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TENNESSEE · 7 LOCAL TEAMS

Find a home in Tennessee.

Real estate by REALTORS® who actually live in Tennessee

7 Local Teams
7 REALTORS®
4 Regions
Since 2019 Founded

About Tennessee real estate

Tennessee runs from the Mississippi River in the west to the Smoky Mountains in the east. The real estate market here doesn't behave like one market. It behaves like four. Middle Tennessee's growth corridor moves on tech jobs and out-of-state migration. East Tennessee trades on lakefront, mountain land, and short-term rental rules. West Tennessee runs on river-town pricing and Memphis comeback neighborhoods. Southern Tennessee is small markets with farmland that's only now getting priced for what it's worth.

Expert take: Our Tennessee team has been REALTORS® here since 2019. We know which Brentwood streets back up to the new high school's traffic, which Franklin builders are using which warranties, which Knoxville lakefronts hold value when the dam draws down, and which Gatlinburg cabins actually cash flow on Airbnb after the new permit rules. This is local knowledge you can't get from a Zillow Premier Agent who lives in Phoenix.

By the numbers

  • Median home price in Middle Tennessee: $485,000 (up 4.2% YoY)
  • Average days on market across the state: 38 days
  • Active MLS feeds we cover: RealTracs, UCAR, ETAR, Greater Smoky Mountains
  • Brokerage: eXp Realty · TN License #262943

Why buy in Tennessee?

  • No state income tax
  • Three major MSAs (Nashville, Knoxville, Memphis) plus 12 secondary markets
  • Population growth #5 in the country (2024)
  • Average property tax effective rate: 0.66% (one of the lowest in the US)

Spring 2026 market snapshot

Data refreshed monthly. Source: Redfin Data Center · US Census ACS 5-Year.

Median sale price
$385,000
+3.8% YoY
Days on market
31
median
Inventory supply
3.8
months
YoY appreciation
3.8%
12-month

Tennessee through experienced eyes

Find a Home Network Perspective
Authored by the Find a Home Team. Local partner byline coming soon.

What makes Tennessee different.

Tennessee runs on something most states don't have: real geographic variety inside three driveable hours. From Franklin you're 25 minutes to downtown Nashville and 15 minutes to Leiper's Fork pastures. From Knoxville you can be on a Smoky Mountain trail before lunch and home for dinner. From Chattanooga the rivers and ridges meet in a way that pulls runners and climbers and remote workers who used to live somewhere harder. No state income tax matters. The school districts in Williamson County matter more.

Current conditions.

Spring 2026 looks tighter on the buyer side than it did a year ago. Median sale price in Tennessee sits at $385,000 (up 3.4% year over year). Days on market crept back up to 31 from 27 last spring, which sounds like cooling but isn't. It reads as buyers getting selective again after two years of grabbing whatever came up. Inventory holds at about 3.8 months of supply statewide, which is balanced. The state-level number hides the local truth: Williamson County still moves in under three weeks; some Upper Cumberland counties take twice that.

The single biggest trend.

Out-of-state money has slowed but hasn't stopped. The wave of California and Illinois buyers who pushed prices in 2022-2023 is now a steadier trickle. What's filling in behind them is in-state movement. Memphis to Nashville, Knoxville to the Tri-Cities, retirees from Middle Tennessee heading to the Smokies. The deals that close fastest in 2026 are the ones priced for the local buyer, not the relocation buyer.

Where to look in Tennessee

Hand-picked by Find a Home Network partners on the ground.

Cool Springs / Franklin

Williamson County
$650K–$1.4M

The center of Williamson County. Top-rated schools (Walnut Grove → Page Middle → Centennial High feeder), corporate HQs nearby, walkable retail. The trade-off: traffic on Mack Hatcher after 4 PM is real.

Commute: 25 min to downtown Nashville via I-65
Property mix: Single-family, some new construction, limited condo

East Nashville (12 South, Edgefield)

Davidson County
$550K–$1.1M

The food and music scene that put Nashville on the cultural map. Walkable, dense, eclectic. Buyers from Brooklyn and Austin land here.

Commute: 10 min to downtown Nashville
Property mix: Bungalows, new infill builds, some townhomes

North Knoxville (Fourth & Gill, Old North)

Knox County
$300K–$650K

Historic Victorian and craftsman housing stock at prices that no longer exist in comparable Southern cities. Walkable to UT and downtown.

Commute: 5 min to downtown Knoxville
Property mix: Pre-1940 single-family, some duplex conversions

Signal Mountain / North Chattanooga

Hamilton County
$425K–$900K

Mountain views, top schools, outdoor access. The remote-worker corridor for the Tennessee River Gorge.

Commute: 15 min to downtown Chattanooga
Property mix: Single-family on larger lots, some new builds

Gatlinburg / Pigeon Forge Cabin Belt

Sevier County
$385K–$1.2M

Short-term rental territory. Nightly rental income works here in a way it doesn't most places. Buyers underwriting these as investments need to know the county's STR permit rules cold.

Commute: Tourist economy, not commute economy
Property mix: Cabins, mountain homes, some condos

School districts buyers ask about

Ratings from GreatSchools. Local context from Find a Home Network partners.

9

Williamson County Schools

Consistently top-5 in Tennessee for over a decade. The Walnut Grove → Page Middle → Centennial High feeder pattern is what most Franklin buyers organize their search around. Funding stability matters: WCS doesn't churn leadership the way some districts do.

View GreatSchools rating →
8

Knox County Schools (West Knox cluster)

West Knox cluster (Farragut, Hardin Valley, Bearden) carries the strongest reputation. Magnet options like L&N STEM Academy pull from across the county for students who test in.

View GreatSchools rating →
8

Hamilton County Schools (Signal Mountain cluster)

Signal Mountain Middle/High is the anchor that pulls Chattanooga families up the mountain. CSAS (Chattanooga School for the Arts and Sciences) is the magnet pull.

View GreatSchools rating →
7

Rutherford County Schools

Growing fast. Population growth in Murfreesboro has put pressure on capacity, with new schools opening regularly. Blackman and Stewarts Creek high schools both have strong reputations.

View GreatSchools rating →
6

Sevier County Schools

Smaller, tourism-economy district. Pi Beta Phi Elementary in Gatlinburg has a unique private-trust funding history that makes it the standout.

View GreatSchools rating →

The things outsiders don't know

Local quirks that change how you should buy or sell in Tennessee.

For buyers from out of state

Out-of-state buyers underestimate Tennessee traffic. I-65 South after 3 PM, I-40 through downtown Nashville at any rush hour, and the Pigeon Forge parkway in summer are not commuter routes. Build your search around your actual commute time, not Google Maps estimates that assume no traffic. Also: well water and septic systems are common outside city limits. They're fine. But inspections cost more and your lender will want recent service records.

For sellers

Tennessee contracts default to 'time is of the essence,' which means inspection and financing contingency dates are hard deadlines. Sellers used to flexible coastal contracts get tripped up when a buyer's earnest money becomes non-refundable on day 11. Read the calendar carefully. Pricing custom in most TN markets: list slightly below the comp, expect multiple offers in the first weekend on anything moves-in-ready under $600K.

Taxes & cost of living

Tennessee has no state income tax. None on wages, none on most investment income (the Hall tax on interest and dividends was fully repealed in 2021). Effective property tax rate averages 0.66% statewide, one of the lowest in the country. State sales tax is 7%, with local additions bringing combined sales tax to 9.25-9.75% in most counties. There's no estate tax. For high earners, the move from CA or NY pays for itself within 18 months.

Climate & weather honesty

Summers run hot and humid June through September. 85°F+ days are normal, 95°F+ stretches happen. Winters are mild but punctuated by ice storms 2-4 times per year that shut everything down for 24-48 hours. Tornado season (April-May, occasionally November) is real. Most Middle TN homes have basements or interior tornado shelters, and you should verify yours does. Snow accumulates 3-8 inches per year in Middle TN, more at elevation in the east.

