Key Takeaways
The reemergence of inflation nationally and across the Greater Boston real estate market is prompting home buyers and sellers to reevaluate their housing needs and budgets. Here are four trends to consider.
The Affordability Squeeze
A recent Wall Street Journal analysis found that annual homeownership costs rose 39% from 2019 to 2025, sharply outpacing the 26% increase in overall consumer inflation.
The Fed’s Hawkish Shift
At its June 17 meeting, the Federal Reserve held rates steady. However, nine of 18 policymakers projected at least one rate hike by year-end.
Local Buyer Headwinds
Rising living costs, economic uncertainty, and concerns about job security are forcing buyers to rethink their budgets, housing preferences, or put their moves on hold.
The Cost of Waiting
Delaying the sale of your home comes with a price—rising property expenses. Carrying costs like insurance, taxes, utilities, and maintenance can quickly chip away at your net proceeds.
Watch: How 2026 Inflation is Changing the Greater Boston Real Estate Market
In this video, Matt Coyle explains how inflation, mortgage-rate uncertainty, and higher carrying costs are creating new challenges across the Greater Boston real estate market.
The Macro View
Economic Data Shaping the Greater Boston Real Estate Market
The following economic indicators influence household budgets, borrowing costs, and other expenses affecting home buyers and sellers.
Signals higher monthly housing costs and a direct reduction in the purchasing power of money and savings.
Producer Inflation 6.5% Final-demand PPI, 12 months ending May 2026Signals rising production costs, serving as a leading indicator for future consumer inflation.
10-Year Treasury Yield 4.41% June 24, 2026The primary benchmark for long-term borrowing and mortgage pricing.
30-Year Fixed Mortgage Rate 6.49% Freddie Mac, week ending June 25, 2026Lower than last year, but still high enough to limit purchasing power.
Latest available data as of June 2026. Inflation figures reflect the 12-month change ending May 2026.
The practical impact
Implications for Buyers and Sellers
Real estate has long been viewed as a hedge against inflation—just not a perfect one.
Why the Disconnect?
In an inflationary environment, home values may rise, but so do the costs to finance, maintain, insure, and operate a home. Ultimately, those higher costs, combined with diminished resources and greater economic uncertainty, create affordability issues for buyers and sellers in different ways.
Budget Compression
Rising housing costs and economic uncertainty are forcing buyers to scale back or pause searches entirely. This shift is highly visible among local tech, biotech, and finance professionals reliant on variable compensation.
Eroding Returns
Sustained inflation drives up ongoing property overhead , motivating some owners to exit the market sooner. Delaying a transition can quickly dilute final proceeds as operational expenses chip away at home equity.
LOCAL MARKET UPDATE
Greater Boston Real Estate Market: Balanced but Slowing Down
Home sales in the Greater Boston area are slowing down as buyers navigate elevated living and financing costs. The drop in year-over-year closed sales and the decline in the sale-to-original-price ratio provide clear evidence that sellers are finding it increasingly difficult to command their initial asking prices.
| Market Metric | 2025 YTD | 2026 YTD | Change | What It Signals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| New Listings | 9,879 | 9,770 | −1.1% | Fewer owners are bringing homes to market. |
| Active Inventory | 2,162 | 2,457 | +13.6% | Buyers have more choices than they did a year ago. |
| Closed Sales | 5,646 | 5,233 | −7.3% | Fewer transactions are closing as buyers remain more selective. |
| Median Days to Offer | 7 days | 7 days | — | Well-priced homes can still move quickly. |
| Median Sale Price | $865,000 | $872,500 | +0.9% | Prices remain resilient despite slower transaction volume. |
| Sale-to-Original-Price Ratio | 101.48% | 100.26% | −1.22 points | Buyers are negotiating more effectively, leaving sellers less room for pricing error. |
Greater Boston single-family data via MLS PIN, comparing year-to-date results through June 25, 2025 and June 25, 2026. Coverage includes communities across Middlesex, Norfolk, and Suffolk counties, including Wellesley, Newton, Needham, Natick, Weston, Dover, Sherborn, Boston, and surrounding towns.
Frequently Asked Questions
Inflation & Real Estate
How Does Inflation Hurt Homeowners?
Inflation directly erodes the net proceeds when you eventually sell your home in two distinct ways:
- Lowers Your Net Proceeds: Even if your mortgage payment is fixed, inflation directly attacks your bottom line. For instance, variable carrying costs—like property insurance premiums, municipal tax adjustments, and the inflated cost of routine maintenance—act as a constant tax on your housing wealth, reducing your net returns over time.
- Shrinks Pool of Eligible Buyers: The Federal Reserve’s main policy tool to combat inflation is raising interest rates. This tool, however, results in higher borrowing costs for homebuyers, which reduces the number of eligible buyers who can afford your property. The net result for the homeowner is potentially a lower ROI on their property sale.
Is Real Estate a Perfect Hedge Against Inflation?
No. Inflation can erode the financial benefit of homeownership and reduce your potential home-sale gains in two key areas:
- Variable Operating Costs: While asset values may rise over time, inflation simultaneously drives up the everyday costs of owning a home—including property insurance premiums, municipal taxes, utility rates, and professional maintenance fees.
- Higher Financing Costs: At the same time, the Fed typically raises interest rates. This directly compresses buyer purchasing power through higher borrowing costs. The net effect is fewer available buyers with lower budgets and potentially lower offers.
Should I Postpone Selling My Home Until Inflation Abates?
No. Your decision to sell your home should be based on your unique needs and timing—sell when you are ready. As the old adage goes, you can't time the market, so don't try. In fact, postponing a sale introduces two immediate financial risks to your bottom line:
- The Cost of Waiting: Rising property taxes, utility rates, and spiking insurance premiums constantly chip away at your net equity while you wait.
- Rising Market Inventory: To illustrate, active homes on the market have already increased 13.6% across Greater Boston. When you factor in fewer available buyers due to inflation, the net effect is fewer buyers chasing more homes for sale—which ultimately puts you at a disadvantage.
Your next step should be to talk to an agent to evaluate your specific property, numbers, and timing.
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Explore Your OptionsSources & methodology
- Wall Street Journal — Homeownership costs, 2019–2025
- Federal Reserve — June 17, 2026 FOMC statement
- Federal Reserve — June 2026 Summary of Economic Projections
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Consumer Price Index
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Producer Price Index
- Freddie Mac — Primary Mortgage Market Survey
- Massachusetts single-family market data: MLS PIN, Team Coyle analysis, June 2026.