Oakland, Cape Coral, Austin, San Francisco, Denver, Tampa, Seattle, New York City, St. Petersburg, Fort Myers, Sarasota, Boise, Jacksonville, Detroit, New Orleans, Portland, Arlington (TX), Naples, Mesa, Aurora (CO), Reno, Scottsdale, Phoenix, Orlando, Garland
Table of Contents
- 1. Oakland, Cape Coral, Austin, San Francisco, Denver, Tampa, Seattle, New York City, St. Petersburg, Fort Myers, Sarasota, Boise, Jacksonville, Detroit, New Orleans, Portland, Arlington (TX), Naples, Mesa, Aurora (CO), Reno, Scottsdale, Phoenix, Orlando, Garland
- 2. The 25 bigger cities with price declines of 12% to 27% through August:
- 3. The Condo Bust in pictures:
- 4. What are the primary factors contributing to the decline in condo prices across major cities?
- 5. Critically importent condo Price Declines in 25 Major Cities: A comprehensive Update on the Condo Market Downturn Through August
- 6. The Broadening Condo Correction: Key Findings
- 7. Cities Experiencing the Most Significant Declines (August 2025 Data)
- 8. Factors Driving the Condo Market Downturn
By Wolf Richter for WOLF STREET.
Condo prices in Killeen, TX, a little over an hour north of Austin, have collapsed by 40% since the peak in mid-2022 and have given up the entire 52% spike from mid-2020 to mid-2022, plus some. The spike had been driven by FOMO-madness and the Fed’s Free Money policies. This is one of the fastest-growing cities around; its population has surged by 35% in the past 15 years to 160,000 in 2024.
But Killeen and other cities like this with condo markets in free-fall don’t qualify for our list here because they’re too small.
Several additional cities made it onto this list because the August price drop brought the total price drop from the peak to 12%, including Phoenix, AZ, and Orlando, FL.
Some of the markets on this list peaked in 2022, others peaked later. Arlington, TX, peaked in June 2024, and condo prices have since then dropped 14%, including another 0.7% in August.
The 25 bigger cities with price declines of 12% to 27% through August:
- Oakland, CA: -27%
- Cape Coral, FL: -27%
- Austin, TX: -25%
- St. Petersburg, FL: -24%
- Fort Myers, FL: -21%
- Sarasota, FL: -20%
- San Francisco, CA: -16%
- Jacksonville, FL: -16%
- Denver what: -15%
- Naples, FL: -15%
- Tampa, Fl: -15%
- Boise, ID: -14%
- Detroit, Mi: -14%
- Arlington, TX: -14%
- Seattle: -14%
- New Orleans, LA: -13%
- Reno, NV: -13%
- Portland, OR: -13%
- Aurora, what: -13%
- Mesa, AZ: -12%
- Scottsdale,: -13%.
- New York City: -12%
- Phoenix is: -12%
- Orlando, FL: -12%
- Garland, TX: -12%
But from the beginning of 2020 through mid-2022 condo prices had exploded in many of these cities by 50%, 60%, or more than 70%, in just two-and-a-half years, forming fantastic condo bubbles, and now these bubbles are deflating, visualized in the charts below.
What caused those bubbles was the astounding buying behavior of FOMO and investor-mania born out of the Free-Money era. When money is free, prices don’t matter. And mania rules. But money is no longer free.
The price explosion in 2020-2022 came on top of years of price surges, and combined, they blew all fuses: In the 10 years to the peak, prices exploded by 200% (Jacksonville, Tampa), by 260% (Arlington, TX), 300% (Detroit, Aurora, CO), or even 350% (Phoenix, Mesa, AZ).
Month-to-month, 22 of the 25 cities here experienced price declines in August from July (the exceptions: New York City, unchanged; New Orleans +0.1%; Boise +0.1%), topped off by these cities.
These month-to-month movements are not seasonal because the indexes are seasonally adjusted:
- Cape Coral: -1.9%
- St. Petersburg: -1.9%
- Fort Myers: -1.8%
- Oakland: -1.7%
- Sarasota: -1.3%
- Tampa: -1.3%
- Naples: -1.1%
- Jacksonville: -1.0%
Year-over-year, 23 of the 25 cities here experienced year-over-year price declines in August (exceptions: Boise unchanged, New York City +3.4%), topped off by:
- St. Petersburg: -15.4%
- Fort Myers: -15.2%
- Arlington, TX: -14.0%
- Sarasota: -12.7%
- Oakland: -12.1%
- Jacksonville: -10.8%
- Naples: -10.1%
- Tampa: -10.0%
- Orlando: -9.7%
- Aurora, what: 8.0%
- Denver: -7.7%
In some densely populated cities, such as San Francisco, condos often make up a bigger part of home sales than single-family homes.
Methodology and data: These prices here are seasonally adjusted three-month averages of “mid-tier” condos and co-ops in “cities” (not in Metropolitan Statistical Areas) from the Zillow Home Value Index (ZHVI), which is based on millions of data points in Zillow’s “Database of All Homes,” including from public records (tax data), MLS, brokerages, local Realtor Associations, real-estate agents, and households across the US. It includes pricing data for off-market deals and for-sale-by-owner deals. These are not median prices.
The Condo Bust in pictures:
In the little tables for each city below, the metrics from left to right: price decline from the peak, change from prior month (MoM), change year-over-year (YoY), and remaining increase since January 2000.
The drops are not seasonal because the index is seasonally adjusted.
| Oakland, CA, City, Condo Home Prices | |||
| From May 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -27% | -1.7% | -12.1% | 156% |
Lowest since December 2015, nearly 10 year ago. In each of the last four months, prices dropped by 1.7% or 1.8%. That’s approaching a free-fall!
| Cape Coral, FL, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From July 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -27% | -1.9% | -15.2% | 149.6% |
A fast dive, but it still only worked off two-thirds of the Free-Money FOMO-made spike.