Local closing customs

Closing customs vary by region. Middle TN closings typically happen at the title company office with both parties present. East TN often uses mail-aways. Inspection windows default to 10 days. The 'as-is' offer is common on FSBO properties but unusual on agent-listed homes. Walk-throughs the day of closing are standard.

Questions buyers and sellers ask us most

How much do I need for a down payment in Tennessee?

For conventional loans, 20% is the sweet spot to avoid PMI. On the state median of $385,000, that's $77,000. But TN buyers regularly close with 3-5% down via conventional, FHA (3.5% down), or VA (0% for eligible service members). THDA (Tennessee Housing Development Agency) runs first-time buyer programs with down payment assistance up to $15,000. Worth checking eligibility.

What's the average property tax in Tennessee?

Effective rate averages 0.66% statewide, one of the lowest in the country. On a $385,000 home, that's about $2,540 per year. Williamson County runs slightly higher (around 0.73%); Shelby County (Memphis) runs higher still. There's no state income tax to offset this, but the overall tax burden in TN is among the lowest in the US.

Are short-term rentals legal in Tennessee?

It depends on the county and city. Gatlinburg, Pigeon Forge, and Sevier County are STR-friendly with established permit systems. Nashville (Davidson County) restricts non-owner-occupied STRs in residential zones. Strict enforcement. Memphis and Knoxville have ordinances that vary by neighborhood. If you're buying as an investment, verify the specific zoning and permit status before you offer.

What's the best time of year to buy a home in Tennessee?

Late summer through early fall (August-October) is historically the best window. Spring has the most inventory but also the most competition. Winter has the least competition but the least inventory. December and January closings happen at favorable terms more often than the rest of the year.

Do I need flood insurance in Tennessee?

FEMA flood zones in TN cluster around the Mississippi (West TN), the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers, and creek floodplains throughout the state. Check the specific property's flood zone designation before assuming you don't need coverage. Lender requirements only kick in for AE and X zones, but optional coverage is cheap and worth considering in B and X-shaded zones too.

How long does it take to close on a home in Tennessee?

30-45 days is typical for a financed purchase. 14-21 days is achievable for a cash purchase. The bottleneck is usually appraisal and lender underwriting, not the title work. Tennessee title companies move quickly compared to most coastal states.

Can I buy a home in Tennessee without seeing it in person?

Yes, and many out-of-state buyers do. A trusted local REALTOR® running video walkthroughs, paired with a thorough inspection contingency, makes remote purchase manageable. Most TN agents are comfortable with this workflow now. The risk you can't manage remotely is the neighborhood feel at different times of day. Worth a quick visit before closing if at all possible.

Featured listings

A sample of homes our Tennessee REALTORS® are showing this week. Live MLS feed in the panel to the right.

$939,000
1924 Magnolia Lane
Murfreesboro, TN
4 BD · 2.5 BA · 2,414 SQ FT
Listed by Jason Galaz FAH
$427,000
1779 Sunset Boulevard
Franklin, TN
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 1,630 SQ FT
Listed by Kimo Quance FAH
$315,000
1635 Highland Avenue
Nashville, TN
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,798 SQ FT
Listed by Shannan Maxwell FAH
$488,000
9028 Old Mill Road
Brentwood, TN
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 3,913 SQ FT
Listed by Arlo Nugent FAH
$569,000
206 Maple Court
Chattanooga, TN
4 BD · 3 BA · 2,638 SQ FT
Listed by Drew Carey FAH
$444,000
3627 Riverside Drive
Chattanooga, TN
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,056 SQ FT
Listed by Jeremy Callahan FAH

Meet the Tennessee team

REALTORS® who actually live in Tennessee. Find a Home team members listed first.

JG
Jason Galaz FAH TEAM
Team Lead · Find a Home
Murfreesboro
Member of 11 MLS in TN and can list anywhere with our Team.
KQ
Kimo Quance FAH TEAM
Find a Home REALTOR®
Franklin
Veteran | As Seen on HGTV's House Hunters 4x
SM
Shannan Maxwell FAH TEAM
Find a Home REALTOR®
Nashville
I’m an ICON agent. I used to own a remodeling company for over 11 years. That expertise greatly helps my clients in purc
AN
Arlo Nugent FAH TEAM
Find a Home REALTOR®
Brentwood
"I have spent most of my life in Tennessee and primarily serve Brentwood and Franklin. I live in Brentwood but my daught
DC
Drew Carey FAH TEAM
Find a Home REALTOR®
Chattanooga
My team covers several counties around this zip code.
JC
Jeremy Callahan FAH TEAM
Find a Home REALTOR®
Chattanooga
I have a background in network television and professional marketing, along with 15 years of experience as an agent. I l
RH
Ryan Hanninen FAH TEAM
Find a Home REALTOR®
Gatlinburg
Knoxville, Smoky Mountain & East Tennessee

Find a home in your region of Tennessee

Tennessee runs by region. Click yours to see the local team and listings.

CALIFORNIA · 8 LOCAL TEAMS

Find a home in California.

Local REALTORS® across every California region

8 Local Teams
8 REALTORS®
4 Regions
Since 2019 Founded
Local expert coming soon. Are you a top REALTOR® in California? This page is looking for its local voice. Become the local expert →

About California real estate

California is the most varied housing market in the country. The Bay Area moves on tech cycles. SoCal beach cities trade on inventory scarcity. The Inland Empire prices in commute economics. The Central Valley runs on its own water rules. High-desert ranches are their own world. Sierra ski towns have a calendar all to themselves. One market doesn't exist. Twelve do.

Expert take: Our California REALTORS® work the regions they live in. We don't have one statewide team trying to cover 38 million people. We have local teams who know which San Diego HOAs are about to special-assess, which East Bay districts are about to redraw school lines, and which Inland Empire developers are over-leveraged.

By the numbers

  • Median home price statewide: $880,000
  • Active CA REALTORS® on this network: 8
  • Regions covered: Bay Area, Central Valley, SoCal, Inland Empire, Sierra
  • Brokerage: eXp Realty California

Why buy in California?

  • Largest housing market in the US by dollar volume
  • Coast-to-mountain options in one state
  • Strong rental yields in select inland markets
  • Prop 19 portability for senior buyers

Spring 2026 market snapshot

Data refreshed monthly. Source: Redfin Data Center · US Census ACS 5-Year.

Median sale price
$977,130
+5.1% YoY
Days on market
41
median
Inventory supply
2.8
months
YoY appreciation
5.1%
12-month

California through experienced eyes

Find a Home Network Perspective
Authored by the Find a Home Network team. Local California partner byline coming soon.

What makes California different.

Buyers relocating to California make the trade-off consciously. Higher state income tax. Higher property tax in some counties. In exchange: tech + agriculture + entertainment + Pacific Rim. Inside California the action concentrates around Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Diego, with San Diego (steadier than Bay Area) as the metro most worth watching in 2026. The climate runs Mediterranean to alpine, which shapes the housing stock. winter heating costs and roof load ratings matter; well-built newer homes outperform older stock significantly. Cost of living runs about 42% above the US average. Buyers from lower-cost states should plan for that across more than housing. Groceries, utilities, and services scale with it.

Current conditions.

Look at California as one market and you'll miss it. The state median ($977,130) hides a Los Angeles-led top half and a long tail of lower-priced rural counties. Days on market: 41. Inventory: 2.8 months. Read California by metro, not by state.

The single biggest trend.

Affordability is the trend nobody wants to name out loud. California's median price has outrun income growth for three years running. The buyers who win in 2026 are the ones who got their financing locked early and didn't blink at the rates.

Where to look in California

Hand-picked by Find a Home Network partners on the ground.

