
Restraint has governed the Denver area housing market for several years now. One thing’s for sure… Colorado knows how to hold ‘em and when to fold ‘em.

Restraint has governed the Denver area housing market for several years now. One thing’s for sure… Colorado knows how to hold ‘em and when to fold ‘em.

The Denver housing market spent most of 2025 and early 2026 in a state of decoupling. For ten consecutive months, pending sales frequently rose while closed sales lagged or fell, creating a persistent conversion gap. This gap was likely created by interested buyers who failed to clear closing or got shy about (un)affordability. The short [...]

At the start of the year, Denver’s housing market signaled cautious participation. The March 2026 Denver housing market report answered back. Pending sales jumped nearly 30% month over month. Closed sales followed. New listings rose both month over month and year over year. Active inventory reached its highest level in some time. And on February 26, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate touched 5.98% (the first time it had closed below 6% since 2022).

December’s numbers answer two questions the market has been circling for two years: Who is still willing to transact and who has shut the front door (but left the window [...]

If you want to know where the Denver Metro Area real estate market is headed, don’t look at prices. Look at behavior. November’s data shows buyers slowing down, sellers conceding more, and a widening gap between how homes are listed and how they actually close. That shift, more than any rate headline, is what defines this December market and the new year to come.

The Denver housing market ended October looking steady, but a little out of steam. Prices aren’t dropping, buyers aren’t stampeding, and sellers are recalibrating expectations instead of dreams. It’s not a boom or a bust. It’s a pause that’s starting to feel permanent.

The September 2025 Colorado Housing Market is like the dimmer switch in your living room… slowly adjusting. Inventory is up compared to last year, pending sales are gaining ground, and prices are holding steady. On the other side of the scale: closings are down, homes are taking longer to sell, and affordability still weighs heavy.
It’s not a seller’s sprint, and it’s not a buyer’s bargain hunt. It’s a balancing act… with each side adjusting as the market steadies into fall.

If the Colorado housing market were a music festival, August would be when the headliner’s set slows down: the lights are still on, the crowd’s still there, but the tempo’s dropped and the energy’s shifted.
Buyers aren’t rushing the stage, sellers aren’t throwing crowd-pleasing deals, and the beat is steady enough that you can actually hear yourself think. For some, that’s a relief. For others, it’s a little unnerving.
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