
Real estate agents say this may be as normal as it gets for Colorado’s housing market.
says the market is becoming more balanced this spring.
Pending sales rose 7% year-over-year in April, closed sales climbed nearly 3%, and the median home price dipped to $545,000.
Buyers are making moves despite high mortgage rates.
“Buyers are not necessarily flooding back into the market, but they do appear to be more acclimated to the current rate environment and increasingly accepting that mortgage rates above 6% are not a temporary exception, but the operating baseline for now,” said .
“This remains a market defined by affordability constraints and negotiation, not broad-based price depreciation.”
The gap between move-in ready and “needs work” widens
Agents describe a market of contrasts: attractive homes sell quickly, while overpriced or high-maintenance properties linger.
“Like most places across the state, we continue to see an unpredictable market with properties that are well-priced, in a good location with good views and no work needed going under contract quickly and others lingering on the market,” said .
“It seems to be a bit more balanced, and I wouldn’t say that buyers or sellers have the upper hand right now.”
This pattern is especially visible in Evergreen and Conifer.
Single-family pending sales rose 16% year-over-year, yet median pricing dipped 6% to $855,000, a sign buyers are active only when homes are priced for today’s borrowing costs.
Sellers and lenders are increasingly offering incentives. Seller concessions for mortgage-rate buydowns are more common, with temporary one-year buydown programs gaining traction.
“Creative financing solutions are becoming a much larger part of the market conversation,” said , who described the market as “highly selective, rewarding realistic pricing, thoughtful preparation and creative problem-solving on all sides of the transaction.”
Some markets buck statewide trends
Colorado’s markets rarely move in lockstep, and April was no exception.
Durango and La Plata County saw strong activity, with sales up 39% and pending sales up 52%.
Not every market is faring as well.
Fort Collins saw sales drop 17%, listings fall 18%, and the median value decline 3% to $607,750.
Colorado Springs saw listings rise 6% while demand remained soft, and the median price fell 3%.
“The housing market is running out of buyers,” said , citing job uncertainty and higher mortgage, insurance, and fuel costs.
What this means if you’re buying or selling this summer
For buyers: act fast on the right home, but negotiate on properties that have been on the market for extended periods.
“Buyers should be prepared to make a move if the right property comes along and should feel like they can submit a lower offer to sellers whose properties have been on the market for a while,” Eldridge said.
For sellers, pricing discipline is essential.
summed up the statewide mood: “Weld County remains a stable and active market, but one that requires more strategy than speed. Buyers are gaining leverage, while sellers who price and present their homes well are still seeing strong results.”
The news and editorial staffs of The Denver Post had no role in this postap preparation.