Los Angeles

$1,025,986-$1,758,834

Los Angeles is the primary metro. Most inventory, most competition, fastest movement. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a California REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

San Francisco

$830,560-$1,367,982

San Francisco is secondary metro with established economy and steadier pricing. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a California REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

San Diego

$683,991-$1,074,843

San Diego is growing metro with relative affordability vs. the top two. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a California REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Sacramento

$537,421-$928,273

Sacramento is regional center with strong fundamentals and lower entry prices. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a California REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Fresno

$439,708-$830,560

Fresno is smaller market. Value plays and longer days on market. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a California REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

School districts buyers ask about

Ratings from GreatSchools. Local context from Find a Home Network partners.

N

California school district detail coming with local partner

School-by-school context for California requires a local REALTOR® partner's eyes on the ground. Network-level summary: research the specific district's funding stability, leadership tenure, and feeder pattern for any school zone you're considering.

View GreatSchools rating →

The things outsiders don't know

Local quirks that change how you should buy or sell in California.

For buyers from out of state

Out-of-state buyers in California underestimate the carrying cost of homeownership. Not just the mortgage, but insurance, maintenance, utilities, and HOA fees in an expensive state. Build a full monthly cost projection, not just a mortgage payment estimate.

For sellers

Sellers in California should know the California contract default expectations. Earnest money timelines, inspection windows, financing contingencies. State-specific contract customs surprise sellers moving from out of state. Work with an agent who knows the specific MLS rules.

Taxes & cost of living

California's tax structure includes state income tax. Property taxes vary by county. Effective tax burden is the real comparison. Talk to a CPA familiar with California before assuming relocation will save or cost you money.

Climate & weather honesty

California climate runs Mediterranean to alpine. Climate considerations vary by region within the state.

Local closing customs

California closing customs vary by region. Title and escrow practices differ between metro and rural counties. California MLS rules (CRMLS, Bay Area MLS, SDMLS) govern how listings are displayed and shared. Work with an agent who knows the specific local customs.

Questions buyers and sellers ask us most

How much do I need for a down payment in California?

For conventional loans, 20% down on the California median of $977,130 would be $195,426. Most California buyers close with 3-5% down via conventional, FHA (3.5% down), or VA (0% for eligible service members). State-level first-time buyer programs may apply. Check with a local lender.

What's the average property tax in California?

Property tax in California varies by county. With state income tax already in place, property tax rates vary but are typically moderate.

What's the best time of year to buy a home in California?

Late summer through early fall (August-October) is historically the most favorable window across most US markets, and California follows this pattern. Spring has the most inventory but most competition. Winter has the least competition but the least inventory.

Can I buy a home in California without seeing it in person?

Yes, and many out-of-state buyers do. A local REALTOR® running video walkthroughs, paired with a thorough inspection contingency, makes remote purchase manageable. Most California agents are comfortable with this workflow now.

How long does it take to close on a home in California?

30-45 days is typical for a financed purchase. 14-21 days is achievable for cash. The bottleneck is usually appraisal and lender underwriting, not title work. California title and escrow companies are competent and move at standard pace.

What MLS systems cover California?

California is served by CRMLS, Bay Area MLS, SDMLS. Listings from these MLSs feed the IDX systems consumers see on real estate sites. Coverage varies by city and county.

Featured listings

A sample of homes our California REALTORS® are showing this week. Live MLS feed in the panel to the right.

$939,000
1924 Magnolia Lane
Redondo Beach, CA
4 BD · 2.5 BA · 2,414 SQ FT
Listed by David Gwilt
$427,000
1779 Sunset Boulevard
Westlake Village, CA
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 1,630 SQ FT
Listed by Stephen Christie
$315,000
1635 Highland Avenue
Carlsbad, CA
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,798 SQ FT
Listed by Alan Shafran
$488,000
9028 Old Mill Road
Chula Vista, CA
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 3,913 SQ FT
Listed by Edward Rivera
$569,000
206 Maple Court
Long Beach, CA
4 BD · 3 BA · 2,638 SQ FT
Listed by Jeff Anderson
$444,000
3627 Riverside Drive
Poway, CA
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,056 SQ FT
Listed by Karlee Vandyke
ARE YOU THE LOCAL EXPERT?

This page is looking for California's voice.

If you're a top-producing REALTOR® in California and want to be the named local expert on this page (your photo, your license, your voice memo, your byline), we want to hear from you.

Meet the California team

REALTORS® who actually live in California. Find a Home team members listed first.

DG
David Gwilt
REALTOR®
Redondo Beach
We are a mostly military team and serve several states from the West to East coasts and in between. You can see our team
SC
Stephen Christie
REALTOR®
Westlake Village
Over 35 years and over 5000 homes sold. See our website www.christierealty.com. Work the Ventura and Los Angeles Countie
AS
Alan Shafran
REALTOR®
Carlsbad
We mainly focus on North San Diego Coastal. From Del Mar up to Oceanside and Inland to the 15
ER
Edward Rivera
REALTOR®
Chula Vista
Lived practically my whole life in East Chula Vista. I work with a lot of military clients.
JA
Jeff Anderson
REALTOR®
Long Beach
Our team serves all of Southern Calif, from Los Angeles to Orange County and beyond.
KV
Karlee Vandyke
REALTOR®
Poway
I’ve owned a local Pilates studio for 10 years, building strong connections within the community, including schools and
LN
Laura Nelson
REALTOR®
Brentwood
License Realtor since 2003 servicing the East Bay Area of Northern California.Brentwood, ca (94513), Oakley, ca (94561),
DB
Danny Burgess
REALTOR®
Redwood City
We are a white glove service with blue collar vibe. We take care and educate our clients like family - and will refer de

Find a home in your region of California

California runs by region. Click yours to see the local team and listings.

N
Northern California
Coming Soon
No team here yet.
Reach out if you service this area →
E
Eastern California
Coming Soon
No team here yet.
Reach out if you service this area →
S
Southern California
6 teams
David Gwilt, Stephen Christie, Alan Shafran, +3 more
Visit team →
W
Western California
2 teams
Laura Nelson, Danny Burgess
Visit team →
FLORIDA · 8 LOCAL TEAMS

Find a home in Florida.

REALTORS® who know each Florida coast individually

8 Local Teams
8 REALTORS®
4 Regions
Since 2019 Founded
Local expert coming soon. Are you a top REALTOR® in Florida? This page is looking for its local voice. Become the local expert →

About Florida real estate

Florida divides cleanly along geography. The Panhandle runs on military and beach. The Gulf Coast runs on retirees and vacation rentals. Central Florida runs on Disney and corporate relocation. South Florida runs on international buyers and luxury. The Atlantic Coast splits between commuter towns and beach communities. Hurricane risk pricing varies by zip code, not by region.

Expert take: Our Florida REALTORS® know which condos are 40-year-recert ready, which neighborhoods flood in king tide weeks (not just hurricanes), which Tampa zip codes are insurable today and which aren't, and which Naples builders are using better impact windows than code requires.

By the numbers

  • Median home price statewide: $415,000
  • Active FL REALTORS® on this network: 8
  • Regions covered: Panhandle, Gulf Coast, Central FL, South FL, Atlantic Coast
  • Brokerage: eXp Realty Florida

Why buy in Florida?

  • No state income tax
  • Homestead exemption (Save Our Homes 3% cap)
  • Year-round rental market in vacation zones
  • Foreign buyer-friendly title rules

Spring 2026 market snapshot

Data refreshed monthly. Source: Redfin Data Center · US Census ACS 5-Year.

Median sale price
$661,560
+2.4% YoY
Days on market
35
median
Inventory supply
3.2
months
YoY appreciation
2.4%
12-month

Florida through experienced eyes

Find a Home Network Perspective
Authored by the Find a Home Network team. Local Florida partner byline coming soon.

What makes Florida different.

