Loudoun County Housing Market Statistics – April 2009

May 12, 2009 by Danilo Bogdanovic  
Filed under Statistics

Here’s a look at Loudoun County housing market statistics for April 2009:

Total Sales/Buyer Demand 

  • April 2009 sales were up 9 percent over March 2009
  • April 2009 sales were up 8 percent over April 2008

Inventory/Supply

  • April 2009 had 892 new listings come on the market versus 842 in March 2009, an increase of 6 percent (The increase in listings between March 2008 and April 2008 was 9 percent)
  • April 2009 had 892 new listings come on the market versus 1254 in April 2008, a decrease of  29 percent

What does this mean?

The numbers show a decent increase in buyer demand and a huge decrease in inventory. This trend has been apparent since the end of 2008 and is leading to price stabilization througout Loudoun County.

This is good news for the Loudoun housing market especially for home owners and sellers. But it can be frustrating to Loudoun home buyers because they don’t have many homes to choose from. And once they do find homes that meet their needs, they’re seeing them sell before they have a chance to look at them or they’re in multiple/competing offer situations on home(s) they’re writing offers on.

Loudoun’s housing market conditions also lead to an interesting conversation with home buyers relocating to the area from places that are still getting hit hard by the market – they’re expecting the local market to be a “Buyer’s Market” like the one they’re moving from, but that’s not the case. And our local market goes against what much of the media is still saying, much of which is outdated, behind the curve and on a national, not a local level.

How does the Loudoun County housing market compare to the rest of Northern Virginia?

The rest of Northern Virginia is in a similar situation. We’re seeing the same trend in Fairfax County and now in Prince William County. Fairfax County wasn’t quite hit as hard as Loudoun County, but Prince William County definitely had us beat and is taking longer to recover. And, overall, Northern Virginia is leading the Washington, DC area in the housing recovery.

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Loudoun Foreclosure, Bank-Owned, Short-Sale Market Statistics – April 2009

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