Spring 2026 Buyer's Guide — Mike Hughes Team

Spring 2026 Buyer's Guide: Navigating the Greater Boston Market

May 25, 2026

Mike Hughes Team  |  Spring 2026

Spring 2026 Buyer's Guide:
Navigating the Greater Boston Market

Everything you need to know to buy a home this spring, from understanding today's market to making your strongest offer.

Top 10 Reasons Buyers Purchase a Home

Whether you are buying for the first time or making your next move, the motivations that drive homeownership are remarkably consistent. Here are the ten reasons buyers most commonly cite, backed by research from the National Association of REALTORS and other leading sources.

  1. The desire to own a home of your own. Consistently the most cited reason buyers purchase. In NAR's 2024 survey, 64% of first-time buyers named this as their primary motivation. Owning your own home is a deeply personal milestone that no rental can replicate.
    Source: NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 2024
  2. A home is a proven financial investment. 79% of buyers believe purchasing a home is a good financial investment, and 39% of those say it outperforms owning stocks. Long-term appreciation, equity growth, and leverage make real estate one of the most accessible wealth-building tools available.
    Source: NAR Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers, 2024
  3. Control over your living space. 94% of homeowners cite control over what they do with their home as a key benefit. Paint the walls, renovate the kitchen, plant a garden, get a dog. You set the terms.
    Source: NAR Promoting Home Ownership consumer survey, nar.realtor
  4. Privacy and security. 91% of homeowners cite a sense of privacy and security as a meaningful benefit. A home that is yours provides stability and peace of mind that month-to-month tenancy simply cannot.
    Source: NAR Promoting Home Ownership consumer survey, nar.realtor
  5. A good place to raise a family. 90% of homeowners say their home is a good place for their family and to raise children. Stable housing has been directly linked to better educational outcomes and social development for children.
    Source: NAR Promoting Home Ownership consumer survey; NAR Social Benefits of Stable Housing, 2012
  6. Building long-term equity. Buyers who purchased 10 years ago have gained an average of $225,000 in equity. Each mortgage payment reduces your loan balance and builds an asset you own outright over time. Rent payments build wealth for your landlord.
    Source: NAR Promoting Home Ownership, nar.realtor
  7. Predictable, stable housing costs. A fixed-rate mortgage locks in your principal and interest payment for the life of the loan. Rent has no ceiling. U.S. shelter costs have risen significantly decade over decade, while your locked-in mortgage payment stays the same.
    Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Price Index (Shelter component)
  8. Community belonging and civic roots. Homeowners are more likely to vote, volunteer, and invest in their neighborhoods than renters, regardless of income level. Stable housing creates a deeper connection to the community around you.
    Source: NAR Social Benefits of Homeownership and Stable Housing, 2012
  9. Tax advantages of homeownership. Homeowners may deduct mortgage interest and property taxes from taxable income. Upon sale, individuals can exclude up to $250,000 in capital gains ($500,000 for married couples filing jointly) from federal taxation.
    Source: IRS Publication 936; IRS Section 121
  10. Creating generational wealth and a family legacy. A home is an asset that can be passed to children and grandchildren, anchoring financial security across generations. The wealth gap between homeowners and renters compounds significantly over time.
    Source: Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances; Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies
Greater Boston real estate — Mike Hughes Team

What's Happening in the Housing Market Today?

If you've been on the sidelines, waiting for the "right time" to buy, here's your honest read on where things stand this spring. Three questions buyers ask me most often:

What's going on with mortgage rates?

The 30-year fixed rate sits at approximately 6.51% as of May 2026, according to Freddie Mac. That's the most favorable spring rate buyers have seen in the last three years. Rates have pulled back meaningfully from their 2023 highs, and most forecasters expect a gradual drift lower through 2026 and into 2027.

Are home prices still going up?

Yes, but the pace has moderated. The FHFA House Price Index shows national home prices up 1.7% year over year as of February 2026. In Greater Boston, appreciation remains stronger than the national average due to constrained supply and persistent demand. Prices are not falling.

Is more inventory coming to market?

Slowly, yes. New listings are up approximately 8.9% year over year nationally, and total inventory has risen 10.5% from a year ago. Months' supply now sits at 4.4 months nationally, according to NAR. That's still below the 6-month neutral threshold, which means sellers retain a meaningful advantage in most price ranges.

Bottom line: rates are better than they've been in years, prices are still rising (just more slowly), and more homes are coming to market. Buyers who act this spring are entering a more balanced market than we've seen since 2019.

The Difference Between Renting and Buying a Home

A lot of buyers ask whether renting is the safer choice right now. Here's what the data says:

📈

Rents Keep Rising

The national median rent has increased substantially over the past decade. There is no cap on what a landlord can charge at renewal. A fixed-rate mortgage locks in your payment today.

🏠

A Home Is a Tangible Asset

Every mortgage payment builds equity you own. Rent payments build equity for someone else. After 30 years, a homeowner has a paid-off asset. A renter has receipts.

💰

Wealth Grows Over Time

Homeowners consistently accumulate significantly more net worth than renters over a 10-, 20-, and 30-year horizon, driven by equity growth and price appreciation.

