• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Contact Us

Agency Checklists

Massachusetts Insurance News & Job Opportunities

You are here: Home / State House News / Mass. home sales on the rise to start 2025

Mass. home sales on the rise to start 2025

March 20, 2025 by State House News Service

Massachusetts Home Prices

Median single-family home sale price increases to $580,000 year-to-date

STATE HOUSE, BOSTON, MARCH 18, 2025…..Two months into 2025, the market for single-family homes in Massachusetts is roughly following the trend that began to emerge at the tail end of 2024: the number of homes sold and the median price of those sales are both up slightly compared to a year prior.

In the latest checkup, The Warren Group said Tuesday that there were 2,136 single-family homes sold here last month, a 4.2% increase over the 2,500 transactions in February 2024. The median single-family sale price climbed 4.9% year over year to hit $575,000 this February.

“The median home sale price is down $10,000 from January, which is usual for the month-over-month period. Looking at previous patterns, March should see a jump in both the number of sales and the median price versus February,” Cassidy Norton, Warren Group associate publisher, said.

In the first two months of 2025, 4,765 single-family homes have sold in Massachusetts — 7% more than during the same two months of 2024, The Warren Group said, and the median single-family home sale price has increased 5.5% on the same basis to stand at $580,000 year-to-date.

The dynamic of chronically-limited inventory and always-escalating prices has played a major role in driving up cost of living in Massachusetts. State policymakers are counting on a new housing production law to begin to chip away at what is expected to be a 220,000-plus housing unit shortage by 2030.

“Our economic future and our livelihood, our growth as a state depends on our ability to build more homes,” Gov. Maura Healey said last week on GBH Radio as she detailed how the combination of the 2021 law requiring multi-family zoning around MBTA service and last year’s housing bond and policy law are meant to spur production. She added, “It’s the most important thing that we can do as a state.”

A statewide housing plan Healey’s administration released in February found that increasingly high rents and sale prices “burden household budgets, undermine the stability of communities, exacerbate homelessness, cause health problems, weaken the economy, and widen gaps between privilege and disadvantage.”

The report said that fewer than two out of every 100 homes here are available for sale or rent and new housing production in Massachusetts has slowed significantly in recent years compared to the 2010s. And with inventory chronically low, costs have soared and pushed homeownership out of reach for many. Median home prices rose 73% from 2000 to 2023 after adjusting for inflation, while median household income rose only 4% in real dollars over the same period.

As of March 13, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate was 6.65%, according to data from Freddie Mac compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. That’s virtually unchanged from a week before and down just slightly from one year ago, when the average 30-year mortgage rate was 6.74%.

Norton said the condominium market followed roughly the same trends as single family homes in February, with last month’s 1,108 condo sales marking a 2.9% increase over a year earlier and February’s median sale price hitting $511,000 following a 4.3% year-over-year climb.

There have been 2,266 condominium sales so far in 2025, up 10.5% from the same point in 2024. The year-to-date median sale price for condos is up 5% over the year to $525,000.

“The 10 percent year-to-date increase in sales may reflect an increase in inventory, potentially illustrating a loosening in the market,” Norton said.

Primary Sidebar

MA Division of Insurance Announcements

New Episode

MA Insurance Lawyers

SPONSORED

Career News

The Concord Group Appoints Michael P. Nolin, Jr. as President & Chief Executive Officer

Industry Veterans Join Plymouth Rock as Territory Sales Manager for Massachusetts

Risk Strategies Founder Mike Christian Named 2025 Insurance Professional of the Year

Risk Strategies Founder Mike Christian Named 2025 Insurance Professional of the Year

Arbella Adds Two New Members to its Board of Directors

Arbella Adds Two New Members to its Board of Directors

View More Career News

In Memoriam

In Memoriam: Roy Corso: 1943-2025

In Memoriam: Kevin Hugh Kelley, 1950-2025

In Memoriam: Kevin Hugh Kelley, 1950-2025

In Memoriam: Stephen Lee Brown, 1937-2025

In Memoriam: Stephen Lee Brown, 1937-2025

Company News

Hiring initiative bringing 100 new Farmers Insurance® jobs to four cities

Travelers Institute Announces Fall 2025 Wednesdays with Woodward® Webinar Schedule

Insurance Library Announces 2025 Members of Hess Benefactor Society

Agency Checklists, Arbella's New Cyber Endorsement, Cyber Extortion Insurance, CyberBullying Insurance, Online Fraud Insurance for Homeowners, Data Breach Insurance for Homeowners, CyberBullying Insurance for your children

Massachusetts RMV Cautions Public to Beware of Text Scams

Footer

Agency Checklists

Contact us

We offer a variety of ways to get help promote your company or product.

Announcements
Email Sponsorships
Partnerships
Custom Collaborations

*Affiliate Disclosure

Please note that any of Agency Checklists’ articles might contain one or more affiliate links. This means that any subsequent purchase resulting from these links may result in a commission for us, but at no additional cost to you. For example, as an Amazon Associate, Agency Checklists earns a commission from all qualifying purchases. By working with affiliates we can continue to keep Agency Checklists subscription free. Thank you for your support.

Explore Our Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Agency Checklists · All rights reserved.

 

Loading Comments...