Florida Treasure Coast Opens the Year With a Surge of New Home Listings

Aerial view of suburban florida homes

The Florida Treasure Coast kicked off the new year with something real estate watchers have not seen in years: a massive flood of new home listings. According to local Realtor data highlighted by TCPalm, January delivered 1,905 fresh listings, marking a bold 22 percent jump from the same month last year.

But more listings were not the only surprise. Martin County saw its median home-sale price fall by nearly 100,000 year over year, even while neighboring St. Lucie and Indian River counties experienced steady price growth.

For aspiring and active Florida real estate professionals, these fast-moving trends underline the importance of strong market analysis skills. At Cameron Academy, you gain the practical insight needed to help clients price properly, buy strategically, and move confidently regardless of market shifts.

Home Prices

The counties moved in dramatically different directions:

  • Martin: 507,000, down from 619,000
  • St. Lucie: 389,000, up from 383,900
  • Indian River: 423,125, up from 390,500

Interact Tip: If you are considering becoming a real estate agent, take note: markets can behave completely differently even when they share borders. This is why strong, success-focused education like the training at Cameron Academy teaches you to understand micro-trends that clients depend on.

Home Sales

Closed sales grew across all three counties:

  • Martin: 148, up from 115
  • St. Lucie: 363, up from 310
  • Indian River: 256, up from 171

More inventory plus elevated sales shows that demand is still strong despite mortgage rates pushing upward, closing January near 6.95 percent for 30-year loans.

Home Listings

Active listings also increased year over year:

  • Martin: 952, up from 892
  • St. Lucie: 2,587, up from 2,580
  • Indian River: 1,863, up from 1,312

These increases point toward a more balanced or even buyer-friendly spring selling season.

Inventory Levels

Inventory months tell the clearest story of all. A balanced market sits at 5.5 months. Anything above that favors buyers. Indian River made the biggest shift:

  • Martin: 5.4 months, unchanged
  • St. Lucie: 5.6, slightly down from 5.7
  • Indian River: 8.1, up from 6.0

Career Insight: A rising-inventory market is a powerful time to enter the profession. Buyers need guidance, sellers need strategy, and agents who understand market signals immediately stand out. At Cameron Academy, you learn exactly how to read these trends and communicate them like a seasoned pro.

Time to Contract

Homes took longer to go under contract in two of the three counties:

  • Martin: 52 days, unchanged
  • St. Lucie: 57 days, up from 52
  • Indian River: 64 days, up from 52

Longer time on market usually means buyers can negotiate with more confidence, while sellers need sharper pricing strategies. This is where knowledgeable agents become invaluable.

Final Takeaway

The Treasure Coast real estate landscape is shifting quickly and becoming more dynamic as 2026 begins. Whether you are already licensed or preparing to enter the field, understanding local market trends gives you the ability to guide clients with clarity and confidence.

If you want to sharpen your expertise or begin your Florida real estate career with a curriculum built for real-world success, explore Cameron Academy. Our flexible, modern licensing programs prepare you for opportunity in every kind of market environment.

Source: Reporting by Jack Randall, TCPalm Real Estate and Economy

More Articles

Getting licensed or staying ahead in your career can be a journey—but it doesn’t have to be overwhelming. Grab your favorite coffee or tea, take a moment to relax, and browse through our articles. Whether you’re just starting out or renewing your expertise, we’ve got tips, insights, and advice to keep you moving forward. Here’s to your success—one sip and one step at a time!

Why Today’s High Mortgage Rates Matter More Than Ever for the Housing Market

A growing share of American homeowners now carry mortgage rates above 5%—a dramatic shift that’s reshaping refinancing, inventory, and buyer behavior nationwide. With more than 30% of borrowers locked into rates over 5% and 20% above 6%, the market is split between owners holding on to low pandemic‑era loans and new buyers taking on higher‑rate mortgages. Federal efforts to push rates down could unlock millions of refinancing opportunities, while buyers see only modest monthly savings. For real estate professionals, understanding these rate dynamics is crucial as they increasingly drive inventory levels, affordability, and market activity.

CRE Deal Volume Dips in December, but Office Sector Stages an Unexpected Comeback

New Moody’s data shows commercial real estate deal volume slipped 20% in December, marking a second monthly decline. Yet the full year tells a different story: 2025 ended with a 17% gain, signaling a quiet but resilient recovery. The biggest surprise came from the office sector, which posted a 21% jump in activity as return‑to‑office trends and AI‑driven job growth boosted demand. Multifamily, retail, and alternative assets like data centers also saw strong momentum, giving real estate professionals a market full of fresh opportunities heading into 2026.

Florida Kicks Off 2026 With Major Auto Insurance Rate Cuts and Market Stability

Florida drivers and industry professionals are heading into 2026 with good news: auto insurance rates are dropping across the state as the market shows strong signs of stabilization. USAA leads the latest wave with a 7% average rate decrease expected in May 2026, saving members more than $125 million annually. They join several major insurers — including State Farm, Progressive, AAA, Allstate, and Florida Farm Bureau — all approving significant reductions. Officials credit recent legislative reforms, especially tort reform, for the improved loss ratios and renewed insurer confidence. With both auto and home insurance markets strengthening, Florida’s real estate, mortgage, and insurance professionals can expect more consumer confidence, smoother transactions, and expanding career opportunities.

The 2024 Housing Shortage: Why America Is Still 1.2 Million Homes Behind

New data from Eye On Housing and the NAHB shows the U.S. remains short more than 1.2 million housing units, keeping pressure on both rents and home prices. Record‑low vacancy rates, slow single‑family construction, and restrictive zoning continue to fuel intense competition in 2024. Major metros like Chicago, New York, and Atlanta face some of the deepest deficits, and the true nationwide shortfall may be even higher when accounting for overcrowding and aging homes. For real estate professionals, the ongoing shortage means sustained demand, tighter inventory, and major opportunities for those who understand the evolving market.

AI Isn’t the Shiny Object Anymore — It’s the New System Driving Real Estate Success

Top real estate coach Jason Pantana says the divide between agents today isn’t about who has “tried” AI — it’s about who is immersed in it. In a new HousingWire interview, he explains why AI isn’t a gimmick but a full business system that amplifies output, improves authenticity, and reshapes how clients search for agents. From prompt mastery to AI‑driven visibility on Google, Pantana reveals how agents who commit even 15 minutes a day to learning AI are already outperforming those who hesitate.

DFW Commercial Real Estate 2025: Industrial Surges, Retail Shines, Office Struggles

Dallas–Fort Worth’s commercial real estate market closed 2025 with a split personality. Industrial dominated with massive new deliveries and soaring leasing demand, retail held steady with some of the market’s strongest fundamentals in years, and office continued to falter under remote‑work pressures. High vacancies, weak absorption, and rising demand for top‑tier space show the sector’s ongoing reset. Meanwhile, industrial and retail strength position the Metroplex for another powerhouse year heading into 2026.