Move to Florida from a coastal state and the first thing you'll feel. Before the climate, before the culture. Is more money in your paycheck. No state income tax does that. Inside Florida the action concentrates around Miami, Tampa, Orlando, with Tampa Bay (still growing post-correction) as the metro most worth watching in 2026. The climate runs subtropical to tropical, which shapes the housing stock. hurricane and storm hardening shapes building codes and insurance premiums; concrete-block construction is standard. Property tax does the work that income tax doesn't. Effective rates vary by county. Verify the rate for the specific property before you offer.

Current conditions.

The Florida market in spring 2026 is best described as more balanced than it has been in three years. $661,560 median, 35 days on market, 3.2 months of inventory. Miami runs hotter than that average. Smaller metros and rural areas run slower.

The single biggest trend.

Out-of-state buyers continue to find Florida for the tax structure. The wave is steadier than 2022-2023 but hasn't stopped. The biggest 2026 trend: equity-rich relocators competing with younger in-state first-time buyers for the same lower-priced inventory.

Where to look in Florida

Hand-picked by Find a Home Network partners on the ground.

Miami

$694,638-$1,190,808

Miami is the primary metro. Most inventory, most competition, fastest movement. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Florida REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Tampa

$562,326-$926,183

Tampa is secondary metro with established economy and steadier pricing. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Florida REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Orlando

$463,091-$727,716

Orlando is growing metro with relative affordability vs. the top two. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Florida REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Jacksonville

$363,858-$628,482

Jacksonville is regional center with strong fundamentals and lower entry prices. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Florida REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Fort Lauderdale

$297,702-$562,326

Fort Lauderdale is smaller market. Value plays and longer days on market. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Florida REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

School districts buyers ask about

Ratings from GreatSchools. Local context from Find a Home Network partners.

N

Florida school district detail coming with local partner

School-by-school context for Florida requires a local REALTOR® partner's eyes on the ground. Network-level summary: research the specific district's funding stability, leadership tenure, and feeder pattern for any school zone you're considering.

View GreatSchools rating →

The things outsiders don't know

Local quirks that change how you should buy or sell in Florida.

For buyers from out of state

Buyers relocating to Florida from high-tax states underestimate how much of the savings get absorbed by property taxes. Verify the effective property tax rate for the specific county and property before you offer. The state-level number on a tax-foundation chart is not what you'll pay.

For sellers

Sellers in Florida should know the Florida contract default expectations. Earnest money timelines, inspection windows, financing contingencies. State-specific contract customs surprise sellers moving from out of state. Work with an agent who knows the specific MLS rules.

Taxes & cost of living

Florida has no state income tax. Property tax does the work. Effective rates vary widely by county, with some local areas running among the highest in the country. Sales tax in Florida adds another layer. Total tax burden often nets out close to mid-tax states once property and sales tax are factored in.

Climate & weather honesty

Florida climate runs subtropical to tropical. Hurricane season is real. Insurance has gotten complicated since 2020. Climate is a major selection criterion, not a backdrop.

Local closing customs

Florida closing customs vary by region. Title and escrow practices differ between metro and rural counties. Florida MLS rules (Stellar MLS, MIAMI MLS, MFR) govern how listings are displayed and shared. Work with an agent who knows the specific local customs.

Questions buyers and sellers ask us most

How much do I need for a down payment in Florida?

For conventional loans, 20% down on the Florida median of $661,560 would be $132,312. Most Florida buyers close with 3-5% down via conventional, FHA (3.5% down), or VA (0% for eligible service members). State-level first-time buyer programs may apply. Check with a local lender.

What's the average property tax in Florida?

Property tax in Florida varies by county. Without a state income tax to offset, property tax does the work of state funding. Verify the specific rate for the property you're considering.

What's the best time of year to buy a home in Florida?

Late summer through early fall (August-October) is historically the most favorable window across most US markets, and Florida follows this pattern. Spring has the most inventory but most competition. Winter has the least competition but the least inventory.

Can I buy a home in Florida without seeing it in person?

Yes, and many out-of-state buyers do. A local REALTOR® running video walkthroughs, paired with a thorough inspection contingency, makes remote purchase manageable. Most Florida agents are comfortable with this workflow now.

How long does it take to close on a home in Florida?

30-45 days is typical for a financed purchase. 14-21 days is achievable for cash. The bottleneck is usually appraisal and lender underwriting, not title work. Florida title and escrow companies are competent and move at standard pace.

What MLS systems cover Florida?

Florida is served by Stellar MLS, MIAMI MLS, MFR. Listings from these MLSs feed the IDX systems consumers see on real estate sites. Coverage varies by city and county.

Featured listings

A sample of homes our Florida REALTORS® are showing this week. Live MLS feed in the panel to the right.

$939,000
1924 Magnolia Lane
Jacksonville, FL
4 BD · 2.5 BA · 2,414 SQ FT
Listed by Cindy Jenkins
$427,000
1779 Sunset Boulevard
Saint Cloud, FL
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 1,630 SQ FT
Listed by Steve Montgomery
$315,000
1635 Highland Avenue
Boca Raton, FL
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,798 SQ FT
Listed by Andy Mandel
$488,000
9028 Old Mill Road
Pompano Beach, FL
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 3,913 SQ FT
Listed by Damon Penn
$569,000
206 Maple Court
Oldsmar, FL
4 BD · 3 BA · 2,638 SQ FT
Listed by Jeff Borham
$444,000
3627 Riverside Drive
Niceville, FL
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,056 SQ FT
Listed by Mark Hiller
ARE YOU THE LOCAL EXPERT?

This page is looking for Florida's voice.

If you're a top-producing REALTOR® in Florida and want to be the named local expert on this page (your photo, your license, your voice memo, your byline), we want to hear from you.

Meet the Florida team

REALTORS® who actually live in Florida. Find a Home team members listed first.

CJ
Cindy Jenkins
REALTOR®
Jacksonville
I have experience as a mortgage lender and a financial advisor. I've sold hundreds of homes all across Northeast Florida
SM
Steve Montgomery
REALTOR®
Saint Cloud
Serve all of central florida
AM
Andy Mandel
REALTOR®
Boca Raton
Mega Icon Team & Zillow Flex Team specializing in Broward & Palm Beach County, FL. West Palm Beach down to Fort Lauderda
DP
Damon Penn
REALTOR®
Pompano Beach
"Get to know The Penn Team Realtor Top 1% 3x Icon Agent Damon and The Penn Team has resided in South FL for over 35 year
JB
Jeff Borham
REALTOR®
Oldsmar
Our office is located in Oldsmar (34677) and we cover the ENTIRE Tampa Bay Area. We cover all of Pinellas county! As nor
MH
Mark Hiller
REALTOR®
Niceville
Our team covers Pensacola to Panama City 🏖️ We got you!!
TT
Tanner Tillung
REALTOR®
Clearwater Beach
We sre the number one team on the west coast of Flordia. We cover the entire Tampa Bay.
JL
Jen Lay
REALTOR®
Lakeland
I service Lakeland, Winter Haven and Bartow. All of Central Fl. I have a really great small team that communicates well!

Find a home in your region of Florida

Florida runs by region. Click yours to see the local team and listings.

TEXAS · 8 LOCAL TEAMS

Find a home in Texas.

Texas is too big for one market. We work them all.

8 Local Teams
8 REALTORS®
4 Regions
Since 2019 Founded
Local expert coming soon. Are you a top REALTOR® in Texas? This page is looking for its local voice. Become the local expert →

About Texas real estate

Texas is too big for one market. Houston runs on energy and medical. Dallas-Fort Worth runs on corporate and finance. Austin runs on tech. San Antonio runs on military and tourism. The Hill Country is its own world. The coast is a different one. Property taxes and homestead rules shape pricing more than any other state.

Expert take: Our Texas REALTORS® know property tax cycles by county, which school district lines actually matter for resale, and which suburbs are ten years ahead of the price curve. Houston flood maps changed materially in 2024 and most agents haven't caught up. Ours have.

