Spring has arrived, and with it comes one of the most complicated housing markets in recent memory. Rates were supposed to be heading lower by now. Instead, they just surged to their highest level since September 2025, landing at 6.53% on Friday the very first day of the season according to Mortgage News Daily.
The sharp increase caught many prospective buyers off guard. Earlier this year, there was genuine optimism that borrowing costs would ease enough to bring more buyers off the sidelines. The 30 year fixed mortgage rate had briefly dipped below 6% at the end of February, offering a fleeting glimpse of relief. That window has since closed, and the culprit is largely the war with Iran.
How the Iran war changed everything
The conflict has sent oil prices sharply higher, reigniting inflation fears and forcing the Federal Reserve to reconsider the rate cutting path it had been on. Rising inflation expectations have pushed U.S. bond yields up, and mortgage rates have followed. The Fed, which had been lowering its benchmark lending rate to ease economic pressure, is now widely expected to hold steady or potentially reverse course.
The result is a housing market that entered spring caught between two competing forces. On one hand, conditions have genuinely shifted in favor of buyers in ways not seen in years. On the other, the sudden spike in borrowing costs is threatening to undercut those advantages before buyers can fully capitalize on them. As one senior economist at Realtor.com put it recently, the market is in a precarious position caught between long-term improvements and sudden short-term instability and everything feels far more unsettled than it did just a month ago.
More homes, but fewer new listings
Inventory is rising, but not for the reasons anyone would celebrate. For the week ending March 14, active listings were up 5.6% year over year, according to Realtor.com. However, new listings actually fell 1.4% over the same period.
That gap tells an important story. The supply of homes for sale is growing not because more sellers are entering the market, but because the homes already listed are sitting longer without selling. Some potential sellers appear to be holding back entirely, spooked by economic uncertainty tied to the Iran conflict and unsure whether now is the right moment to make a move.
Analysts note that the hope of meaningfully lower rates arriving later this year has largely evaporated. With that expectation gone, both buyers and sellers are recalibrating in real time.
A market that looks very different depending on where you live
The 2026 spring market is shaping up to be a tale of many cities. In markets like Las Vegas, Seattle, Cincinnati and Washington, D.C., active listings were up more than 20% from a year ago as of February, giving buyers in those areas substantially more negotiating power. Meanwhile, inventory in San Francisco, Chicago, Miami and Orlando actually fell compared to a year earlier, keeping competition tighter in those regions.
Home prices nationally are nearly flat, up just 0.7% in January compared to the same month in 2025Â a significant cooldown from the 3.5% annual growth seen at the start of last year. The Northeast and Midwest are bucking that trend, with states like New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, Wisconsin and Nebraska seeing the strongest price appreciation, driven by persistently tight supply.
Nearly 69% of top metropolitan housing markets are currently considered overvalued, according to real estate analytics firm Cotality, which also notes that cities like Los Angeles, New York, San Francisco and Honolulu currently undervalued could see a price rebound as far out as 2027.
New construction offers some relief, but challenges persist
For buyers open to newly built homes, this spring may present some of the better deals in recent years. Builders are sitting on an oversupply, with inventories reaching a 9.7-month supply in January the result of sales falling to their lowest level since 2022. A growing share of builders cut prices in March and are offering sales incentives in an effort to move product.
That said, builders are not operating from a position of strength. Land, labor and construction costs remain elevated, and the combination of economic uncertainty and still high mortgage rates is keeping potential buyers cautious. Single family housing starts also declined in January, a sign that the pipeline of new supply may begin to thin in the months ahead.
For now, the 2026 spring housing market is one defined more by hesitation than momentum a season that arrived full of promise and ran headlong into a complicated and fast moving economic reality.

