Mid-2025 snapshot

The DFW market in numbers

Inventory has hit a 20-year high. Median sales prices have softened year-over-year across the metroplex. Days on market are up. Closed sales volumes are down. This is what the data actually shows.

Active listings: a supply shock

Year-over-year increases in active listings are at levels not seen in two decades. Collin County is up 65%. Denton 54%. Dallas 40%. This isn't a slow drift — it's a dam breaking.

The driver is what economists call the "unwind of the lock-in effect." Homeowners with 2–4% mortgages held off selling for three years. Life events — divorce, job changes, growing families, downsizing — can only be deferred for so long. The backlog is hitting the market.

Months of supply: balanced to buyer's

Months of Supply (MOS) is the cleanest read on market balance. Under 3 = seller's market. 4-6 = balanced. Over 6 = buyer's market. DFW's resale market sits at 6.48 MOS — firmly buyer's-market territory for the first time since 2003.

Kaufman (5.8) and Rockwall (5.7) are the deepest into buyer territory. Even Tarrant, the tightest county, sits at 3.0 — a level that gives buyers measurable negotiating room.

Price discovery

Median sales prices are moving down

Year-over-year change in median sales price by DFW county, mid-2025 data.

Forecast range: Zillow models a further -2.2% decline through May 2026. Local analysts at M&D Real Estate model a 10–20% correction. Reventure App projects a -7.3% DFW decline over the next 12 months. The downside risk for prices is real and the upside is capped by inventory.

DFW market indicators by county

Mid-2025 data. Higher MOS, higher inventory growth, and deeper price softening all point to greater buyer leverage.

CountyMonths of SupplyMarketListings YoYMedian Price YoYClosed Sales YoY
Collin3.2 – 4.7Balanced→Buyer+65%-4.0% to -5.8%-5.0%
Dallas3.6 – 4.8Balanced→Buyer+40%-5.2%-6.0%
Denton3.4 – 4.7Balanced→Buyer+54%-3.4% to -5.0%-9.0%
Kaufman5.7 – 5.8Buyer's market+12%-5.0% to -7.8%+11.0%
Rockwall4.9 – 6.5Buyer's market+36%0% to -6.5%-25.0%
Tarrant3.0Balanced+27%-1.5%-10.0%
Borrowing costs

Mortgage rate forecast through 2026

Consensus from Fannie Mae, NAR, Morningstar, MBA and Berkshire Hathaway. 30-year fixed mortgage rate (solid blue) and Fed funds rate (dashed amber).

Fannie Mae

30-year fixed near 6.5% by end of 2025, falling to 6.3% end of 2026.

NAR (Lawrence Yun)

H2 2025 average 6.4%, declining to 6.1% in 2026.

Morningstar

Cumulative Fed cuts could drive 30-year mortgage rates to 5.0% by 2028.

Transaction anatomy

66% of homes are now selling below original list

Average closing price has dropped to 94–95% of original asking. Resale homes are sitting on the market for 54 days, new construction 84 days. Nationally, listing cancellations are up 47% — sellers who refuse to adjust are simply pulling their homes.

Translation: this is no longer a market where you bid over asking and waive contingencies. This is a market where you negotiate.

How to negotiate this market →

Days on market → offer leverage

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