Key Takeaways
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- Condo prices posted their largest annual drop since 2012, down 1.9% YoY in September–October, while single-family prices stayed modestly positive.
- HOA dues are rising sharply (insurance + maintenance), directly hurting affordability and extending time-on-market.
- Downside is concentrated in specific metros with oversupply, climate/insurance shocks, or weak downtown demand; some areas have 25%+ of condos below last sale value.
- Financing friction is increasing: lenders scrutinize buildings with repair/insurance issues, adding another headwind to transaction volume.
What Happened?
The U.S. condo market has weakened to its worst condition in more than a decade. National condo prices fell 1.9% year over year in September and October, the steepest decline since 2012. A growing share of units are now valued below their most recent sale price, and sellers are responding by cutting prices, waiting longer, or pulling listings and renting instead.
Why It Matters?
Condos are facing a unique triple squeeze: softer demand for urban living amid hybrid work, slower second-home demand, and rising carrying costs driven by HOA fees—particularly where insurance premiums and building maintenance are climbing. This is creating a widening performance gap versus single-family homes, which still benefit from structurally tight supply. For investors and lenders, the key risk is that higher fees and repair/insurance constraints can impair liquidity, reduce buyer pools, and increase price volatility in markets already facing supply gluts or localized shocks.
What’s Next?
Watch for whether HOA dues stabilize or continue rising, especially in high-risk insurance markets, because monthly all-in costs are increasingly determining buyer behavior. Monitor delisting rates and rental conversions as a signal of seller capitulation versus standoff, and track mortgage availability for buildings requiring major repairs or with insufficient insurance coverage. Markets with oversupply (notably some Sun Belt metros) and those exposed to climate-driven insurance pressure are likely to remain under the most stress until either costs fall, demand reaccelerates, or inventory clears.