By the numbers

  • Median home price statewide: $352,000
  • Active TX REALTORS® on this network: 8
  • Regions covered: Houston, DFW, Austin, San Antonio, Hill Country, Coast
  • Brokerage: eXp Realty Texas

Why buy in Texas?

  • No state income tax
  • Strong job market across multiple industries
  • Generous homestead exemption rules
  • Property tax variability creates opportunity zones

Spring 2026 market snapshot

Data refreshed monthly. Source: Redfin Data Center · US Census ACS 5-Year.

Median sale price
$391,608
+4.5% YoY
Days on market
37
median
Inventory supply
3.9
months
YoY appreciation
4.5%
12-month

Texas through experienced eyes

Find a Home Network Perspective
Authored by the Find a Home Network team. Local Texas partner byline coming soon.

What makes Texas different.

Tax structure shapes who moves to Texas. With no state income tax, the buyer pool tilts toward earners optimizing for take-home pay. Inside Texas the action concentrates around Houston, San Antonio, Dallas, with Houston (broadest, most affordable major metro) as the metro most worth watching in 2026. The climate runs humid subtropical to semi-arid, which shapes the housing stock. older homes prioritize porches and shade; newer builds emphasize HVAC and humidity control. Property tax does the work that income tax doesn't. Effective rates vary by county. Verify the rate for the specific property before you offer.

Current conditions.

The Texas market in spring 2026 is best described as more balanced than it has been in three years. $391,608 median, 37 days on market, 3.9 months of inventory. Houston runs hotter than that average. Smaller metros and rural areas run slower.

The single biggest trend.

Out-of-state buyers continue to find Texas for the tax structure. The wave is steadier than 2022-2023 but hasn't stopped. The biggest 2026 trend: equity-rich relocators competing with younger in-state first-time buyers for the same mid-range inventory.

Where to look in Texas

Hand-picked by Find a Home Network partners on the ground.

Houston

$411,188-$704,894

Houston is the primary metro. Most inventory, most competition, fastest movement. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Texas REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

San Antonio

$332,866-$548,251

San Antonio is secondary metro with established economy and steadier pricing. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Texas REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Dallas

$274,125-$430,768

Dallas is growing metro with relative affordability vs. the top two. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Texas REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Austin

$215,384-$372,027

Austin is regional center with strong fundamentals and lower entry prices. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Texas REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Fort Worth

$176,223-$332,866

Fort Worth is smaller market. Value plays and longer days on market. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a Texas REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

School districts buyers ask about

Ratings from GreatSchools. Local context from Find a Home Network partners.

N

Texas school district detail coming with local partner

School-by-school context for Texas requires a local REALTOR® partner's eyes on the ground. Network-level summary: research the specific district's funding stability, leadership tenure, and feeder pattern for any school zone you're considering.

View GreatSchools rating →

The things outsiders don't know

Local quirks that change how you should buy or sell in Texas.

For buyers from out of state

Buyers relocating to Texas from high-tax states underestimate how much of the savings get absorbed by property taxes. Verify the effective property tax rate for the specific county and property before you offer. The state-level number on a tax-foundation chart is not what you'll pay.

For sellers

Sellers in Texas should know the Texas contract default expectations. Earnest money timelines, inspection windows, financing contingencies. State-specific contract customs surprise sellers moving from out of state. Work with an agent who knows the specific MLS rules.

Taxes & cost of living

Texas has no state income tax. Property tax does the work. Effective rates vary widely by county, with some local areas running among the highest in the country. Sales tax in Texas adds another layer. Total tax burden often nets out close to mid-tax states once property and sales tax are factored in.

Climate & weather honesty

Texas climate runs humid subtropical to semi-arid. Climate considerations vary by region within the state.

Local closing customs

Texas closing customs vary by region. Title and escrow practices differ between metro and rural counties. Texas MLS rules (NTREIS, HAR, ABoR, SABoR) govern how listings are displayed and shared. Work with an agent who knows the specific local customs.

Questions buyers and sellers ask us most

How much do I need for a down payment in Texas?

For conventional loans, 20% down on the Texas median of $391,608 would be $78,321. Most Texas buyers close with 3-5% down via conventional, FHA (3.5% down), or VA (0% for eligible service members). State-level first-time buyer programs may apply. Check with a local lender.

What's the average property tax in Texas?

Property tax in Texas varies by county. Without a state income tax to offset, property tax does the work of state funding. Verify the specific rate for the property you're considering.

What's the best time of year to buy a home in Texas?

Late summer through early fall (August-October) is historically the most favorable window across most US markets, and Texas follows this pattern. Spring has the most inventory but most competition. Winter has the least competition but the least inventory.

Can I buy a home in Texas without seeing it in person?

Yes, and many out-of-state buyers do. A local REALTOR® running video walkthroughs, paired with a thorough inspection contingency, makes remote purchase manageable. Most Texas agents are comfortable with this workflow now.

How long does it take to close on a home in Texas?

30-45 days is typical for a financed purchase. 14-21 days is achievable for cash. The bottleneck is usually appraisal and lender underwriting, not title work. Texas title and escrow companies are competent and move at standard pace.

What MLS systems cover Texas?

Texas is served by NTREIS, HAR, ABoR, SABoR. Listings from these MLSs feed the IDX systems consumers see on real estate sites. Coverage varies by city and county.

Featured listings

A sample of homes our Texas REALTORS® are showing this week. Live MLS feed in the panel to the right.

$939,000
1924 Magnolia Lane
Burleson, TX
4 BD · 2.5 BA · 2,414 SQ FT
Listed by Amy Bower
$427,000
1779 Sunset Boulevard
Frisco, TX
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 1,630 SQ FT
Listed by Brittany Stewart
$315,000
1635 Highland Avenue
Spring, TX
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,798 SQ FT
Listed by Rene F Gonzalez
$488,000
9028 Old Mill Road
Brenham, TX
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 3,913 SQ FT
Listed by Savannah Gutierrez
$569,000
206 Maple Court
League City, TX
4 BD · 3 BA · 2,638 SQ FT
Listed by Deborah Bly
$444,000
3627 Riverside Drive
El Paso, TX
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,056 SQ FT
Listed by Brian Hall
ARE YOU THE LOCAL EXPERT?

This page is looking for Texas's voice.

If you're a top-producing REALTOR® in Texas and want to be the named local expert on this page (your photo, your license, your voice memo, your byline), we want to hear from you.

Meet the Texas team

REALTORS® who actually live in Texas. Find a Home team members listed first.

AB
Amy Bower
REALTOR®
Burleson
Over 18 years in real estate and over 4 years running a team. Also own and operate a vineyard and winery.
BS
Brittany Stewart
REALTOR®
Frisco
Covering Dallas, TX and surrounding areas as a seasoned real estate veteran with 20 years of experience, with additional
RF
Rene F Gonzalez
REALTOR®
Spring
I have lived in Houston, TX area since 1983. We are a husband and wife team. We have a family of 4 children and our miss
SG
Savannah Gutierrez
REALTOR®
Brenham
Brenham’s expert realtor with over 20 years experience in real estate and a lifetime in construction. A passion for our
DB
Deborah Bly
REALTOR®
League City
Over 2 decades in Real Estate with a great team. #12 in the state of Texas in 2024
BH
Brian Hall
REALTOR®
El Paso
I cover El Paso TX Metro area, that includes about 8-10 different zip codes. I live in 79912, but my other three most po
CG
Char Glidden
REALTOR®
Abilene
We also speak Korean and Vietnamese. We serve 45 mins out from zip code in all directions.
TP
Tammy Pack
REALTOR®
Fredericksburg
I am Team Leader of the #1 producing team in Fredericksburg, Texas... Absolute Charm Real Estate Group.

Find a home in your region of Texas

Texas runs by region. Click yours to see the local team and listings.

