Las Vegas 2025: Worst Home Sales Since 2007—But the Real Story is Even More Alarming
Las Vegas 2025: 28,498 sales (lowest since 2007) despite population doubling. Las Vegas Expert, Zach WalkerLieb: "On a ratio basis, far worse than 2007." Median price $470K, inventory up 28.8%. Per-capita transaction crisis creates buyer opportunities, seller challenges.
Why January Could Save Las Vegas Buyers Thousands (And What December Taught Us)
January could save Las Vegas homebuyers thousands. National data shows January buyers save $23,000 compared to May purchases, and Vegas demonstrated this principle dramatically—December median prices dropped $19,000 from November's record high.
Local experts confirm October-February as prime buying season with less competition, motivated sellers, and better negotiating power. Combined with 6% mortgage rates (three-year lows), January 2026 offers both favorable financing and seasonal pricing advantages. While spring brings more inventory, winter buyers avoid competition and benefit from sellers eager to close before year-end.
Trump's $200 Billion Mortgage Bond Move: What It Means for Las Vegas Homebuyers
President Trump's $200 billion mortgage bond purchase could lower rates for Las Vegas homebuyers, but how much impact will it really have? Current mortgage rates around 6.15% may drop to the high 5% range, saving buyers $75-80 monthly on a typical Vegas home.
As your trusted Las Vegas realtor, I'm breaking down what this means for our local market—from Summerlin luxury homes to North Las Vegas starter properties. Learn about the mortgage spread, predicted rate changes, and whether you should wait or buy now in Southern Nevada's evolving real estate landscape.
National home equity is falling, but Las Vegas bucks the trend. While U.S. household real estate values dropped $361 billion in Q3 2025 and equity-rich homes declined nationwide, Vegas homeowners maintain strong positions with just 0.5% distressed sales.
Our market's resilience stems from locked-in low mortgage rates (averaging 4%), economic diversification, zero state income tax, and sustainable price growth. Unlike Sun Belt markets experiencing sharp corrections, Las Vegas prices are down only 2% from peaks—a healthy normalization, not a crisis. Local homeowners should feel confident despite concerning national headlines.