U.S. Luxury Home Prices Rose 5% in September, Twice the Pace of Non-Luxury Prices
Luxury prices rose most in
Luxury prices are outpacing non-luxury
Prices of luxury homes have been rising faster than prices of non-luxury homes for most of the past two years. The typical luxury home price has climbed about 11% since
“Luxury prices are outpacing the rest of the market because the people buying at the top end are playing by different rules,” said Redfin Senior Economist
That widening gap reflects how high-end buyers—many of whom pay in cash or take smaller loans—have stayed active even as affordability challenges priced many middle-income buyers out of the market. High mortgage rates and record home prices have made purchasing a home far more expensive than before the pandemic, and many middle-income Americans are waiting for affordability to improve before jumping back in.
Luxury and non-luxury home sales are stable, but near record lows
Luxury (+0.3%) and non-luxury (-0.3%) home sales were essentially flat from a year earlier, hovering near the lowest September levels in records going back to 2012.
Pending sales—a leading indicator of future closings—rose 1.6% for luxury homes and 1% for non-luxury homes from a year earlier. While that’s a modest improvement, it comes on the heels of one of the slowest years for home sales in more than a decade. The small year-over-year uptick suggests that sales are hovering just above their low point rather than meaningfully rebounding.
Luxury home inventory climbs 7.7% from a year earlier
The number of luxury homes for sale climbed 7.7% year over year to the highest September level since 2020. Non-luxury inventory rose even more—11.4%—to the highest level for any September since 2019.
Metro-Level Luxury Highlights:
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Prices: Luxury prices rose most in
West Palm Beach, FL (+14.8% to$4.13 million ),Newark, NJ (+12.3% to$2.05 million ), andVirginia Beach, VA (+11.2% to$1.07 million ). The only two metros where prices dropped wereTampa, FL (-3.3% to$1.45 million ) andOakland, CA (-2.2% to$2.9 million ). -
Sales: Luxury sales rose most in
San Francisco (+30.5%),Providence, RI (+19.1%) andFort Worth, TX (+13.5%). They fell most inWest Palm Beach (-22.4%),San Jose, CA (-20.8%) andPhiladelphia (-16.8%). -
Active Listings: Luxury inventory grew fastest in
Tampa (+31.1%),Fort Worth (+18.7%), andNashville, TN (+18.6%). It declined most inPhiladelphia (-21.6%),San Jose (-20.0%), andChicago (-14.8%). -
New Listings: New luxury listings rose most in
Tampa (+21.5%),Kansas City, MO (+20.6%), andSan Francisco (+20.0%). They fell most inJacksonville, FL (-22.6%),Anaheim, CA (-19%), andNew York (-16.5%). -
Speed of Sales: Luxury homes sold fastest in
San Jose (14 days),St. Louis (16 days) andDetroit (16 days). They sold slowest inMiami (130 days),West Palm Beach (115 days), andFort Lauderdale, FL (114 days).
To view the full report, including charts and additional metro-level data, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/news/luxury-homes-market-september-2025
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Source: Redfin