U.S. homes fell in 2024 to a nearly 30-year low for the second time in as many years as elevated mortgage rates, rising home prices and few properties on the market freeze prospective homebuyers out of the market.
REALTORS® in California and across the nation have launched a massive, industrywide fundraising effort to support those impacted by the Southern California wildfires.
Sales of previously occupied U.S. homes fell in 2024 to a nearly 30-year low for the second year in a row as elevated mortgage rates, rising home prices and a
Los Angeles councilmembers spar over a proposal to give new safeguards to tenants who lost income because of the fires.
President Donald Trump rescinded his spending freeze, but billions of dollars in federal funds are still up in the air.
In recent years, the U.S. rental industry has evolved from being a secondary segment of the housing ecosystem to a key player in the broader market, as an increasing number of people are renting longer. This shift, propelled by economic factors and changing consumer preferences, is reshaping the housing landscape with fundamental implications.
Brokerage leaders, data scientists and other experts have helped paint a picture of the scope and impact of the California wildfires on the LA housing market.
A POLITICO analysis found roughly a quarter of all large metro areas face both housing shortages and high flood risk.
A.B. 238, which would make it easy for victims of the Los Angeles County wildfires to get mortgage relief, will proceed despite voluntary agreements Gov. Newsom reached with hundreds of lenders.
Many homeowners are locked in where they’re at, even if they’d like to sell, due to sub-5% rates on their current mortgages.
Gov. Gavin Newsom has launched a program called LA Rises which will provide financial support from private sectors to rebuild areas affected by LA wildfires.
For the second year in a row, sales of previously owned homes in the U.S. dropped in 2024 to the lowest level in almost 30 years