Zillow’s 2026 Housing Market Predictions
Zillow economists predict the housing market will warm up in 2026, with more sales and modest price growth.
Zillow economists predict the housing market will warm up in 2026, with more sales and modest price growth.
Key Takeaways:
The housing market should settle into a healthier state in 2026, with buyers seeing a bit more breathing room and sellers benefitting from price stability and more consistent demand.
On the heels of a year of small wins for home buyers — slight affordability gains and buyer-friendly conditions in 19 major markets — home buyers and sellers can expect a modest rise in home values, a few more sales and mortgage rates holding above 6%. Many apartment renters should look forward to some affordability relief, as well.
U.S. home values are forecasted to grow 1.2% in 2026 after national values were roughly flat in 2025. Next year’s forecast reflects expectations of gradually improving affordability and steady buyer demand. Mortgage costs should ease a bit in 2026, helping more buyers stay in the market and supporting modest price growth in many parts of the country.
With home values expected to rise in most major markets, fewer homeowners will see their Zestimate fall below what they paid for their home. This stands in contrast to 2025, when home values have fallen in 24 of the 50 largest markets, as of October — a number Zillow forecasts will be cut in half to 12 major markets next year. Stabilizing prices means more homeowners will continue building equity rather than losing it, at least on paper.
Even for the experts, foreseeing mortgage rates a year out is about as difficult as predicting next year’s weather forecast. However, mortgage rates are shaped in part by inflation, and Zillow has been accurately predicting shelter inflation, which makes up 40% of the consumer price index.
Because of that, we are willing to put ourselves on the record: Mortgage rates are unlikely to fall below 6% in 2026. Borrowers have already seen some relief this year, pushing affordability to a three-year best. Gradual rate moderation should help more buyers reenter the market, even if ultralow pandemic-era rates remain far out of reach.
Zillow’s forecast calls for 4.26 million existing home sales in 2026, a 4.3% increase from this year’s projected total. Years of limited inventory and high mortgage rates have created a pent-up demand to move that should start to release as affordability improves. A stronger-than-expected fall season has hinted at what’s possible this spring if recent affordability gains persist.
2026 is shaping up to be the slowest year for single-family home construction starts since 2019, following a notably weak year in 2025. Because there’s a large stock of new homes already built and others still under construction, builders are expected to hold back on starting new projects.
Single-family starts are trending 5% below last year’s pace, as of the latest reading in August. A further 2% drop off of that pace in 2026 would bring starts below the roughly 947,000 homes begun in 2023, currently the low-water mark since the start of the pandemic. Expect builders to continue leaning heavily on incentives such as rate buydowns to keep inventory moving, particularly in markets where affordability remains tight.
Rent affordability is expected to continue improving in most of the country after a year in which 37 of the 50 biggest markets saw incomes grow faster than rents. A median-income household would spend 27.2% of income on the typical U.S. rent as of October, the lowest share since August 2021. Zillow forecasts multifamily rents to rise just 0.3% in 2026, giving incomes a chance to catch up even further. Single-family rents are projected to climb 2.3% as many buyers delay home purchases.
New York City is a notable exception: StreetEasy economists expect rent growth there to accelerate next year, bucking the national trend.
For a growing share of Americans, renting is a deliberate choice that supports mobility, reduces home-maintenance burdens and better fits the way they want to live. Nearly 3 in 5 renters say they plan to keep renting next year, according to the Zillow Consumer Housing Trends Report. Even if mortgage rates dropped, only 37% say they would buy, down from 45% last year.
Lifestyle renting and affordability realities are changing who rents and what they need from their homes. Thirty-seven percent of renters now have a child younger than 18 at home — up from 33% a year ago, according to the Zillow Consumer Housing Trends Report. With Generation Alpha influencing close to half of their parents’ spending, families are bringing those preferences into housing decisions as well. With parents making up roughly one-third of today’s apartment shoppers, buildings that offer family-friendly amenities like “imagination centers” or “homework pods” will be better positioned to compete.
In New York City, StreetEasy experts expect communal spaces to become defining features of the rental landscape in 2026 and beyond.
Rising household expenses will continue reshaping what buyers look for in a home. Energy-efficient features such as zero-energy-ready homes, whole-home batteries and EV charging stations are appearing more frequently in listings. Zillow predicts families will gravitate toward homes that are energy-efficient and grocery-optimized — think walk-in pantries, garage-based cold zones for bulk storage, refrigerated drawers and smart organization systems that help families shop smarter and keep food fresh longer.
In 2026, AI will move beyond offering advice and begin coordinating steps in the buying, selling and renting process. Instead of simply recommending actions, AI assistants will help manage tasks end to end — from connecting buyers and sellers with the right real estate agents, to tour scheduling, to negotiations and closing prep. This “agentic” approach will streamline decisions, automate routine work and make the transaction feel more predictable for everyone involved.