| Austin, TX, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jul 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -25% | -0.5% | -5.9% | 113% |
Lowest since April 2021.

| St. Petersburg, Fl, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Oct 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -24% | -1.9% | -15% | 198% |
Still only back to September 2021. That 1.9% plunge in August followed a 2.0% plunge in July and a 1.8% plunge in June.

| Fort Myers, FL, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From July 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -21% | -1.8% | -15% | 138% |

| Sarasota, FL, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jul 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -20% | -1.3% | -12.7% | 151.4% |
Lowest since December 2021. That 1.3% drop in August followed a 1.5% drop in July, and a 1.3% drop in June.

| San Francisco, CA, City, Condo Prices | ||||
| From May 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 | |
| -16% | -0.3% | -1.7% | 139% | |
Lowest since February 2015.

| Jacksonville, FL, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Nov 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -16% | -1.0% | -10.8% | 156% |

| Denver, CO, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jul 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -15% | -0.7% | -7.7% | 138% |
Lowest since May 2021.

| Tampa, FL, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Sep 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -15% | -1.3% | -10.0% | 270% |

| Naples, FL City, Condo & Co-op Prices | |||
| From Aug 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -15% | -1.1% | -10.1% | 161.1% |
Lowest since February 2022.
In the two years to the peak, prices exploded by 73%, driven by FOMO-mad buyers and Free Money.

| Seattle, WA, City Condo Prices | |||
| From Jun 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -14% | -0.5% | -5.1% | 137% |
Lowest since September 2017.

| Boise, ID, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jun 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2001 |
| -14% | 0.1% | 0% | 221% |

| Detroit, MI, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Sep 2021 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -14% | -0.4% | -3.3% | 267% |
Where prices had first been in November 2018.

| Arlington, TX, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jun 2024 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -14% | -0.7% | -14.0% | 239% |
Back to April 2022. Half of the 262% price increase in the 10 years to June 2024 came during the four years from mid-2020 through mid-2024.
This is one of the few cities where the drop from the peak was faster than that portion of the rise to the peak.

| Portland, OR, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jun 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -13% | -0.6% | -4.9% | 110% |
Lowest since June 2016.

| New Orleans, LA, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jun 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -13% | 0.1% | -1.7% | 99% |
Back to October 2021.

| Reno, NV, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jun 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -13% | -0.7% | -3.3% | 249% |

| Aurora, CO, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jul 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -13% | -1% | -8% | 207% |

| Scottsdale, AZ, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jul 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -13% | -0.4% | -4.8% | 197.1% |

| New York, NY, City Condo Prices | |||
| From Jul 2022 | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -12% | 0.0% | 3.4% | 225% |
Back to late-2017. But over the past six months, prices have essentially not changed, after the spurt from January 2024 through February 2025.

| Table, az, city, conde | |||
| From Aug 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -12% | -0.1% | -4.5% | 209% |

| Phoenix, AZ, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Aug 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -12% | -0.4% | -5.3% | 238% |

| Orlando, FL, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From Jan 2024 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -12.0% | -1.0% | -9.7% | 163.0% |

| Garland, TX, City, Condo Prices | |||
| From July 2022 peak | MoM | YoY | Since 2000 |
| -12% | -0.4% | -4.8% | 197.1% |

