JPMorgan Warns of a Sunbelt Housing Slowdown — With Florida and Texas Feeling the Sharpest Pain

House for sale yard sign

The housing market steps into 2026 with a strange new reality: after a decade of soaring prices, JPMorgan Global Research now expects national home values to level off at 0% growth. But beneath that calm national surface lies something far more dramatic — a widening divide between steady markets and the Sunbelt, where price drops are accelerating at a startling pace.

As highlighted in Fortune’s report on the forecast, the markets facing the steepest struggle ahead are familiar boomtowns: Florida and Texas.

The National Picture: Flat Prices, Stabilizing Demand

JPMorgan analysts expect supply and demand to reach an uneasy balance in 2026. Adjustable‑rate mortgage costs may fall as the Fed trims rates, while 30‑year fixed loans are still likely to remain above 6%. Builders continue offering mortgage buydowns to help clear unsold inventory, softening monthly payments for buyers.

“We think this could be enough, along with a rising wealth effect, to shift demand higher while supply increases subside,” said John Sim, head of securitized products research at JPMorgan.

Still, the broader picture remains muted. November’s price growth rose just 1.9% year over year — a steep decline from October’s 4.8% — reflecting persistent buyer hesitation.

The Sunbelt Squeeze: Overbuilding Now Biting Back

The Sunbelt’s once‑magnetic affordability surge during the pandemic drew millions of relocating buyers and prompted builders to accelerate construction. Now, that same aggressive expansion is pushing inventory to uncomfortable levels.

While JPMorgan didn’t name specific states, the data speaks loudly. According to Zillow, Texas home prices are down 2.4% year over year. Florida — once the crown jewel of migration — faces a deeper decline: down 5.1%.

Why this matters: Overbuilding remains “a sure path to home price declines,” JPMorgan notes. Builders in Florida and Texas now face some of the nation’s largest housing inventories.

Trump’s Affordability Strategy: Limited Impact on the Ground

President Donald Trump has pledged to improve housing affordability, but analysts indicate the proposed policies may produce only marginal effects for everyday buyers.

A ban on institutional investors buying single‑family homes would shift very little — such investors represent just 1% to 3% of national purchases. Ironically, restricting them from developing rental communities might even tighten supply further.

Trump’s directive for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to purchase $200 billion in mortgage‑backed securities also appears modest. The move touches only 1.4% of the $14.5 trillion mortgage market and may reduce rates by a mere 10–15 basis points.

Most builders already offer mortgage buydowns of 100–200 basis points — far exceeding the projected impact of the administration’s policy shift.

At the same time, Trump has stated openly that he prefers rising home prices. “I don’t want to drive housing prices down,” he said. “I want to drive housing prices up for people that own their homes.”

What This Means for Real Estate Professionals — Especially in Florida

For agents, brokers, and investors, a flattening market paired with Sunbelt price softness creates a rare strategic opportunity. Florida’s current turbulence may sting, but history shows that high‑demand states rebound quickly once surplus inventory clears.

For professionals entering the industry or leveling up their education, now is the time to understand market cycles — and position yourself ahead of the next upswing.

If you’re building a long‑term career in real estate, mortgage, or insurance, Florida’s shifting market isn’t a warning sign. It’s an invitation — a window to learn, get licensed, and advance while competitors hesitate.

That’s why institutions like Cameron Academy continue to lead professionals across Florida and all 50 states through evolving markets, offering licensing and continuing education designed to prepare you for every cycle — whether rising or falling.

The Bottom Line

The headlines may highlight falling prices in Florida and Texas, but the deeper narrative is one of transformation — not collapse. With supply balancing out, demand shifting, and policy changes offering limited relief, 2026 may become a year of normalization and preparation for the next market phase.

For real estate professionals, now is the moment to step forward, not step back. Understanding these trends today positions you as a trusted expert tomorrow — no matter what direction the market moves.

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!

How Bluerate.ai Is Transforming the Mortgage Experience With AI

Bluerate.ai—formerly MyMortgageRates—is stepping into 2025 with a mission to modernize a mortgage process that has barely changed in decades. Built by Zeitro, the platform equips both borrowers and loan officers with powerful AI tools, from online pre‑qualification and automated financial data extraction to instant guideline answers and scenario analysis. With more than 3,000 verified NMLS‑licensed loan officers and real‑time rate comparisons from major lenders, Bluerate.ai is quickly becoming a must‑know platform for mortgage and real estate professionals seeking speed, clarity, and a fully digital lending experience.

Federal Housing Programs Restart After Shutdown — Here’s What Real Estate Pros Need to Know Now

After the longest government shutdown in U.S. history, key federal housing programs such as FHA, VA, USDA, and NFIP are officially back in operation—offering long‑awaited relief to agents, lenders, and insurance professionals. But with a six‑week backlog slowing everything from loan guarantees to flood-insurance renewals, real estate pros should brace for delays and focus on resetting client expectations. A new federal spending deal restores funding through early 2026 and gives the market room to breathe, while NAR’s aggressive advocacy helped push the government toward reopening. Now, professionals who communicate clearly and stay on top of regulatory updates will be best positioned to guide clients through the temporary turbulence.

The Digital Wave Transforming Commercial Real Estate

Commercial real estate is rapidly shifting toward a digital-first model, with platforms like Crexi leading the charge. By unifying property data, AI-driven insights, transparent bidding, and streamlined transaction tools, digital marketplaces are becoming essential to how modern CRE deals are sourced, analyzed, and closed. With more than 2 million monthly users and over $1 trillion in facilitated transactions, Crexi showcases how technology is reshaping the industry and giving real estate professionals a powerful competitive edge.

Europe’s Real Estate Giants Unite to Build a Game‑Changing Proptech Accelerator

Europe’s biggest landlords—including Aroundtown, Vonovia, and top global investors—have teamed up to launch ATechX, a powerful new accelerator giving proptech startups something they rarely get: access to real buildings, real customers, and a clear path to scale across multiple countries. Designed to move founders beyond “pilot purgatory,” ATechX offers a true sandbox for innovation in Europe’s aging, regulation‑heavy property market, helping promising technology reach commercial traction faster than ever.

Is Now the Moment to Buy? What Today’s Odd-but-Opportunistic Housing Market Really Means for You

Mortgage rates are finally easing, inventory is climbing, and buyers are gaining leverage for the first time in years — yet sky‑high prices and economic jitters are keeping many on pause. With economists warning that inflation could push rates higher again, this fall may offer a rare window for well‑prepared buyers. Here’s what’s driving the shift, where opportunities are emerging, and how real estate professionals can stay ahead.

Griffin Funding Brings on New SVP to Drive Bold $3B Non-QM Expansion

Griffin Funding has appointed John Jones as Senior Vice President of Growth and EOS Integrator, aiming to scale the company toward a $3 billion annual non-QM volume goal by 2030. After serving in fractional leadership roles since April 2025, Jones now steps in full‑time to lead organizational structure, efficiency, market expansion, and cross‑department alignment. Backed by strong liquidity and rising deal volume, Griffin Funding appears positioned for major industry impact in the years ahead.