Defying the Pandemic, Houston Real Estate Market Has a Record-Setting 2020

Defying the Pandemic, Houston Real Estate Market Has a Record-Setting 2020

1611 South Blvd. was among the hundreds of multimillion-dollar properties sold this year.

COVID WREAKED HAVOC on almost every industry, in one way or another, last year. But the designation of Realtors as essential workers cracked real estate's code to unprecedented success; single-family home sales in 2020 outpaced those of 2019 by more than 10 percent, even with steadily dwindling inventory, per HAR.


For just the second time in Houston's market history, the annual total property sales topped 100,000. In fact, the number of transactions reached 115,523, a nearly 12 percent jump from last year, totaling a whopping (and also record-breaking) $35.3 billion. The average sales price for a single-family home in 2020 was up nearly 6 percent, to $324,069; the median price was also up by around 6 percent, to $260,000.

While April and May sales volumes suffered due to the stay-at-home orders, the remainder of 2020 brought an impressive turnaround. In fact, July produced the greatest one-month sales volume of all time: Nearly 11,000 single-family homes were sold at a record-high average price of $347,164.

By year's end, inventory — the amount of time it would take to sell every home on the market at the current pace — was down to just 1.9 months. That's the Houston market's lowest level ever. For context, 6.0 months is considered representative of a balanced market.

The rental market also held its own; leases of townhomes or condos in December, for example, were up 13.1 percent compared to the same timeframe last year, with average rent up 3.6 percent as well.

Home + Real Estate
Fall Philanthropy Report: Be An Angel Improves Quality of Life for Children with Special Needs

What year was your organization launched? 1986 by a small group of committee community members that believed special needs children were not receiving basic life services.

Keep Reading Show less

Derrick Shore, Tom Mays and Owen Conflenti (photo by Daniel Ortiz)

THE ALWAYS MEMORABLE Alley Theatre ball took on special significance this year, becoming not just a sexy Post Oak Hotel soiree — with “A Buenos Aires Affair” as the theme, nodding to the company’s production of Noël Coward’s Private Lives — but also an emotional sendoff to retiring longtime Managing Director Dean Gladden. It raised $1.3 million to boot.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

RICE VILLAGE JUST got a whole lot tastier.

Keep Reading Show less
Food