
You’ve likely seen the viral posts claiming “home prices are crashing.” When that narrative hits your feed, it’s only natural to worry about your equity or wonder if we’re headed for a 2008-style meltdown.
Let’s set the record straight: This is not a crash. Your home isn’t bleeding value; the market is simply finding its footing.
The National View: Growth is Steady, Not Stopping
The biggest problem with social media “doom-scrolling” is that it ignores the averages. While a few specific cities are seeing price corrections, they are the outliers. Nationally, the trend remains upward—just at a more sustainable speed.
According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), the data for the end of 2025 tells a story of stability:
“Home prices continued to rise in the fourth quarter of 2025. National median prices rose 1.2% year over year to $414,900.”
While we aren’t seeing the double-digit explosions of previous years, a 1.2% increase is a sign of a healthy, normalizing market, not a downturn.
Regional Breakdown: Where the Growth Is
The “negative narrative” falls apart when you look at the U.S. region by region. Prices are generally holding firm or increasing in the Northeast, Midwest, and South. While the West has seen some minor dips, these are localized adjustments following years of unsustainable, exponential growth.
Zooming Out: The 5-Year Reality Check
It is easy to panic if a local market drops 2% in six months, but data from ResiClub and Zillow suggests we need to look at the bigger picture. Even in the “pockets” where prices have softened recently, home values remain significantly higher than they were five years ago.
Most homeowners are sitting on a massive cushion of equity built up since 2020. A small “dip” today doesn’t erase the historic gains made over the last half-decade.
Social media thrives on shock value, but the real estate market thrives on long-term data. Across most of the country, home values are either holding their ground or continuing to climb.
Curious about what’s happening in your specific neighborhood? Local context matters more than national headlines.
