REAL ESTATE NEWS
San Antonio home sellers are slashing prices at record rates

Nearly 58 percent of San Antonio home sellers dropped their list price in February
Prospective home buyers in San Antonio may want to seal the deal this spring. According to a new Redfin report, nearly 58 percent of Alamo City home sellers dropped their list price in February — the highest share among the 50 most populous regions in the U.S.
Austin wasn't far behind at 55.2 percent, followed by Dallas at 47.3 percent. According to the real estate marketplace, Texas’ dominance on this list isn't coincidental. Along with Florida, the state has been building more homes than anywhere in the nation, giving prospective buyers more options and bargaining power.
Nationwide, 34.2 percent of February home sellers cut their asking price, a 31.5 percent rise from a year earlier and the highest share ever since Redfin began tracking markets in 2012. The average cut was $40,915, approximately 7 percent of the original sticker price.
Redfin attributes the discounts to a classic supply-and-demand imbalance. High mortgage rates combined with economic uncertainty have kept buyers on the fence while sellers continued to flood the market with new homes. The company speculates that the real rate of cuts may be higher since it does not account for delisted properties.
“A lot of people who couldn’t sell their homes last year opted to delist instead of reducing the price, with a plan to relist this spring because they knew that would give them a better chance of selling,” says Redfin real estate agent Aditi Jain, via a release “Some homeowners need to move immediately, but those who can afford to time the market may get a better price.”
Redfin says that spring consistently produces the lowest share of price cuts, with May having the lowest share in six of the past ten years, and April taking the title in three others.
Sellers who closed in December faced the highest likelihood of cutting their price.Sellers who have owned their homes longest are also better protected from market fluctuations.
Owners who have lived in their homes for at least seven years cut prices at a rate of 31.8 percent, compared to 37.4 percent for those who have owned for two years or less. More recent buyers who purchased their homes at the height of the pandemic boom are now reluctant to accept what the market will actually bear.
The five U.S. cities with the highest shares of cut listing prices are:
No. 1 — San Antonio, Texas (57.9%)
No. 2 — Austin, Texas (55.2%)
No. 3 — Dallas, Texas (47.3%)
No. 4 — Tampa, Florida (45.9%)
No. 5 — Fort Lauderdale, Florida (44.9%)
