Home Prices Grew Just 0.7 Percent in March and the Market Is in a Standoff That Will Not Last Forever
Home Prices Grew Just 0.7 Percent in March and the Market Is in a Standoff That Will Not Last Forever
The Data That Describes Exactly Where the Housing Market Is Right Now
The S&P Case-Shiller Home Price Index just released its March 2026 numbers and the picture they paint is one that every serious buyer needs to understand before making any decisions about timing and strategy in the current market.
National home prices grew just 0.7 percent year over year in March. That is the weakest showing since 2011. Monthly price growth was the slowest since 2019. These are not numbers that suggest a market firing on all cylinders. They are numbers that describe a market that has stalled.
The Standoff That Defines the Current Moment
Cotality's chief economist put it as directly as anyone could. Buyers are rejecting current price tags but sellers refuse to offer steep discounts. The result is a standoff.
That description captures the housing market of mid-2026 more accurately than any other single sentence. Buyers who have been watching prices, interest rates, and their own budgets have concluded that many listed prices are not justified by the current rate environment and the overall affordability picture. Sellers who purchased or refinanced at lower prices and who have been watching their home values appreciate over several years are not willing to accept what feels like a significant concession from peak valuations.
Neither side is wrong exactly. Both sides are holding their position. And the result is a market where transactions happen but slowly, where days on market keep extending, and where the data shows the weakest price growth in over a decade.
Why Standoffs Do Not Last Forever
Here is the part that matters most for buyers who are positioning themselves for the months ahead. Standoffs resolve. They always do. And they almost always resolve in a direction that favors the side that was better prepared when the resolution arrived.
Sellers who have been holding out are starting to feel the weight of time in ways they were not feeling six months ago. Days on market are lengthening across most markets which means carrying costs are accumulating, life plans are on hold, and the psychological pressure of an unsold listing is building. Inventory is rising as more sellers enter the market creating more competition among sellers for the buyers who are actively searching. Motivated sellers are beginning to emerge from within what looked like a uniformly stubborn seller pool.
As Alex Mysinek explains you do not need a crash to find a great deal in this market. You need a motivated seller and a pre-approval. Those two things in combination are producing favorable outcomes for prepared buyers right now in ways that were not available when sellers had all the leverage.
What Being Ready to Move Actually Means
The buyers who will capture the best outcomes as this standoff continues to resolve are not the ones who are watching from the sidelines hoping for dramatic price declines that may not materialize. They are the ones who are already prepared to move when the right combination of motivated seller and right property appears.
That preparation has a specific definition. A current and thoroughly reviewed pre-approval that demonstrates to a motivated seller that the financing is real and the deal will close. A clear understanding of budget across a realistic range of rate scenarios rather than at a single optimistic point. A loan officer who is actively engaged and can move quickly when a time-sensitive opportunity surfaces.
The standoff creates a window. Motivated sellers are emerging. Inventory is building. Negotiating room is available in ways it has not been for years. The buyers who capture that window are the ones who showed up prepared rather than the ones who are still getting organized after the right property appeared.
Alex Mysinek works with buyers to get fully prepared and positioned to act when the motivated seller and the right property align. Reach out to Alex Mysinek to find out what your numbers look like and how to be ready to move when the standoff breaks in your favor.
Sources
SPGlobal.com
MortgageNewsDaily.com
NAR.realtor
Realtor.com
HousingWire.com


