Single-Family Homes: More Supply, Stable Prices
King County’s single-family housing market saw a significant inventory expansion in 2025. Active listings increased nearly 42% compared to the prior year. New listings also rose more than 10%.
However, closed sales declined 2.9%. Therefore, higher inventory did not translate into higher transaction volume. Even so, prices remained resilient. The median single-family home price increased 2.6% year-over-year, finishing just below $975,000.
Months of inventory generally ranged from 1.5 to 2.8 months. As a result, the market softened but remained seller-leaning.
Condominiums: Greater Balance Emerges
Condominiums followed a different trajectory. Active condo inventory increased almost 40%, and new listings rose 12%. Unlike single-family homes, condo closed sales increased 4.5%.
Median condo prices increased 1.8%, ending the year near $560,000. Meanwhile, months of inventory ranged between 2.8 and 4.6 months. Consequently, condo buyers gained noticeably more negotiating leverage.
Luxury Market Concentration
Luxury single-family home sales remained heavily concentrated on the Eastside, which accounted for 72% of all $2 million-plus transactions. Seattle represented roughly 24%, while other areas contributed minimal volume.
What This Means
Overall, 2025 marked normalization. Single-family homes retained pricing strength. Condos moved closer to balance. Therefore, market strategy increasingly depends on property type rather than broad headlines.
Data is derived from the NWMLS.