The COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically reshaped the housing market landscape, resulting in an unprecedented surge in home prices throughout the United States. This surge was driven by record-low interest rates, a limited housing supply, and millennials entering their prime homebuying years. According to data from Zillow, typical home values skyrocketed by 36 percent, climbing from $244,000 in March 2020 to $332,000 by March 2023.
However, this growth was anything but uniform. A compelling new paper titled “The Geography of Pandemic-Era Home Price Trends and the Implications for Affordability” from the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies reveals that rural and low-density areas experienced the most significant price increases. The shift toward remote work allowed families to explore housing options beyond high-cost urban centers, leading to a migration trend towards more affordable, less populated regions.
In particular, low-density suburbs of large cities, smaller markets, and rural areas witnessed a notable 36 percent increase in home prices, mirroring the national trend. In contrast, urban and moderate-density suburbs within large metropolitan areas—those with populations exceeding one million—saw more modest increases of 30 percent and 21 percent, respectively. This represents a marked departure from pre-pandemic patterns when price growth was more evenly spread across different regions.

Rural Areas: A Case of Dramatic Growth

Home price growth by county type The disparity in growth is further highlighted by the fact that typical home values in 31 percent of non-metro counties surged by at least 40 percent following the pandemic. By comparison, only 18 percent of urban counties experienced growth beyond this threshold. Such disproportionate growth has intensified affordability issues, particularly in non-metro regions where the average home-value-to-income ratio has escalated from 2.5 to 3.9, approaching levels previously seen in urban counties before the pandemic.

Affordability Challenges Intensify

Map of county home price changes The rapid increase in home prices has significantly strained affordability in areas that were once considered more cost-effective. Rising interest rates have further compounded these affordability challenges, making homeownership an increasingly elusive goal for many. Whether these trends will persist depends on several factors, including ongoing remote work dynamics, regional affordability differences, and the capacity of housing supplies to meet new demand.
The original article on this topic can be found here.

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!

The Mortgage Industry’s AI Transformation: Automation Reshapes Lending From Application to Approval

Artificial intelligence is rapidly reshaping the mortgage industry, boosting productivity, reducing manual work, and accelerating loan closings. From automated document data extraction to AI‑generated underwriting narratives and predictive analytics, lenders are using new tools that improve accuracy and drastically speed up processing times. With chatbots, next‑gen point‑of‑sale systems, and end‑to‑end automation, preapprovals that once took days now take minutes. For mortgage and real estate professionals, mastering AI is becoming a major competitive advantage—one that defines who will thrive in the future of lending.

Why Your Insurance Bill Is Rising Even as Florida Rates Go Down

Florida’s property insurance rates are finally starting to drop, but many homeowners are still seeing higher monthly bills. The reason isn’t insurer price hikes—it’s soaring replacement costs driven by construction inflation, labor shortages, and rising home values. Nearly 75 percent of recent premium increases came from higher property values alone. Understanding this gap between “rates” and “premiums” helps homeowners—and real estate and insurance professionals—navigate the shifting Florida market and make smarter coverage decisions.

Milwaukee’s Commercial Real Estate Market Turns a Corner

Milwaukee’s commercial real estate market is finally showing real signs of recovery, with 2025 sales volume hitting a three‑year high and investor confidence steadily returning. Driven by selective, fundamentals‑focused buying—favoring strong cash flow, quality assets, and strategic pricing—the city is moving from a period of correction into a healthier, opportunity‑rich phase. For real estate professionals nationwide, Milwaukee’s momentum reflects broader CRE market stabilization and the growing importance of disciplined underwriting and market expertise.

Reverse Mortgage Market Poised for Breakout Growth in 2026

Industry leaders project a major surge in reverse mortgage activity heading into 2026, fueled by rising proprietary products, lender innovation, and strong investor interest. As high interest rates push originators to adopt new strategies, flexible private‑label options, senior‑focused HELOCs, and a wave of big‑capital investment are reshaping the market. With education and policy shifts poised to unlock even more demand, reverse mortgages are entering their most transformative era yet.

The 2026 Housing Market Outlook: Is Better Inventory Finally on the Horizon?

Experts forecast that 2026 may bring long‑awaited relief to homebuyers, with both existing and new home inventory expected to rise. NAR predicts a boost in home sales, a slight drop in mortgage rates, and a modest 4% increase in prices—conditions that could motivate more homeowners to list while builders add over a million new homes to the market. For first‑time buyers, higher loan limits and easing qualification standards may make entering the market more achievable than in recent years.

Lower Interest Rates Signal a Brighter 2026 for South Florida Real Estate

South Florida enters 2026 with renewed optimism as falling mortgage rates, improving buyer confidence, and a strong job market help stabilize a housing landscape that struggled in 2025—especially in the condo sector. While single-family homes remained resilient last year, condos faced price drops, rising fees, and hesitation tied to new safety regulations. With rates projected to fall to around 5.8% by year’s end, buying power is increasing, inventory may loosen, and activity is expected to pick up. Still, affordability challenges persist, Miami’s rental market remains intensely competitive, and the condo sector’s recovery will take time.