KEY POINTS
  • Housing inventory in June was 19% higher than a year ago, but overall inventory is still about half of pre-Covid levels.
  • The median listing price in June hit another record high of $450,000.
  • The costs of owning the median-priced home in the second quarter required 31.5% of the average U.S. wage, the highest since 2007.

A historic housing shortage brought on by the one-two punch of slow construction and strong pandemic-induced demand is finally starting to ease.

Active listings for homes jumped 19% in June, the fastest annual pace since Realtor.com began tracking the metric five years ago. And the number of new listings during the month finally surpassed typical pre-Covid levels, up 4.5% from a year ago. Overall inventory, however, is still about half pre-Covid levels.