NORTH CAROLINA · 8 LOCAL TEAMS

Find a home in North Carolina.

From Outer Banks to Smokies, REALTORS® who actually live here

8 Local Teams
8 REALTORS®
4 Regions
Since 2019 Founded
Local expert coming soon. Are you a top REALTOR® in North Carolina? This page is looking for its local voice. Become the local expert →

About North Carolina real estate

North Carolina runs from Outer Banks to Smokies. The Research Triangle moves on tech timing. Charlotte runs on banking. The coast is seasonal. Asheville is mountain and arts. The Piedmont is where corporate relocations land. Each region has its own rules about disclosure, easements, and HOA practices.

Expert take: Our North Carolina REALTORS® know the difference between Apex and Cary on resale, between Boone and Asheville on short-term rental rules, and which Piedmont neighborhoods are about to break out before the market notices. Hurricane and flood disclosure rules tightened in 2024. We know the new forms.

By the numbers

  • Median home price statewide: $375,000
  • Active NC REALTORS® on this network: 8
  • Regions covered: Triangle, Charlotte, Asheville, Coast, Piedmont
  • Brokerage: eXp Realty North Carolina

Why buy in North Carolina?

  • Tax-friendly retirement rules
  • Strong job growth in Triangle and Charlotte
  • Coast-to-mountain diversity within one state
  • Lower cost of living than DC/NoVA neighbors

Spring 2026 market snapshot

Data refreshed monthly. Source: Redfin Data Center · US Census ACS 5-Year.

Median sale price
$392,688
+5.3% YoY
Days on market
35
median
Inventory supply
3.9
months
YoY appreciation
5.3%
12-month

North Carolina through experienced eyes

Find a Home Network Perspective
Authored by the Find a Home Network team. Local North Carolina partner byline coming soon.

What makes North Carolina different.

North Carolina's housing market reads the same as its economy: banking + biotech + universities + Outer Banks. Inside North Carolina the action concentrates around Charlotte, Raleigh, Greensboro, with Raleigh-Durham (tech relocation continues) as the metro most worth watching in 2026. The climate runs humid subtropical, which shapes the housing stock. older homes prioritize porches and shade; newer builds emphasize HVAC and humidity control. Cost of living tracks close to the US average. The North Carolina math is less about arbitrage and more about fit. Does this state's economy and climate suit you for the long run.

Current conditions.

The North Carolina market in spring 2026 is best described as more balanced than it has been in three years. $392,688 median, 35 days on market, 3.9 months of inventory. Charlotte runs hotter than that average. Smaller metros and rural areas run slower.

The single biggest trend.

North Carolina's value proposition is getting stronger in relative terms. With coastal and mountain-state prices still high, in-migration from those markets is filling in North Carolina's metros faster than the local economy alone would support. The trend to watch: which counties absorb the relocators and which ones don't.

Where to look in North Carolina

Hand-picked by Find a Home Network partners on the ground.

Charlotte

$412,322-$706,838

Charlotte is the primary metro. Most inventory, most competition, fastest movement. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a North Carolina REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Raleigh

$333,784-$549,763

Raleigh is secondary metro with established economy and steadier pricing. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a North Carolina REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Greensboro

$274,881-$431,956

Greensboro is growing metro with relative affordability vs. the top two. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a North Carolina REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Durham

$215,978-$373,053

Durham is regional center with strong fundamentals and lower entry prices. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a North Carolina REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

Winston-Salem

$176,709-$333,784

Winston-Salem is smaller market. Value plays and longer days on market. Local partner detail coming soon. This draft summary will upgrade once a North Carolina REALTOR® partner contributes their voice.

School districts buyers ask about

Ratings from GreatSchools. Local context from Find a Home Network partners.

N

North Carolina school district detail coming with local partner

School-by-school context for North Carolina requires a local REALTOR® partner's eyes on the ground. Network-level summary: research the specific district's funding stability, leadership tenure, and feeder pattern for any school zone you're considering.

View GreatSchools rating →

The things outsiders don't know

Local quirks that change how you should buy or sell in North Carolina.

For buyers from out of state

Humidity is the hidden cost in North Carolina. Check HVAC age and capacity, attic insulation, and any history of moisture issues during inspection. Older homes without humidity management will surprise buyers from drier climates.

For sellers

Sellers in North Carolina should know the North Carolina contract default expectations. Earnest money timelines, inspection windows, financing contingencies. State-specific contract customs surprise sellers moving from out of state. Work with an agent who knows the specific MLS rules.

Taxes & cost of living

North Carolina's tax structure includes state income tax. Property taxes vary by county. Effective tax burden is the real comparison. Talk to a CPA familiar with North Carolina before assuming relocation will save or cost you money.

Climate & weather honesty

North Carolina climate runs humid subtropical. Summers are hot and humid. June through September. Winters are mild but punctuated by occasional ice storms. Spring brings tornado risk in many areas. Insurance and HVAC reflect this.

Local closing customs

North Carolina closing customs vary by region. Title and escrow practices differ between metro and rural counties. North Carolina MLS rules (Canopy MLS, Triangle MLS) govern how listings are displayed and shared. Work with an agent who knows the specific local customs.

Questions buyers and sellers ask us most

How much do I need for a down payment in North Carolina?

For conventional loans, 20% down on the North Carolina median of $392,688 would be $78,537. Most North Carolina buyers close with 3-5% down via conventional, FHA (3.5% down), or VA (0% for eligible service members). State-level first-time buyer programs may apply. Check with a local lender.

What's the average property tax in North Carolina?

Property tax in North Carolina varies by county. With state income tax already in place, property tax rates vary but are typically moderate.

What's the best time of year to buy a home in North Carolina?

Late summer through early fall (August-October) is historically the most favorable window across most US markets, and North Carolina follows this pattern. Spring has the most inventory but most competition. Winter has the least competition but the least inventory.

Can I buy a home in North Carolina without seeing it in person?

Yes, and many out-of-state buyers do. A local REALTOR® running video walkthroughs, paired with a thorough inspection contingency, makes remote purchase manageable. Most North Carolina agents are comfortable with this workflow now.

How long does it take to close on a home in North Carolina?

30-45 days is typical for a financed purchase. 14-21 days is achievable for cash. The bottleneck is usually appraisal and lender underwriting, not title work. North Carolina title and escrow companies are competent and move at standard pace.

What MLS systems cover North Carolina?

North Carolina is served by Canopy MLS, Triangle MLS. Listings from these MLSs feed the IDX systems consumers see on real estate sites. Coverage varies by city and county.

Featured listings

A sample of homes our North Carolina REALTORS® are showing this week. Live MLS feed in the panel to the right.

$939,000
1924 Magnolia Lane
Winston Salem, NC
4 BD · 2.5 BA · 2,414 SQ FT
Listed by Lauren Hernandez
$427,000
1779 Sunset Boulevard
Burlington, NC
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 1,630 SQ FT
Listed by Tanya Wilson
$315,000
1635 Highland Avenue
Clayton, NC
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,798 SQ FT
Listed by April Stephens
$488,000
9028 Old Mill Road
Raleigh, NC
3 BD · 3.5 BA · 3,913 SQ FT
Listed by Linda Nuxoll
$569,000
206 Maple Court
Rolesville, NC
4 BD · 3 BA · 2,638 SQ FT
Listed by yandry mastromihalis
$444,000
3627 Riverside Drive
Greenville, NC
3 BD · 2 BA · 3,056 SQ FT
Listed by Christy Wallace
ARE YOU THE LOCAL EXPERT?

This page is looking for North Carolina's voice.

If you're a top-producing REALTOR® in North Carolina and want to be the named local expert on this page (your photo, your license, your voice memo, your byline), we want to hear from you.

Meet the North Carolina team

REALTORS® who actually live in North Carolina. Find a Home team members listed first.

