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During the Pandemic Housing Boom, housing demand surged rapidly amid ultralow interest rates, stimulus, and the remote work boom—which increased demand for space and unlocked “WFH arbitrage” as high earners were able to keep their income from a job in say, NYC or L.A., and buy in say Austin or Cape Coral-Fort Myers. Federal Reserve researchers estimate “new construction would have had to increase by roughly 300% to absorb the pandemic-era surge in demand.” Unlike housing demand, housing stock supply isn’t as elastic and can't ramp up as quickly. As a result, the heightened pandemic era demand drained the market of active inventory and overheated home prices, with U.S. home prices rising a staggering 43% between March 2020 and June 2022.
While some commentators view active inventory and months of supply simply as measures of “supply,” ResiClub sees them more as proxies for the supply-demand equilibrium. Because housing demand is more elastic than housing stock, large swings in active inventory or months of supply are usually driven more by shifts in demand. For example, during the Pandemic Housing Boom, surging demand caused homes to sell faster—pushing active inventory down, even as new listings remained steady. Conversely, in recent years, weakening demand has led to slower sales, causing active inventory to rise—even as new listings fell below trend.
Indeed, during the ravenous housing demand at the height of the Pandemic Housing Boom in April 2022, almost the entire country was at least -50% below pre-pandemic 2019 active inventory levels.
BROWN = Active housing inventory for sale in June 2021 was BELOW pre-pandemic 2019 levels
GREEN = Active housing inventory for sale in June 2021 was ABOVE pre-pandemic 2019 levels

Of course, the past few years have looked much different than the overheating of 2021: National active inventory has been on a multiyear rise, even though recently the pace has recently slowed to a crawl.
Not long after mortgage rates spiked in 2022—causing affordability to reflect the reality of the sharp home price increases during the Pandemic Housing Boom—and return-to-office gained a bit of momentum, national demand in the for-sale market pulled back and the Pandemic Housing Boom fizzled out. Initially, in the second half of 2022, that housing demand pullback triggered a ‘fever breaking’ in a number of markets—particularly in rate-sensitive West Coast housing markets and in pandemic boomtowns like Austin and Boise—causing active inventory to spike and pushing those markets into correction-mode in the second half of 2022.
Heading into 2023, many of those same Western and pandemic boomtown markets (excluding Austin) stabilized, as the spring seasonal demand—coupled with still-tight active inventory levels—was enough to temporarily firm up the market. For a bit, national active inventory stopped rising year-over-year.
However, that period of national inventory stabilization didn’t last. Amid still slumped housing demand, national active inventory began to rise again—and we’re now in the midst of a 32-month streak of year-over-year increases in national active listings. (However, national inventory growth has decelerated recently from +28.9% year-over-year national inventory growth at this time last year, to just +1.9% year-over-year between June 2025 and June 2026—and in some places, like much of Florida, inventory has already rolled off its 2025 peak).
This past few year period of national inventory rebound has coincided with nationally aggregated year-over-year existing home price growth across most indices stabilizing around +1.29%. Even as this post-boom period of inventory growth stalls out, it has done enough to bring us into a window where national resale home price growth is now below U.S. income growth (+3.4%), slowly helping to smooth over some of the overheating that occurred during the Pandemic Housing Boom.
Where active inventory/months of supply has risen the most, homebuyers have gained the most leverage over the past few years. Generally speaking, housing markets where inventory (i.e., active listings) has returned to pre-pandemic 2019 levels have experienced weaker home price growth (or outright declines) over the past 48 months. Conversely, housing markets where inventory remains far below pre-pandemic 2019 levels have, generally speaking, experienced stronger home price growth over the past 48 months.
BROWN = Active housing inventory for sale in June 2026 was BELOW pre-pandemic 2019 levels
GREEN = Active housing inventory for sale in June 2026 was ABOVE pre-pandemic 2019 levels
Click here for an interactive version of the map below