"If you're in a financial position to do so and ready to stay put for at least a few years, buying a house is totally worth it."

Bankrate

What Today's Mortgage Rates Mean for Your Monthly Payment

With rates around 6.5%, here's what different loan amounts translate to in principal and interest (P&I only, before taxes and insurance):

Loan Amount At 7.5% At 7.0% At 6.5% (Today) At 6.0% At 5.5%
$400,000 $2,797 $2,661 $2,528 $2,398 $2,271
$500,000 $3,496 $3,327 $3,160 $2,998 $2,839
$600,000 $4,195 $3,992 $3,792 $3,597 $3,407
$700,000 $4,895 $4,657 $4,424 $4,197 $3,975
$800,000 $5,594 $5,322 $5,056 $4,796 $4,543

Figures are estimated principal and interest only. Taxes, insurance, and HOA fees are additional. Consult your lender for a personalized payment estimate.

Notice how even a 0.5% drop in rates meaningfully reduces your monthly payment. If you're waiting for rates to fall before buying, consider this: lower rates typically bring more buyers into the market, which pushes prices higher. The savings on your rate can easily be offset by a higher purchase price.

Greater Boston County Market Review

Single-family homes only · 3-month data through May 2026 · Updated monthly · Source: MLS PIN Area Market Survey

Middlesex County
1,002
Active
1,620
Pending
1,606
Closed
$1.20M
Avg Price
1,002
1,620
1,606
ActivePendingClosed
38 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 1.87
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Strong Seller's Market
Norfolk County
496
Active
874
Pending
820
Closed
$1.20M
Avg Price
496
874
820
ActivePendingClosed
40 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 1.81
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Strong Seller's Market
Suffolk County
195
Active
205
Pending
195
Closed
$1.16M
Avg Price
195
205
195
ActivePendingClosed
47 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 3.0
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Balanced Market
Essex County
488
Active
725
Pending
757
Closed
$907K
Avg Price
488
725
757
ActivePendingClosed
39 days
Avg Days on Market (sold listings)
Months of Supply: 1.93
Seller's MarketBalancedBuyer's Market
Strong Seller's Market
All stats above are for single-family homes only. Area Market Survey reports can be run for any specific community, neighborhood, or property type, including condos and multi-family. If you're targeting a particular town or want to see how the condo market stacks up, I can pull a custom snapshot for you. Just ask.

Source: MLS PIN Area Market Survey (AMS), single-family homes, 3-month data through May 2026. Months of Supply = Active Listings ÷ (Closings ÷ 3 months). SP:LP: Middlesex 103% · Norfolk 103% · Suffolk 100% · Essex 102%.

Why This Spring Is a Good Time to Buy

Spring 2026 presents a window that buyers haven't had in years. Here's what's working in your favor:

Rates are the best they've been in three springs

Freddie Mac noted that the current rate environment is the most favorable for spring homebuying in three years. That's not a sales pitch, it's a data point.

Prices are still rising, but moderately

National home prices rose 1.7% year over year through February (FHFA). Forecasters at Fannie Mae project 14.8% cumulative appreciation nationally through 2030, averaging roughly 2.8% per year. Buyers who wait a year aren't waiting for prices to fall. They're waiting to pay more.

14.8%
Projected cumulative home price appreciation through 2030 Fannie Mae Home Price Expectations Survey | Q2 2025

More inventory, but still a seller's market

With 4.4 months of supply nationally, we're still below the 6-month balanced-market threshold. That means sellers hold leverage, but buyers have more choices than they did in 2022 or 2023. In Greater Boston, supply remains tighter than the national picture. Homes in desirable towns and price ranges still move quickly.

How Homeownership Builds Wealth Over Time

One of the most important reasons to buy is what happens to your net worth over time. The data is not subtle:

40x
Homeowners build roughly 40 times the net worth of renters over time NAR | Based on Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances

"A monthly mortgage payment is often considered a forced savings account that helps homeowners build a net worth about 40 times higher than that of a renter."

Lawrence Yun | Chief Economist, National Association of REALTORS

Homeownership forces a discipline that renters rarely replicate through voluntary savings. Each payment reduces your principal balance and builds equity that belongs to you, not your landlord.

As of Q1 2026, ATTOM data shows that 43.3% of all mortgaged residential properties are considered "equity-rich" (the loan balance represents 50% or less of the property's estimated market value). The average homeowner with a mortgage carries approximately $295,000 in equity (CoreLogic, Q4 2025). That is generational wealth built by the act of buying and staying.

Are More Homeowners Selling?

Yes, and it's meaningful. Here's what the data shows:

New listings are up 8.9% year over year, and total active inventory is up 10.5%. The "lock-in effect" that kept many sellers frozen in place when rates jumped to 7-8% has gradually eased as owners have adjusted expectations and life circumstances have continued to evolve.

What this means for buyers in Greater Boston: you have more homes to choose from than you did a year ago. That doesn't mean the market is soft. It means you're less likely to lose 6 listings in a row before landing one. Competition is real but more rational than 2021-2022 frenzies.

