In October, home prices rose slightly from the month before, with a median listing price of $579,450. The number of listings on the market shrank 4.5% from last month, which is a bigger decrease than normal for this time of the year in Austin, and homes are also selling close to the same pace as the same time last year.
Price reductions have become the norm in Denver's housing market, with 53.7% of active listings carrying discounts as of Nov. 7, 2025. Homes now take a median of 70 days to sell, up from 56 days a year earlier, marking a notable slowdown for the metro area. The DenverAuroraBroomfield metro recorded 8,222 active single-family listings, up 17.5% from 6,999 a year ago. Despite more competitive pricing, weekly absorption slipped to 838 homes from 878 last year, indicating buyers remain selective even as sellers adjust expectations.
In September, home prices fell moderately from the month before, with a median listing price of $345,000. The number of listings on the market remained practically unchanged from last month, but it is a smaller decrease than normal for this time of the year in Fort Worth, and homes are also selling slower than at the same time last year.
Jacksonville's housing market is somewhat competitive. Homes receive about 1 offer on average and sell in around 69 days. In July 2025, the median sale price was $303,000 ( −2.3% year-over-year). The sale‑to‑list price ratio was 96.6%, with 14.0% of homes selling above list and 36.4% seeing price drops. Jacksonville's median sale price was 32% lower than the national average. Beach days, river walks, and roomy backyards-here are the metro's 50 newest listings. Latest Jacksonville listings