Zillow Research

U.S. Housing Market Value Hits $55.1 Trillion

The total value of U.S. housing climbed to $55.1 trillion in June 2025, a record high and a dramatic $20 trillion gain since before the pandemic. About one dollar in eight (12.5%) of that five‑year run‑up came from newly built homes; the rest was price appreciation on the existing stock. But growth has cooled in the past year, with U.S. housing wealth rising $862 billion, or 1.6%, a far slower pace than during the 2020–2022 boom years.

Regional rebalancing

The geography of housing wealth is shifting. Pandemic boomtowns in the South and Mountain West are cooling, while states in the Northeast and Midwest are powering new growth.

Since the start of the pandemic, the biggest total value increases have come in California (+$3.4 trillion), Florida (+$1.6 trillion), New York (+$1.5 trillion) and Texas (+$1.2 trillion). But three of those four lost ground in the past year: Florida (-$109 billion), California (-$106 billion) and Texas (-$32 billion).

New York gained $216 billion in one year, the most of any state, accounting for one-quarter of total U.S. growth.

The $1 trillion club

Nine metro areas have housing markets worth more than $1 trillion, together holding nearly one-third of the nation’s housing wealth (31.9%): New York ($4.6 trillion), Los Angeles ($3.9 trillion), San Francisco ($1.9 trillion), Boston ($1.3 trillion), Washington, D.C. ($1.3 trillion), Miami ($1.2 trillion), Chicago ($1.2 trillion), Seattle ($1.1 trillion) and San Diego ($1.0 trillion).

But their dominance is slipping as smaller markets are driving more of today’s housing wealth gains. Excluding New York, which gained the most of any metro area by far at $260 billion, the rest of the $1 trillion metros combined to lose $18 billion over the past year. Even with New York’s gain, these nine metros delivered just 28.1% of last year’s national increase — below their 31.9% share of total housing wealth.

Gains and losses across major metros

Behind New York, the biggest annual gains in total housing value were seen in Chicago (+$62 billion), Philadelphia (+$41 billion), Washington, D.C. (+$24 billion) and Detroit (+$22 billion).

Meanwhile, several large metros saw the total value of their housing markets decline: San Francisco (-$52 billion), Dallas (-$38 billion), Miami (-$25 billion), San Diego (-$22 billion), Tampa (-$20 billion), Austin (-$20 billion) and Los Angeles (-$15 billion) had the biggest drops. 

The 100 largest metros, which make up 72% of all housing value nationally, only accounted for about 45% of the national increase over the past year. More than half of overall growth occurred outside those largest markets. The upshot is a housing market that’s still adding value, but with leadership changing hands.

New construction’s role

Since early 2020, new construction has added $2.5 trillion in housing value nationwide, about 12.5% of the total increase. 

New homes have made the biggest difference in Utah (23%), Texas (22%), Idaho (22%) and Florida (20%), which saw the biggest share of housing market gains come from new construction over this period. These are states that experienced booming demand during the pandemic from households seeking more space and relative affordability. 

Sun Belt states like Texas and Florida have been the most prolific home-building states over the past few years, and have recently seen affordability gains and buyer-friendly markets as a result. These additional homes helped the market rebalance more quickly and made it a bit easier for buyers to find a foothold.

About the author

Treh Manhertz is a Senior Economic Research Scientist on Zillow’s Economic Research team, where he develops innovative metrics and methods to analyze housing market data. Treh is passionate about using data to make complex markets more transparent and accessible. Since joining Zillow in 2018, he has collaborated with housing professionals, policymakers, academics, and the media to deliver timely insights and empower consumers. He holds a master’s degree in economics from Georgetown University.
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