Housing Trends in Delaware County ‘Reaching Implausible Levels’

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housing in a neighborhood
Photo by Breno Assis on Unsplash

Housing stock in the region and Delaware County is continuing to reach record-low levels, causing prices to skyrocket and reach heights that far outweigh the income of potential homebuyers, writes Ryan Mulligan for the Philadelphia Business Journal.

According to Kevin Gillen, a senior research fellow at Drexel’s Lindy Institute for Urban Innovation, the inventory trends are “reaching implausible levels.”

In Delaware County, inventory has been getting lower nearly every year in the past decade.

In 2013, the county had 7.5 months of home supply.

In 2014 the number fell to 5.9 but rose to 6.1 in 2015.

The following years all recorded a drop: to 5.4 in 2016, 3.9 in 2017, 3.1 in 2018, 2.3 in 2019, 1.6 in 2020, and 0.7 in 2021.

Currently, the housing supply is at 0.6 months. This means that the supply would last for a little over half a month if no new buildings were constructed.

Meanwhile, home prices have been going up.

The median sales price of homes in Delaware County was $166,000 in 2013 and remained in the mid to high $100,000s for the next several years. However, the price jumped to $237,500 in 2021 and $260,000 this year.

Read more about housing trends in the Philadelphia Business Journal.

Realtor Jason Walter talks about why the real estate market is getting worse for homebuyers.

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