Maryland Housing Market Update | February 2026
A 2026 Maryland housing market update covering Baltimore, Columbia, Frederick, Silver Spring, and Annapolis — exploring price trends, inventory supply, days on market, negotiation metrics, and which cities are most competitive for buyers right now. 📈
Georgia Housing Market Update | February 2026
A 2026 breakdown of the Georgia housing market across Atlanta, Buford, Evans, Jefferson, Savannah, and Valdosta — including median home prices, days on market, year-over-year trends, sale-to-list ratios, and whether each area is a buyer’s or seller’s market.
North Carolina Housing Market Update | February 2026
A 2026 breakdown of the North Carolina housing market across Leland, Wilmington, Fayetteville, Charlotte, and Cary — including median home prices, days on market, year-over-year trends, and whether each area is a buyer’s or seller’s market.
February 2026 Raleigh Housing Market Update: What Buyers Need to Know Right Now
The Raleigh, NC housing market has shifted compared to last year. This update breaks down current home prices, inventory levels, days on market, year-over-year trends, and which areas of Raleigh are leaning more toward buyers or sellers — so you can understand what’s actually happening right now.
🏠 Georgia Housing Market Update — November 2025
Georgia’s housing market is cooling — not crashing. 🏠 Homes are sitting on the market a little longer (about 60 days on average), prices have stabilized, and buyers finally have breathing room again. From Atlanta to Savannah, here’s a full breakdown of where the market’s leaning buyer or seller, what’s changing in each city, and how to strategize your next move whether you’re buying, refinancing, or selling.
North Carolina Housing Market Update: Why Buyers Can See Major Wins in These Cities
The 2025 North Carolina housing market is quietly shifting toward buyers. Inventory is up, prices are stabilizing, and sellers are offering incentives again. From Raleigh to Wilmington, discover where buyers have the most leverage — and how to use it before the next wave of demand hits.