+8.9%
New listings year over year, Spring 2026 National Association of REALTORS | April 2026

For buyers who have felt squeezed by lack of options, this spring is the most selection they've seen in years. Moving now, before summer demand peaks, gives you the best combination of available inventory and motivated sellers.

Why Pre-Approval Is Even More Important This Spring

Getting pre-approved before you tour a single home is not optional in today's market. Here's why it matters more than ever:

What pre-approval actually means

A pre-approval letter is a written commitment from a lender saying they've reviewed your financial documentation (income, assets, credit) and will lend you up to a specified amount, subject to appraisal and final underwriting. It's not the same as a pre-qualification, which is just an estimate based on what you told the lender.

Why sellers require it

In a market where the average home still receives 2.2 offers (NAR, March 2026), a listing agent's first question when an offer comes in is: do they have a pre-approval letter? Without one, your offer doesn't get the same serious consideration as the person standing next to you at the open house who has their letter in hand.

"If you're serious about buying a home this spring, getting pre-approved is the single most important step you can take before anything else."

Freddie Mac

What it takes to get pre-approved

Your lender will typically need:

  • W-2s or 1099s from the past two years
  • Recent pay stubs (30 days)
  • Bank and investment account statements (2-3 months)
  • Photo ID
  • Consent to pull your credit

Most lenders can turn around a pre-approval in 1-3 business days. Don't wait until you find the right house. Get it done this week.

Things to Avoid After Applying for a Mortgage

Once your mortgage application is in, your financial picture needs to stay exactly as the lender saw it until closing day. Common mistakes that can delay or kill your closing:

  • Do not apply for new credit. A new car loan, credit card, or any inquiry can lower your credit score and change your debt-to-income ratio. Both affect your approval.
  • Do not make large cash deposits without documentation. Lenders will ask about any unusual deposits. "I was holding it for a friend" is not a sufficient answer.
  • Do not quit or change your job. Lenders verify employment right before closing. A job change, even a promotion to a new employer, can require a new application cycle.
  • Do not co-sign a loan for anyone. It doesn't matter that you don't expect to pay it. It still shows as your debt.
  • Do not make large purchases on credit. New furniture, appliances, or a car on credit before closing has torpedoed more deals than buyers realize.

The rule is simple: no major financial moves between application and closing without checking with your lender first.

Advice for Making Your Strongest Offer on a Home

When the right home comes along, you want your offer to be the one that gets accepted. Here's what separates winning offers from the rest:

  1. Lean on your agent's knowledge of local market conditions. In Greater Boston, some towns have very different pace and multiple-offer dynamics than others. The strategy that worked in one town may hurt you in the next. Your agent's job is to know this and advise accordingly.
  2. Have your pre-approval letter ready to attach. Sending an offer without a pre-approval letter signals that you are not ready. Every serious offer comes with financing documentation.
  3. Make a fair offer based on comparable sales, not wishful thinking. Lowball offers in a seller's market are typically not entertained. They can also put the listing agent and seller in a defensive posture that makes a deal harder to get done even if you come back at full price. Come in informed.
  4. Trust the negotiation process. A counter-offer is not a rejection. Most deals involve at least one round of negotiation. The goal is getting to a number that works for both sides, not winning an argument. Your agent's job is to keep the deal moving toward the table.

Why You Should Work with a Real Estate Agent When You Buy

In the age of Zillow and Redfin, buyers sometimes wonder if they need an agent at all. The data and the reality of the transaction consistently say yes. Here's why:

Industry Experience

Agents know what's behind the listing: inspection history, seller timeline, why the price changed, what the neighborhood is actually like. You can't get that from a website.

Expert Market Insights

What is this home worth compared to recent closed sales? Is the list price fair? Is the market moving fast or slow right now? These questions require a live professional with local data, not an algorithm.

Pricing Strategy

An experienced agent knows whether this home is correctly priced, overpriced, or actually underpriced relative to recent comps. That knowledge shapes your offer strategy.

Contract Expertise

A purchase and sale agreement has deadlines, contingencies, and clauses that protect you. One missed deadline or misunderstood contingency can cost you thousands or your deposit.

Marketing Access

Buyer's agents often know about coming-soon listings, pocket listings, and off-market opportunities before they hit public sites. In a low-inventory market, that network is real value.

Skilled Negotiation

Negotiating directly against a listing agent who does this full time is not a fair fight. Having your own advocate at the table is how buyers avoid overpaying and protect their interests through closing.

In Massachusetts, buyer agent representation is covered in your transaction. There is no reason to navigate one of the largest financial decisions of your life without a professional in your corner.

Ready to Talk About Buying This Spring?

Whether you have questions about the market, want to know what you can afford, or you're ready to start touring homes, I'm here. A conversation costs nothing.

Mike Hughes

Mike Hughes

Broker Associate  |  Mike Hughes Team  |  eXp Realty

617-433-9225
[email protected]
mikehughesteam.com
Send Me a Message Call 617-433-9225
Mike Hughes is a real estate broker with over 20 years of experience in residential real estate.

Mike Hughes

Mike Hughes is a real estate broker with over 20 years of experience in residential real estate.

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