that is no longer tightening but continuing to rebalance. The data shows no signs of supply contraction, reinforcing that elevated inventory is now the baseline rather than an exception.
This shift is not temporary. Expanded inventory has become a defining characteristic of the Austin market. Buyers benefit from increased selection, more time to make decisions, and greater negotiating power. Sellers, on the other hand, must adjust expectations and strategy. Pricing accuracy, preparation, and patience matter far more than momentum-based approaches that worked in prior cycles.
Pricing across the Austin-Area MLS remains stable at the surface but continues to soften beneath the averages. The average active list price increased from $575,577 to $587,164, a 2.0% year-over-year gain, reflecting continued concentration at higher price points. In contrast, the median active list price declined from $447,415 to $430,000, a 3.9% drop. This divergence highlights a market where higher-end inventory supports averages while the middle of the market continues to recalibrate under affordability pressure.
Sales pricing follows the same pattern. The average sold price rose from $554,544 to $562,604, a 1.5% year-over-year increase. Meanwhile, the median sold price declined from $434,990 to $423,000, down 2.8%. These movements confirm that prices are not collapsing, but they are adjusting slowly and selectively. Well-priced homes continue to transact, while aspirational pricing is increasingly rejected by the market.
Inside the City of Austin, pricing adjustments are more nuanced. The average active list price increased from $789,800 to $820,745, a 3.9% gain, driven largely by higher-end listings within the city limits. At the same time, the median active list price declined from $599,845 to $589,990, down 1.6%, showing continued softness in the core middle of the market. On the sales side, the average sold price increased from $759,229 to $781,544, a 2.9% rise, while the median sold price declined from $580,000 to $572,321, a 1.3% decrease. The takeaway is consistent: averages remain supported, but typical homes are facing mild downward pressure as buyers remain selective.
Negotiation dynamics continue to favor buyers across the Austin-Area MLS. So far this month, 71.41% of all sold properties have closed below list price, up from 69.09% last month. Another 17.93% sold at asking price, down from 19.24% last month. Properties selling above list price accounted for 10.66% of closings, slightly lower than last month’s 11.67% and closely aligned with the 10.24% level seen in December 2024. These figures reinforce that over-ask outcomes remain the exception, not the rule.
The average sold-to-list price ratio currently sits at 96.76%, meaning sellers are conceding just over 3% on average. This ratio has remained relatively stable, suggesting the market has found a functional equilibrium. Sellers who price accurately are still achieving clean transactions, while those who overshoot the market typically experience longer marketing times and eventual price reductions to regain buyer interest.
In this environment, precision is the primary competitive advantage. Buyers benefit from expanded choice and reduced urgency, while sellers succeed when their pricing aligns with real-time comparable sales rather than historical highs.
Across Central Texas, market performance remains balanced but tilted slightly toward softening. Month over month, 15 of the 30 tracked cities, or 50%, posted price increases, while 14 cities, or 47%, experienced declines. Year over year, only 10 cities, or 33%, are showing price gains, while 20 cities, or 67%, are down. These ratios underscore that the market is no longer moving uniformly upward and is instead adjusting at the local level based on affordability, product mix, and buyer demand.
Relative to each city’s peak over the past 12 months, the trend is unambiguous. Zero cities are currently above their recent peak, and all 30 have declined, confirming that the correction phase has fully worked through the system.
ZIP code-level data tells a similar story. Across 75 ZIP codes, 34, or 45%, posted month-over-month price increases, while 39, or 52%, declined. Year over year, 38 ZIP codes, or 51%, show gains, and 37, or 49%, show declines. Only one ZIP code remains above its 12-month peak, while 74 are below. Volatility has eased, and prices are now oscillating within predictable ranges rather than trending sharply in either direction.
Relative to peak values, the Austin housing market has completed its correction and is operating within a stabilized range. Across the Austin-Area MLS, the median sold price remains well below the May 2022 peak, and price-per-square-foot metrics show deeper normalization, with median and average values down more than 20% from their highs. These figures confirm that pricing has reset to sustainable levels and is no longer in an active decline.
Within the City of Austin, the pattern is consistent. Median and average sold prices remain below their peak levels, while price-per-square-foot metrics reflect a full retracement of the excesses seen during the prior cycle. These changes are not signs of weakness. They are signs that the market has absorbed the correction and moved into a healthier equilibrium.
As we move through 2025, the Austin housing market continues to settle into a steady and predictable phase. Inventory remains elevated and continues to grow at double-digit rates, while pricing holds within narrow, controlled ranges. Over-ask activity is limited, and successful transactions are driven by alignment rather than urgency.
The outlook is clear. Buyers retain leverage through choice and time. Sellers succeed through realism, preparation, and data-driven pricing. Austin is no longer a momentum-driven market. It is a value-driven one. This transition sets the stage for a more stable 2026, where participants on both sides of the transaction can plan with greater confidence and fewer surprises.
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The Austin housing market is not oversupplied in a distressed sense, but it is clearly operating with elevated inventory compared to recent years. Active listings across the Austin-Area MLS are up 15.2% year over year, and Months of Inventory has increased from 4.11 to 4.79. This level of supply indicates a balanced-to-buyer-leaning market rather than a shortage. Homes are taking longer to sell, competition among sellers has increased, and buyers have more options. This is a normal and healthy environment after several years of extreme under-supply, not a signal of market stress.
This divergence happens when higher-priced homes continue to sell while the middle of the market softens. In the Austin-Area MLS, the average sold price is up 1.5% year over year, while the median sold price is down 2.8%. Averages are being supported by higher-end transactions, while median prices reflect affordability pressure facing typical buyers. This pattern suggests the market is not broadly appreciating, but selectively supported at the top, with most price-sensitive segments adjusting downward.
Yes. The data shows that 71.41% of homes sold this month closed below list price, and the average sold-to-list price ratio is 96.76%. That means sellers are conceding just over 3% on average. While well-priced homes still attract offers, buyers generally have room to negotiate on price, repairs, or concessions. The market rewards preparation and patience on the buyer side rather than urgency or aggressive bidding.
The City of Austin is following the same overall trend as the broader metro but with slightly lower inventory expansion. City-level inventory is up 13.2% year over year, compared to 15.2% across the Austin-Area MLS. Pricing inside the city is more influenced by higher-end homes, which is why average prices are up while median prices continue to decline. Both markets are moving together directionally: slower turnover, more negotiation, and a greater emphasis on accurate pricing.
For buyers, the environment is favorable. There is more choice, less pressure to rush, and greater leverage in negotiations. For sellers, success depends on pricing accurately from day one and understanding that the market no longer rewards optimism or scarcity-based strategies. The Austin housing market has transitioned into a value-driven phase where data, preparation, and realistic expectations matter more than timing alone. This stability creates a healthier foundation moving forward, even if price growth remains limited.