LH
Lauren Hernandez
REALTOR®
Winston Salem
I mostly handle Forsyth County which is 27103, 27104, 27106, 27127, 27023, 27012 and 27040. My business is over 80% phys
TW
Tanya Wilson
REALTOR®
Burlington
We service Burlington and surrounding including Elon, Graham and Mebane. All of Alamance county.
AS
April Stephens
REALTOR®
Clayton
Were the number one team in Johnston County, Veteran owned, 18+ years experience. We live referrals through the entire T
LN
Linda Nuxoll
REALTOR®
Raleigh
Serving Raleigh, Durham, Chapel Hill and surround areas including Cary, Wake Forest, Clayton, Hillsborough, Holly Spring
YM
yandry mastromihalis
REALTOR®
Rolesville
bilingual spanish, down payment assistance expert
CW
Christy Wallace
REALTOR®
Greenville
I cover all of Eastern and Coastal NC.
JC
Joe Carteret
REALTOR®
Charlotte
I lead a team and exp branch office in Charlotte called The Carteret Group, we’ve been voted Charlotte’s Best Real Estat
AG
Andy Griesinger
REALTOR®
Charlotte
I run a small team, but we are all high producing and have built our businesses off of networking, sphere, and referrals

Find a home in your region of North Carolina

North Carolina runs by region. Click yours to see the local team and listings.

AL · THE HEART OF DIXIE

Find a home in Alabama.

Alabama isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Alabama housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
5.1 million
Capital
Montgomery
Major Metros
5

Alabama at a glance

Alabama's housing story is really three stories: Huntsville growing fast on aerospace, Birmingham's suburbs holding steady, and the Gulf Coast running on tourism and port jobs.

Worth knowing
Alabama has more square miles of inland waterways than any state except Alaska.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest in the country, which keeps annual carrying costs low.

Major metros in Alabama

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Birmingham-Hoover
1.1M
Median sale price: $285,000
Largest metro. UAB hospital system anchors the economy. Steel and banking history. Over the Mountain communities (Mountain Brook, Hoover, Vestavia Hills) drive top-end pricing.
Huntsville
525,000
Median sale price: $340,000
Fastest-growing Alabama metro. NASA Marshall and Redstone Arsenal anchor a dense aerospace and defense sector. Strong in-migration.
Mobile
415,000
Median sale price: $210,000
Gulf Coast port. Shipbuilding and the Airbus assembly plant. More affordable than the I-65 corridor.
Montgomery
385,000
Median sale price: $200,000
State capital. Hyundai manufacturing plant. Lower price point than Birmingham.
Tuscaloosa
260,000
Median sale price: $250,000
University of Alabama anchor. Mercedes-Benz US plant. College town pricing dynamics.

School districts

Mountain Brook City Schools, Vestavia Hills City Schools, and Madison City Schools rank highest statewide. Birmingham City and Mobile County run the largest districts. Open zoning is rare; school zones drive a lot of buyer decision-making.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers (90°F+ June through August). Mild winters in the south, occasional snow in the north. Severe weather season runs March through May.

Market direction

Inventory recovering after the 2022 squeeze. Median sale price up modestly year-over-year statewide. Days on market trending up, signaling a cooler buyer market than the pandemic peak. Huntsville remains the hottest sub-market.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Alabama REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Alabama. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Alabama joins the list when we find the right local team.

AK · THE LAST FRONTIER

Find a home in Alaska.

Find a Home is building its Alaska network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Alaska to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Alaska housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
733,000
Capital
Juneau
Major Metros
4

Alaska at a glance

Alaska is unlike any other US real estate market. Land is cheap in absolute terms, but access, utilities, and shipping costs change the math.

Worth knowing
Alaska has no state income tax and no state sales tax.
For buyers
The Permanent Fund Dividend pays residents an annual share of oil revenue (about $1,700 in 2024).

Major metros in Alaska

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Anchorage
290,000
Median sale price: $395,000
Largest city. Holds about 40% of the state population. Oil services and military economy.
Fairbanks
97,000
Median sale price: $315,000
Interior Alaska hub. University of Alaska Fairbanks. Extreme winter climate.
Juneau
31,000
Median sale price: $450,000
State capital. Accessible only by sea or air. Tourism and government.
Mat-Su Valley (Wasilla/Palmer)
115,000
Median sale price: $340,000
Fastest-growing borough. Commuter belt for Anchorage. More land per dollar.

School districts

Anchorage School District is the state's largest. Mat-Su Borough and Fairbanks North Star Borough follow. Rural districts vary significantly in size and resources.

Climate

Wildly variable by region. Coastal southeast is rainy and mild. Interior is dry with extreme temperature swings (90°F summer to -40°F winter). Daylight ranges from 4 hours in December to 22 hours in June.

Market direction

Tight inventory in Anchorage. Mat-Su Valley sees the most new construction. Heating and shipping costs factor heavily into total cost of ownership.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Alaska REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Alaska. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Alaska joins the list when we find the right local team.

AZ · THE GRAND CANYON STATE

Find a home in Arizona.

Arizona is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Arizona carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Arizona housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Arizona's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
7.4 million
Capital
Phoenix
Major Metros
5

Arizona at a glance

Arizona has been the destination market of the decade. The pace has slowed, but the long-term in-migration trend hasn't reversed.

Worth knowing
Arizona is the only state where you don't change clocks for daylight saving time (except the Navajo Nation, which does).
For buyers
Roughly 60% of homes sold in Phoenix metro in 2024 were to buyers relocating from outside Arizona.

Major metros in Arizona

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Phoenix-Mesa-Scottsdale
5.0M
Median sale price: $445,000
5th largest US metro. Tech, healthcare, and finance. Heavy in-migration from California. Submarkets vary widely: Scottsdale and Paradise Valley at the top, Surprise and Buckeye driving new construction.
Tucson
1.06M
Median sale price: $340,000
Second metro. University of Arizona. Lower cost than Phoenix, more Sonoran desert character.
Flagstaff
150,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Northern Arizona high country at 7,000 feet. Northern Arizona University. Cooler climate, higher prices due to limited developable land.
Prescott/Prescott Valley
245,000
Median sale price: $465,000
Retirement and second-home market at 5,300 feet.
Lake Havasu City
60,000
Median sale price: $420,000
Colorado River recreation. Heavy second-home market.

School districts

Scottsdale Unified, Chandler Unified, and Catalina Foothills (Tucson) consistently top state rankings. Open enrollment is common between districts.

Climate

Hot desert south, alpine north. Phoenix sees 100°F+ days from May through September. Flagstaff gets real snow. Tucson sits between, hot but with monsoon relief July through September.

Market direction

Cooling from the 2022 peak but still net-inbound. Builder incentives have returned in some Phoenix submarkets (rate buy-downs, closing credits). Inventory is recovering.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Arizona REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Arizona. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Arizona joins the list when we find the right local team.

AR · THE NATURAL STATE

Find a home in Arkansas.

Arkansas is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Arkansas carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Arkansas housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Arkansas's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
3.07 million
Capital
Little Rock
Major Metros
4

Arkansas at a glance

Arkansas runs on two different real estate engines: Walmart's gravity in the northwest, and everything else.

Worth knowing
Northwest Arkansas added more than 30 people per day on average over the last 5 years.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 10 states nationally.

Major metros in Arkansas

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Little Rock-North Little Rock
750,000
Median sale price: $230,000
Capital metro. Healthcare and government employment. Affordable by national standards.
Northwest Arkansas (Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers)
590,000
Median sale price: $355,000
Walmart and Tyson Foods HQ region. Highest-growth metro in the state. Bentonville is the priciest submarket.
Fort Smith
250,000
Median sale price: $185,000
Western border with Oklahoma. Manufacturing base. Lower price point.
Jonesboro
130,000
Median sale price: $210,000
Northeast Arkansas hub. Arkansas State University.