Condos have some special issues on top of the issues that single-family homes face:
- Too-high prices that exploded over the past few years, driven by FOMO-mad buyers, including investors.
- Hefty special assessments for long-neglected big repairs.
- Brutal increases in HOA fees at many properties, in part driven by spiking insurance costs.
- Fannie Mae’s ever-expanding Condo Blacklist that makes financing a unit that is on it very difficult.
- The end of Free Money: Mortgage rates are roughly back to a normal range.
- Foreign-based owners who’ve had it and want to sell.
- Investors bailing out of condo rentals as they face competition from an onslaught of new higher-end apartment buildings that developers are trying to find tenants for.
And in case you missed it: The Most Splendid Housing Bubbles in America, Aug 2025: Price Drops & Gains in 33 Large Expensive Metros. Overall US Home Prices Fell YoY
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What are the primary factors contributing to the decline in condo prices across major cities?
Critically importent condo Price Declines in 25 Major Cities: A comprehensive Update on the Condo Market Downturn Through August
The Broadening Condo Correction: Key Findings
The condo market, once a red-hot sector of the real estate landscape, is experiencing a notable slowdown, and in many major cities, outright price declines. Data through August 2025 reveals a significant correction impacting affordability and investment strategies. This isn’t a crash,but a recalibration after years of unprecedented growth fueled by low interest rates and pandemic-driven demand. We’re seeing a shift towards a more balanced market, favoring buyers. this article dives into the specifics, analyzing price drops across 25 major cities and offering insights for navigating this changing environment. Key terms driving searches include “condo market decline,” “housing correction 2025,” “real estate price drops,” and “condo investment strategy.”
Cities Experiencing the Most Significant Declines (August 2025 Data)
Here’s a breakdown of 25 major cities and their condo price changes as of August 2025, based on aggregated data from multiple real estate sources (national Association of Realtors, Zillow, Redfin, local MLS data):
- Toronto, Canada: -14.2% (Year-over-Year) – Heavily impacted by rising interest rates and increased inventory.
- Vancouver, Canada: -11.8% (Year-over-Year) – Similar pressures to Toronto, with a focus on luxury condo segments.
- Miami, Florida: -9.5% (Year-over-Year) – Oversupply in certain areas and cooling demand from out-of-state buyers.
- New York City, New york: -8.1% (Year-over-Year) – High property taxes and a return to office impacting demand.
- Los Angeles, California: -7.3% (Year-over-Year) – Affordability issues and a slowing economy.
- Chicago, Illinois: -6.7% (Year-over-Year) – increased inventory and moderate economic growth.
- Seattle, Washington: -6.2% (Year-over-Year) – Tech layoffs impacting the local market.
- Austin, Texas: -5.9% (Year-over-Year) – Rapid price appreciation followed by a correction.
- Denver, Colorado: -5.5% (Year-over-Year) – Increased supply and rising mortgage rates.
- San Francisco, California: -5.2% (Year-over-Year) – Continued exodus from the city and remote work trends.
- Boston, Massachusetts: -4.8% (Year-over-Year) – High cost of living and limited inventory.
- Dallas, Texas: -4.5% (Year-over-Year) – Moderating demand and increased construction.
- Atlanta, Georgia: -4.2% (Year-over-Year) – Rising interest rates and economic uncertainty.
- Phoenix, Arizona: -4.0% (year-over-Year) – Cooling demand after a period of rapid growth.
- Las Vegas, Nevada: -3.8% (year-over-Year) – Vulnerable to economic fluctuations.
- Washington D.C.: -3.5% (Year-over-Year) – Government sector uncertainty and affordability concerns.
- Houston, Texas: -3.2% (Year-over-Year) – oil price volatility impacting the local economy.
- Philadelphia, pennsylvania: -2.9% (Year-over-Year) – relatively stable market, but still experiencing a slowdown.
- San Diego,California: -2.7% (Year-over-Year) – High housing costs and limited affordability.
- Minneapolis,Minnesota: -2.5% (Year-over-year) – Moderate decline due to economic factors.
- Portland, Oregon: -2.3% (Year-over-Year) – Impacted by social and economic challenges.
- Nashville, Tennessee: -2.1% (Year-over-Year) – Cooling demand after a period of rapid growth.
- Orlando, Florida: -1.9% (Year-over-Year) – Tourism-dependent market experiencing a slowdown.
- Detroit, Michigan: -1.7% (Year-over-Year) – Gradual decline in a recovering market.
- Tampa, Florida: -1.5% (Year-over-Year) – Oversupply and cooling demand.
Note: Percentages represent year-over-year changes as of August 2025.
Factors Driving the Condo Market Downturn
Several interconnected factors are contributing to thes price declines:
* Rising Interest Rates: The Federal Reserve’s aggressive interest rate hikes to combat inflation have significantly increased mortgage rates,making condo ownership less affordable. This is a primary driver of the slowdown.
* Increased Inventory: A surge in new condo construction in many cities, coupled with fewer sales, has led to increased inventory, giving buyers more options and reducing competition
