Florida’s housing market, once known for its rapid price increases and frenzied demand, is now experiencing a significant slowdown. Recent data shows a marked shift: prices are dropping, inventory is surging, and homebuyers finally have more negotiating power after years of a seller-dominated landscape.
Key Takeaways
- Median home prices in Florida have declined for several consecutive months, with July 2025 marking the fifth straight month of year-over-year drops.
- Inventory of homes for sale across the state is climbing rapidly, giving buyers more choices and negotiating leverage.
- Florida’s affordability challenges remain, as incomes lag behind the salaries now needed to purchase a typical home.
- Southwest Florida has been hit particularly hard, with some areas experiencing double-digit percentage declines in property values since their pandemic peak.
Home Prices and Sales Continue to Slide
The median sale price for a single-family home in Florida sits just above $400,000, down around 1-2% from a year ago. Condo and townhouse prices are experiencing even sharper decreases, with median values dropping over 6% in recent months. Sales volume is declining as well; closed transactions for both single-family homes and condos are down compared to last year.
Many real estate analysts agree: this is not a short-term dip, but an ongoing correction following the meteoric price hikes of the pandemic boom. Overbuilt neighborhoods, expanded new construction, and a fading influx of out-of-state buyers all contribute to the cooling market. In some places like Punta Gorda and Cape Coral, prices are down more than 15% from their 2022 highs.
Inventory Surge: A Shift Toward Buyers
Bucking the national trend, available inventory in Florida is well above 2019 pre-pandemic levels. New listings have spiked by double digits compared to last year. The months’ supply of homes—a key market balance indicator—has risen to levels not seen in years, with condos approaching a 10-month supply in several metro areas. Simply put, buyers now have more homes to choose from and more room to negotiate.
Affordability Still a Concern
While prices are softening, affordability remains a pressing issue. Even after recent declines, the salary required to afford a median-priced home in Florida is estimated to be roughly 28% higher than the state’s median income. Factors like steep insurance premiums and rising homeowners association (HOA) fees—especially following stricter safety codes and costly hurricane damage—further strain buyers’ budgets. The days where a $40,000-a-year salary could support homeownership in Florida are firmly in the past.
Looking Forward: More Adjustments Likely
Most experts agree that Florida’s housing market correction has not entirely run its course. As both resale and new home inventories rise, further price declines are expected, especially if mortgage rates remain high. The market is poised to become even more favorable for buyers in the months ahead—though a return to pre-pandemic affordability appears unlikely without a major recession or more drastic shifts in demand.
Buyers, for the first time in years, have newfound leverage in Florida’s real estate landscape—yet must still navigate a complex mix of lingering affordability challenges, insurance costs, and local economic headwinds.
Further Reading
- Florida’s Housing Market Has ‘Flipped’ for Homebuyers, Newsweek.
- Fla.’s Housing Market: Median Prices, Sales Down in July, Florida Realtors.
- Florida’s Housing Market Gains Inventory As Prices Ease – NMP, National Mortgage Professional.
- Much of Southwest Florida’s housing market remains in correction-mode, ResiClub.