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Spring Market Housing Forecast For Suffolk County: What Buyers, Sellers Can Expect

Median home prices in Suffolk are up by $200K over the past five years, but what does the data suggest they'll do in the new year?

SUFFOLK COUNTY, NY. — The housing market in 2026 is off to a sluggish start nationwide. However, experts are optimistic a "reset” this year will help the market rebound from conditions that slowed home sales to their lowest pace in six years.

Pending home sales are down, and homes take over two months to sell; however, new listings are increasing, and agents expect falling costs to draw more buyers this spring, Redfin said in a new spring housing forecast. Agents are “cautiously optimistic” that the “great housing reset" is on the horizon, Redfin said.

Home prices are up 4.3 percent year-over-year in Suffolk, with the average time a home spends on the market rising to 37 days. The median price of a single-family home rose by 4.35 percent in January, the same rate at which it rose in December, while the median price of a co-op or condo dropped 4 percent in the same month. Over the past five years, the median single-family home price has risen by $215,000, from $485,000 to $700,000, while the median price of a condo or co-op has risen from $325,000 to $435,000.

Ben Ambroch, a Redfin Premier agent in Milwaukee, where home-sale prices are rising more than anywhere else in the country, said he expects 2026 to become more balanced over time.

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“With each passing month, I see more sellers willing to forgo record-low rates and accept that it’s time to move,” he said in a news release. “That’s leading to more inventory, which is helping attract buyers. I’m seeing a steady stream of house hunters touring homes, though they are taking their time, requesting inspections, and negotiating with sellers.”

Redfin defines the “great housing reset” as a years-long period of gradual increases in home sales and normalization of prices as affordability gradually improves.

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“It won’t be enough to make home buying affordable in the short run for Gen Zers and young families, who will be forced to make tradeoffs, from moving in with roommates or their parents to delaying having children,” Redfin said in its 2026 housing forecast released late last year.

That report expects the housing market to heat up on Long Island, naming New York City’s suburbs as the most likely areas to see a hotter market in 2026. That increase, Redfin says, will be driven by commuters looking for a bit more space and parking than the city can offer.

The forecast said commuters will drive housing markets in New York City. The Midwest and Great Lakes are appealing due to affordability and lower risk of climate disasters; and small and mid-sized cities attract graduates with affordable rent and stable careers in skilled trades, as AI limits entry-level white-collar jobs.

Along with Long Island, the Hudson Valley, northern New Jersey and Fairfield, Connecticut, other housing markets expected to heat up in 2026 include Syracuse, New York; Cleveland; St. Louis; Minneapolis; and Madison, Wisconsin.

Home sales are expected to stagnate in areas at high risk of natural disasters, where insurance rates are high, and also in places where the return of remote workers has depressed real estate activity. Those markets include Nashville, Tennessee; San Antonio; Austin, Texas; Fort Lauderdale, Florida; West Palm Beach, Florida; and Miami.

Here’s a snapshot of the market forces Redfin said are affecting spring housing sales:

Home sales: The typical U.S. home sold in January spent 64 days on the market, the longest in six years and about a week longer than a year prior, Redfin said. Pending home sales dropped 3.3 percent year over year. One positive of the slow market is that it gives buyers negotiating power, as sellers outnumber them by a record margin.

Buyer behavior: Buyers are cautious, with some backing off entirely due to economic uncertainty, high housing costs and volatile job security as waves of layoffs hit workers. The weekly average mortgage rate of 6.1 percent is near its lowest level in three years, but it’s still double the rate’s pandemic low. At the same time, the median home-sale price is $379,950, up 1.2 percent from a year ago.

Higher prices: Economic uncertainty, high costs, and job insecurity due to waves of layoffs are making buyers cautious, causing some to withdraw. The median home-sale price is $379,950, up 1.2 percent year-over-year. The average mortgage rate is 6.1 percent, near a three-year low but double the pandemic low. While still high, costs are easing, improving affordability; the median monthly mortgage payment is $2,559, down nearly 5 percent year-over-year, and wages are up roughly 4 percent.

More homes on the market: New listings rose 1.1 percent year over year, the third straight week of increases after two straight months of declines, Redfin said.

Related: 2026 Housing Market ‘Reset’: What It Means For Buyers, Sellers And Renters

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