Houston real estate

“April proved to be a strong month for the Houston housing market on both the purchase and rental sides, and mind you that is compared to a record year in 2017,” said HAR Chair Kenya Burrell-VanWormer with JPMorgan Chase. “As long as inventory levels can keep up with the increased buyer demand, we would expect sales volume to remain strong in the months ahead.”

April sales of all property types in Houston totaled 8,453, an increase of 3.2 percent versus the same month last year. Total dollar volume rose 10.5 percent to $2.4 billion.

Houston Real estate April report

After a sluggish March, the Houston real estate market rebounded in April with a nearly seven percent jump in home sales and the highest average and median prices of all time. Consumers also kept the lease market humming with gains in the rental of single-family homes and townhomes/condominiums.

According to the latest monthly report from the Houston Association of REALTORS® (HAR), 7,070 single-family homes sold in April versus 6,611 a year earlier. For the third straight month, the best-performing segment of the market consisted of homes priced in the $500,000 to $749,999 range, which shot up nearly 30 percent. The luxury market – those homes priced at $750,000 and above – rose almost five percent after being flat for two consecutive months.

Home prices reached the highest levels of all time. The single-family home median price (the figure at which half of the homes sold for more and half sold for less) increased 5.3 percent to $240,000 and the average price climbed 5.2 percent to $305,092. 

rent house in Houston

Investors in Houston single-family rental houses are seeing annual returns on par with the nation and are beating out stocks and bonds, a new report showed.

While investors in the stock market have seen double-digit runups in their portfolios in recent years, a commodity that provides both rental income and price appreciation is also racking up gains, according to Roofstock.com, an online marketplace for housing investments.

Owners of single-family rentals in the Houston metro area saw an average annual return of 12.8 percent over the last 7 years, Roofstock.com said.

Houston rental

"It's like a whole other country," according to the motto of the state tourism board. Texas could truly be quite a large and successful country in its own right; it certainly has the size, economy and natural resources to do it up big, in typical Texas fashion. But at the same time, this is a quintessentially American land, where residents are patriotic, friendly, successful...and proud of it all.

Houston Rental Market

This article originally appeared in the March 2018 Housing News Report newsletter published by ATTOM Data Solutions. For a free subscription to the award-winning Housing News Report, contact christine.stricker@attomdata.com.

In November 2017 the Houston Astros won their first World Series championship since the team was founded in 1962. It couldn’t have come at a better time for the city — and its residents — raising the collective spirit that was dampened just three months earlier when the flood waters from Hurricane Harvey left more than 137,000 single family homes in the Houston metro area either damaged or destroyed.

Considering that affected homeowners are still in the recovery process from Harvey, year-end housing data from the Houston Association of Realtors (HAR) came in strong, revealing a record year in terms of home sales and rental activity.

“No one could have imagined 2017 turning out to be a record-setting year for the Houston real estate market, which had weathered the effects of the energy slump only to have Harvey strike such a devastating blow,” said HAR Chair Kenya Burrell-VanWormer in the association’s January 2018 news release. “We know that many are still working tirelessly to rebuild their lives after Harvey, but overall, this clearly illustrates the incredible resilience of the people and the economy of Houston, Texas.”

Dr. Ted C. Jones, chief economist and senior vice president at Stewart Title Guaranty Company, who produces the annual economic forecast for HAR, agreed that the area’s overall economy continues to be strong despite the temporary setbacks caused by Harvey.

“All told we have a very healthy housing market in Houston,” said Jones, who focuses in on the metro area’s four most active counties — Fort Bend, Galveston, Harris and Montgomery. “Last year (2017) we sold more homes than anytime in history with a 2.4 percent growth rate in the sale of single family homes. Sales of homes for $1 million and up were up 11 percent for the year.”

 

Houston rental market

Houstonians leased about 17,000 apartments in the two months after Hurricane Harvey, far more than this region leases in most years, new data show.

The supercharged rental activity has led to a swift reversal in Houston's multifamily market. Landlords who were offering as many as three months of free rent before the storm are now able to raise prices, especially if they're near residential neighborhoods most affected by the hurricane.

 

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"It's almost bordering on a year and a half worth of absorption in two months," said Bruce McClenny, president of ApartmentData.com, citing the new leases logged in September and October.

Yet even as landlords enjoy fuller apartment buildings and higher rents, their good fortunes may be limited.

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REAL ESTATE

"Next year, there's a potential for 17,000 people to move out," McClenny said.

Indeed, thousands of Houstonians will move back into their newly repaired homes in 2018, and there may not be enough demand to refill the vacancies. Creating further uncertainty are the 15,662 damaged apartment units being repaired and coming back online and the units still under construction.

As homeowners move back into their houses, rent levels could stall or even fall back, McClenny said.

Swapnil Agarwal, founder and managing principal of Nitya Capital, still has a bullish outlook on rent growth.

During Houston's recent oil bust, developers put the brakes on starting new projects, and little will come online in the coming years to accommodate demand, benefiting existing properties, said Agarwal, whose company owns 29 apartment complexes in the Houston area.

"All of a sudden, the demand is outpacing the supply," he said.

Renters in October paid an average of $1,105 for an apartment, the highest average rate in two years, a report from Richardson-based real estate analytics firm Axiometrics shows. That's $19 more than September's rate and $30 more than October 2016.

 

Occupancy across the Houston area increased to 93.7 percent, the highest rate in almost two years, the company said.

The market's rebound is mixed, depending on location. Apartment complexes that have seen the most benefit are in Tomball, Spring, Katy and the Energy Corridor, where high-end subdivisions were flooded after the reservoir releases.

