Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure how NIH is a draw or selling point given they fired so many.
Agents need to wake up.
Average NIH employees buying for the first time can’t afford these prices anyways.
Anonymous wrote:In a market like this where buyers have less competition and can pick a house they really like, houses next to a loud major road or highway suffer the most.
This one is so close to 66, you would hear it constantly when out trying to enjoy your backyard.
Anonymous wrote:If the bubble isn’t popping, it’s certainly deflating. They paid $1,110,500 in June 2023, which was $115,500 over the list price. In May 2025 it was listed for $1,275,000. Now it’s down to $1,099,000. What do we think it will end up selling for?
https://redf.in/0CXELD
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a townhouse in our HOA sell this month for 5% over the sale price for another townhome with the same layout that sold in 2023.
Median sale prices in September 2025 are still above sale prices in September 2023.
Market is certainly cooling down and not rising as fast, probably slower than inflation so going down on real terms.
We'll see what happens in the spring market. My guess is it won't be pretty but won't be catastrophic either though I guess that assumes the shutdown ends by then.
I live in a townhouse, and it's the same in my community. But I think that's because townhouses are hot again (they weren't really that hot during covid) now that people have to commute to work again (townhouses tend to be in areas that are convenient to mass transit) and aren't spending most of their time at home. I think townhouses may be doing better than SFHs right now.
Anonymous wrote:We had a townhouse in our HOA sell this month for 5% over the sale price for another townhome with the same layout that sold in 2023.
Median sale prices in September 2025 are still above sale prices in September 2023.
Market is certainly cooling down and not rising as fast, probably slower than inflation so going down on real terms.
We'll see what happens in the spring market. My guess is it won't be pretty but won't be catastrophic either though I guess that assumes the shutdown ends by then.