Why the Housing Market Feels Unfair Right Now and What to Do About It

March 16, 20265 min read

Why the Housing Market Feels Unfair Right Now and What to Do About It

The Housing Market Is Not One Market Anymore

If you have been trying to make sense of conflicting housing market news lately you are not imagining the contradiction. Reports of strong sales activity exist alongside stories of homes sitting for months without offers. Certain properties are moving with urgency while others linger on the market long past what any seller expected when they listed.

The housing market is not behaving as a single unified thing right now. It is behaving as two separate markets occupying the same space and operating by entirely different rules. Understanding which market you are in and what the rules of that market actually are is the foundation of any successful buying or selling strategy in 2025.

The Shape of What Is Happening

Economists have a name for this kind of divergence. They call it a K-shaped market, a term borrowed from the way economic recoveries can simultaneously lift some segments while leaving others behind. The upper line of the K represents one reality. The lower line represents another. And the gap between them is widening.

At the top of the market, specifically in the luxury and high-end segments, conditions have remained strong and in certain cities have actually improved. At the middle and entry levels where the vast majority of buyers and sellers operate, affordability pressure, elevated monthly payments, and high living costs are creating friction that is showing up in longer days on market, more price reductions, and harder negotiations.

What Is Driving the Luxury Market

The fundamental difference between the top of the market and everything below it comes down to one word: financing. A substantial and growing share of luxury buyers are either paying entirely in cash or bringing down payments large enough that mortgage rates have minimal impact on their monthly obligation or their decision to buy.

As Shelby Pennix explains, cash buyer activity has been setting records in markets like New York and other high-end metros. When your purchase does not depend on a mortgage the entire rate environment becomes background noise. You are not calculating what a rate change does to your monthly payment. You are not waiting for rates to come down before you act. You see a property you want and you move on it without the friction that financing introduces.

This is why trophy properties in desirable locations are transacting quickly even in a market that feels stuck everywhere else. The buyer pool for those properties is simply insulated from the forces that are slowing down the rest of the market.

What Is Actually Happening in the Middle Market

For buyers working in normal price ranges the experience is almost the opposite. Elevated mortgage rates applied to home prices that have not fallen significantly have kept monthly payments stretched relative to household incomes across most of the country. Every buyer in this segment is doing payment math constantly, and when the numbers feel tight the response is to negotiate harder, move more slowly, or walk away entirely.

This payment sensitivity is reshaping how middle-market transactions actually get done. Sellers who price even modestly above what the monthly payment math supports for their buyer pool are watching their listings sit. Buyers who understand the environment are using it to negotiate concessions that were essentially off the table just a few years ago.

Your Superpower as a Middle-Market Buyer

If you are buying in the normal price ranges right now your greatest advantage is not a dramatically lower purchase price. It is structure. The tools that buyers have access to in the current environment can make a meaningful and lasting difference in what the home actually costs you every month and what you need to bring to closing.

Seller credits toward closing costs reduce your upfront cash requirement at settlement. A seller-funded rate buydown can lower your monthly payment for the first several years of the loan or for its entire duration depending on what is negotiated. Repair credits and inspection concessions that sellers dismissed entirely during the peak seller's market years are back as regularly successful asks on the right properties.

As Shelby Pennix points out most middle-market buyers are not using these tools as aggressively as the current environment actually supports. The leverage is there. The question is whether you know how to find it and how to ask for it in a way that gets results.

What Middle-Market Sellers Need to Hear

For sellers the K-shaped market delivers a message that is worth taking seriously. The rules governing the luxury segment do not transfer to middle-market listings. Your buyer is payment-sensitive and they are going to make their decision based on what the home costs them every month, not just what the list price says.

Overpricing in this environment does not produce a negotiated outcome close to your number. It produces days on market, reduced buyer traffic, and an eventual price reduction that signals to the market that the listing has a problem. Getting the price right from the beginning and presenting the home in a way that minimizes buyer hesitation are not optional strategies in a market where your buyer pool is already stretched. They are the difference between selling and sitting.

Two Different Markets Require Two Different Approaches

The K-shaped housing market is not a reason to step back from buying or selling. It is a reason to go in with a strategy that is built specifically for the segment you are actually competing in rather than one shaped by headlines about a market that does not apply to your situation.

Shelby Pennix works with buyers and sellers in the middle market to identify what is actually working right now and build strategies that produce real results in the current environment. Reach out to Shelby Pennix to build a plan that fits where the market actually stands today.


Sources

NAR.realtor Realtor.com Forbes.com MortgageNewsDaily.com Zillow.com

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