"Those people up and down Buffalo Bayou in high-priced homes in well-to-do neighborhoods had the means to say, 'Hey. let's go to those apartments in CityCentre and up and down I-10 that didn't get damaged,' " McClenny said.

In those areas, rental specials have disappeared.

On the flip side, landlords are still offering concessions in Montrose, downtown, the Medical Center and the Galleria area.

Catalyst, a new downtown tower near Minute Maid Park, is offering one month of free rent. The building is about 12 percent leased, and renters only began moving into the building after the storm.

Three or four of the new renters were displaced after Harvey flooded their homes, developer Darren Sloniger said. He doesn't expect them to return to their homes for at least a year.

Across Houston, a certain number of post-Harvey renters may never return to homeownership.

"Our leasing agents tell us why people are looking to move and many are selling their homes and moving into apartments," Sloniger said.

McClenny expects that group to be a small one.

"I imagine most are going to become homeowners somewhere else (in Houston) or somewhere different than where they lost their home," he said. "I do believe most of them will leave the apartments."

Houston real estate

Houston Real Estate Highlights in March

  • Single-family home sales fell 2.5 percent year-over-year, with 6,810 units sold;
  • Days on Market (DOM) for single-family homes increased slightly from 61 days in March 2017 to 63 days this March;
  • Total property sales declined 2.3 percent with 8,274 units sold;
  • Total dollar volume edged up 0.7 percent to $2.3 billion;
  • The single-family home median price rose 2.4 percent to $233,500, which represents a March high;
  • The single-family home average price climbed 3.0 percent to a March high of $292,756;
  • Single-family homes months of inventory shrank year-over-year from a 3.6-months supply to 3.4 months, the highest level of this year and the same as the national inventory level;
  • Townhome/condominium sales fell 5.4 percent, with the average price up 3.3 percent to $211,944 and the median price up 9.6 percent to $172,250;
  • Leases of single-family homes fell 9.0 percent with the average rent up 6.0 percent to $1,748;
  • Volume of townhome/condominium leases dropped 13.1 percent with average rent up 0.7 percent to $1,496.

Houston single family home march 2018 report

Single-family home sales rose in February, with 5,260 units sold throughout greater Houston. That is up 5.3 percent from a year earlier when sales volume totaled 4,997. After three consecutive months of declining sales volume, the luxury market – defined as homes priced from $750,000 and up – was flat in February.

The median price reached the highest level ever for a February in Houston, increasing 1.4 percent to $226,200. The average price rose a fractional 0.4 percent, which was sufficient to achieve a February record of $281,945.

Days on Market (DOM), or the number of days it took the average home to sell, decreased slightly from 67 to 65 days. Inventory fell from a 3.4-months supply to a 3.2-months supply year-over-year, its lowest level since December 2017.

Broken out by housing segment, February sales performed as follows:

  • $1 - $99,999: decreased 2.8 percent
  • $100,000 - $149,999: decreased 11.8 percent
  • $150,000 - $249,999: increased 10.9 percent
  • $250,000 - $499,999: increased 10.2 percent
  • $500,000 - $749,999: increased 18.8 percent
  • $750,000 and above: unchanged

Houston single family homes and housing market

February Monthly Market Comparison

Most of Houston’s monthly housing market indicators reflected positivity in February, with single-family home sales, total property sales, average and median pricing and total dollar volume all up compared to February 2017. Month-end pending sales for single-family homes totaled 6,912, up 11.1 percent versus last year. Total active listings, or the total number of available properties, however, declined 2.2 percent to 33,939.

Single-family homes inventory shrank to a 3.2-months supply from 3.4 months a year earlier. For perspective, housing inventory across the U.S. currently stands at a 3.4-months supply, according to the latest report from the National Association of Realtors (NAR).

CATEGORIESFEBRUARY 2017FEBRUARY 2018CHANGE

Total property sales6,1816,3753.1%

Total dollar volume$1,639,814,909$1,713,566,9034.5%

Total active listings34,70733,939-2.2%

Single-family home sales4,9975,2605.3%

Single-family average sales price$280,813$281,9450.4%

Single-family median sales price$223,000$226,2001.4%

Single-family months inventory*3.43.2-0.2 months

Single-family pending sales6,2206,91211.1%

* 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.

Houston lease property update

HOUSTON  (March 14, 2018) — Houston home sales enjoyed their second positive month of the new year, and after three months of declines, stability returned to the luxury market. However, the overall supply of homes across greater Houston shrank slightly in February, narrowing options for house hunters heading into the traditionally active spring home-buying season.

According to the latest monthly report from the Houston Association of Realtors (HAR), sales of single-family homes rose 5.3 percent in February, with 5,260 units sold. Homes priced between $500,000 and $750,000 experienced the strongest sales activity.

The single-family home median price (the figure at which half of the homes sold for more and half sold for less) increased 1.4 percent to $226,200 – the highest median ever for a February. The average price eked out a fractional 0.4 percent gain to reach a February high of $281,945.

"February was a positive month overall for Houston real estate, but we really need growth in inventory to ensure that there is a plentiful supply of homes as we enter the spring buying season," said HAR Chair Kenya Burrell-VanWormer with JP Morgan Chase.

February sales of all property types in Houston totaled 6,375, an increase of 3.1 percent versus the same month last year. Total dollar volume grew 4.5 percent to $1.7 billion.

 

Lease Property Update

Rental properties drew less interest in February than a year earlier. Single-family home leases and townhome/condominium leases each fell 11.5 percent. The average rent for single-family homes was up 4.1 percent to $1,720 while the average rent for townhomes and condominiums rose 2.2 percent to $1,515.