As ResiClub has closely documented, that picture varies significantly across the country: much of the Northeast and Midwest remain below pre-pandemic 2019 inventory levels, while many parts of the Mountain West and Gulf regions have bounced back.
Many of the softest housing markets, where homebuyers have gained the most leverage over the past four years, are located in Gulf Coast and Mountain West regions. These areas were among the nation’s top pandemic boomtowns, having experienced significant home price growth during the Pandemic Housing Boom, which stretched housing fundamentals far beyond local income levels. When pandemic-fueled domestic migration slowed and mortgage rates spiked, markets like Cape Coral, Florida, and San Antonio, Texas, faced challenges as they had to rely on local incomes to sustain frothy home prices. The housing market softening in these areas was further accelerated by higher levels of new home supply in the pipeline across the Sun Belt. Builders in these regions are often willing to reduce prices or make other affordability adjustments to maintain sales in a shifted environment. These adjustments in the new construction market also create a cooling effect on the resale market, as some buyers who might have opted for an existing home shift their focus to new homes where deals are still available.
In contrast, many Northeast and Midwest markets were less reliant on pandemic migration and have less new home construction in progress. With lower exposure to that domestic migration pullback demand shock—and fewer builders doing big affordability adjustments to move product—active inventory in these Midwest and Northeast regions has remained relatively tight—with home sellers retaining more power relative to their peers in the Gulf and Mountain West regions.

While national active inventory at the end of June 2026 was still -9.6% below pre-pandemic June 2019, it’s much closer now than it was in June 2021, when national inventory was -59.6% below pre-pandemic June 2019.

Big picture: The housing market is still grinding through a process of normalization following the surge in housing demand during the Pandemic Housing Boom, when home prices went up too fast, too quickly. To date, that normalization process has pushed some markets—including Austin (mid-2022-present), Las Vegas (second half of 2022), Phoenix (second half of 2022), Boise (mid-2022–2023), Punta Gorda (2022–present), Cape Coral (2023–present), and Tampa (2024–present)—into correction-mode. In some other areas, so far, it has caused home price growth to stall out. Meanwhile, some markets still remain tight and have only seen a deceleration in home price growth from the highs of the Pandemic Housing Boom. As this happens, and national incomes continue to rise (+3.4% year-over-year), it’s slowly improving underlying fundamentals and smoothing over the overheating that occurred during the Pandemic Housing Boom.
For greater regional and local nuance, I recommend ResiClub PRO members reviewing our latest inventory and home price reports:
Chart: Year-over-year shift in nationally aggregated existing single-family home prices
Among the 6 major indices tracked by ResiClub—which do a better job accounting for mix shift—U.S. single-family existing home prices are currently up +1.29% year-over-year. That’s below U.S. income/wage growth (+3.4% year-over-year).

Trump didn’t sign the bipartisan housing bill—it became law anyway last night
President Donald Trump said Friday he would not sign the bipartisan 21st Century ROAD to Housing Act that Congress passed last month, in protest of Republicans' failure to pass a controversial election measure. But the housing bill nevertheless became law automatically on Saturday. Under Article I, if the president doesn't sign or veto a bill within 10 days (excluding Sundays) while Congress is in session, it automatically becomes law without his signature.
We’ll send ResiClub PRO members a deeper dive on the bill’s housing market and homebuilding impacts.
Dream Finders makes fifth bid to buy Beazer and become a top 10 homebuilder
The stock of Beazer Homes—America's 21st largest homebuilder—jumped up +13% on Wednesday after Dream Finders Homes—America's 14th largest homebuilder—publicly announced another bid. On Wednesday, ResiClub PRO members got a deep dive on Dream Finders latest push to buy Beazer.

Beazer Homes CEO Allan Merrill speaking at ResiDay 2025
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Institutional landlord VineBrook Homes has increased its for-sale listings by 3,658% over the past 6 months, according to Parcl Labs
Jan 1, 2026 -> 53 single-family homes for sale
July 8, 2026 -> 1,992 single-family homes for sale
Reviewing VineBrook Homes' SEC filings from May 2026, ResiClub found [see our piece from Sunday] that the company has accelerated its selloff in recent months because it doesn't have "sufficient liquidity" to satisfy debt obligations coming due over the next year. It sounds like it’s doing some forced selling
“The Company [VineBrook Homes] has significant debt obligations of approximately $265.9 million coming due within 12 months of the financial statement issuance date, primarily due to the NexPoint Homes MetLife, which matures on March 3, 2027. As of the date of issuance, the Company [VineBrook Homes] does not have sufficient liquidity to satisfy these obligations. In order to satisfy obligations as they mature, management intends to evaluate its options and may seek to: (i) make partial loan pay downs, (ii) refinance the NexPoint Homes MetLife Note 1 and (iii) sell homes from its Portfolio and pay down debt balances with the net sale proceed.”