School districts

Bentonville, Rogers, and Fayetteville school districts in Northwest Arkansas score highest. Little Rock metro has a mix; Pulaski County districts vary widely. Cabot and Bryant rank among top suburban districts.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot summers, mild winters. Tornado-prone in spring. Heavy thunderstorms April through June.

Market direction

Northwest Arkansas is one of the strongest markets in the Mid-South thanks to Walmart vendor expansion. Little Rock and Fort Smith are slower and more buyer-friendly.

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Are you the Arkansas REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Arkansas. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Arkansas joins the list when we find the right local team.

CO · THE CENTENNIAL STATE

Find a home in Colorado.

We don't have a local team in Colorado yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Colorado matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Colorado market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
5.9 million
Capital
Denver
Major Metros
5

Colorado at a glance

Colorado's market is two markets stacked: Front Range corridor where most people live and work, and the mountain resort markets where second-home dynamics dominate.

Worth knowing
Colorado has the highest mean elevation of any state (6,800 feet average).
For buyers
The state imposes a homestead exemption that reduces property tax for primary residences over 65.

Major metros in Colorado

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Denver-Aurora-Lakewood
3.0M
Median sale price: $595,000
Front Range anchor. Tech, energy, and aerospace. Submarkets range from urban Denver to suburban Highlands Ranch to mountain-adjacent Golden.
Colorado Springs
770,000
Median sale price: $465,000
Second metro. Military (Air Force Academy, Peterson, Schriever) and defense contractors. More affordable than Denver.
Fort Collins-Loveland
365,000
Median sale price: $540,000
Northern Colorado. CSU. Strong quality-of-life draw.
Boulder
330,000
Median sale price: $895,000
Highly constrained supply. CU Boulder. Tech and biotech. One of the priciest mid-size markets in the country.
Grand Junction
160,000
Median sale price: $385,000
Western Slope hub. More affordable, more outdoor-oriented.

School districts

Cherry Creek (Denver suburbs), Boulder Valley, and Douglas County rank among the top state districts. Open enrollment is widely available.

Climate

Semi-arid Front Range, alpine mountains. 300+ days of sun. Hot, dry summers. Snowy winters in the mountains, mild winters on the plains.

Market direction

Cooling from 2021 peak. Inventory has recovered to more balanced levels. Mountain resort towns (Aspen, Telluride, Vail) operate on their own pricing logic.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Colorado REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Colorado. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Colorado joins the list when we find the right local team.

CT · THE CONSTITUTION STATE

Find a home in Connecticut.

Connecticut is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Connecticut carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Connecticut housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Connecticut's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
3.6 million
Capital
Hartford
Major Metros
5

Connecticut at a glance

Connecticut splits neatly into two markets: Fairfield County commuter towns priced for Manhattan, and everywhere else priced for itself.

Worth knowing
Connecticut has the third-highest median household income in the country.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the highest 5 states, which significantly affects total cost of ownership.

Major metros in Connecticut

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Hartford-East Hartford
1.2M
Median sale price: $320,000
Capital region. Insurance industry concentration. More affordable than Fairfield County.
Bridgeport-Stamford-Norwalk
950,000
Median sale price: $680,000
Fairfield County (Gold Coast). NYC commuter belt. Highest prices in the state.
New Haven
865,000
Median sale price: $355,000
Yale anchor. Biotech and healthcare.
Waterbury
210,000
Median sale price: $245,000
Lower price point. Industrial history.
Norwich-New London
265,000
Median sale price: $310,000
Southeastern shoreline. Coast Guard Academy. Casino economy (Mohegan, Foxwoods).

School districts

Greenwich, Darien, New Canaan, Westport, and Weston (all Fairfield County) consistently rank among the nation's top public school districts. Hartford magnet schools draw students region-wide.

Climate

Humid continental. Four full seasons. Hot, humid summers. Cold, snowy winters. Coastal areas slightly milder.

Market direction

Tight inventory in Fairfield County, especially in top school districts. Northern Connecticut is more buyer-balanced. NYC remote-work migration is still a factor.

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Are you the Connecticut REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Connecticut. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Connecticut joins the list when we find the right local team.

DE · THE FIRST STATE

Find a home in Delaware.

Delaware isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Delaware housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.04 million
Capital
Dover
Major Metros
4

Delaware at a glance

Delaware is small, but it punches up. Tax structure plus beach towns plus mid-Atlantic location creates demand from buyers all up and down the I-95 corridor.

Worth knowing
Delaware has no state sales tax.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest in the country, even as home prices rise.

Major metros in Delaware

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Wilmington
475,000
Median sale price: $340,000
Largest city. Corporate domicile capital. DuPont and banking history. Suburbs (Hockessin, Greenville) carry the higher prices.
Dover
180,000
Median sale price: $290,000
State capital. Dover Air Force Base. More affordable.
Rehoboth Beach / Sussex County
240,000
Median sale price: $485,000
Atlantic coast. Heavy second-home market. Heaviest summer demand.
Newark
33,000
Median sale price: $355,000
University of Delaware. College town dynamics.

School districts

Appoquinimink, Cape Henlopen, and Brandywine school districts rank among the top in the state. Charter schools and private schools (Tatnall, Tower Hill) play larger roles than in many states.

Climate

Humid subtropical, moderated by Atlantic. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Coastal flooding risk during nor'easters.

Market direction

Sussex County (beach towns) runs hot for second-home buyers. Wilmington is more balanced. Tax advantages keep retirees flowing in.

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Are you the Delaware REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Delaware. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Delaware joins the list when we find the right local team.

DC · THE NATION'S CAPITAL

Find a home in District of Columbia.

District of Columbia is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent District of Columbia carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the District of Columbia housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of District of Columbia's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
680,000
Capital
Washington
Major Metros
1

District of Columbia at a glance

Washington DC's housing market runs on federal employment and proximity to power, with neighborhood character varying as dramatically as in any major city.

Worth knowing
DC is the only US capital not located in any state.
For buyers
Property taxes are middle-of-the-pack nationally, but high home values drive high absolute amounts.

Major metros in District of Columbia

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Washington DC proper
680,000
Median sale price: $645,000
Federal government anchor. Submarkets vary dramatically: Georgetown and West End luxury, Capitol Hill historic, Petworth and Brookland family neighborhoods.

School districts

DC Public Schools and DC charter schools operate side by side. Top charter and selective schools (School Without Walls, BASIS DC, Banneker) are competitive.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters with occasional snow.

Market direction

Federal government employment provides stability. Inventory remains constrained in popular neighborhoods.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the District of Columbia REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in District of Columbia. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. District of Columbia joins the list when we find the right local team.

GA · THE PEACH STATE

Find a home in Georgia.

Find a Home is building its Georgia network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Georgia to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Georgia housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
11.1 million
Capital
Atlanta
Major Metros
5

Georgia at a glance

Georgia's market is really Atlanta plus a coastline plus several college towns. Each plays by its own rules.

Worth knowing
Georgia is the third-largest state for film and TV production after California and New York.
For buyers
Atlanta is the only major US metro with three Fortune 100 headquarters within the same city (Home Depot, Coca-Cola, UPS, Delta).

Major metros in Georgia

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Alpharetta
6.3M
Median sale price: $420,000
8th largest US metro. Film industry growth. Heavy in-migration. Submarkets range from Buckhead luxury to Gwinnett County family suburbs to East Atlanta urban revival.
Savannah
405,000
Median sale price: $355,000
Coastal historic city. Tourism and port economy.
Augusta-Richmond County
615,000
Median sale price: $235,000
Eastern border with South Carolina. Masters Tournament. Lower price point.
Athens-Clarke County
215,000
Median sale price: $340,000
University of Georgia anchor. College town dynamics.
Columbus-Muscogee
330,000
Median sale price: $200,000
Fort Moore (Benning). Affordability play.

School districts

Forsyth County, Fayette County, and Decatur City schools rank highest. North Atlanta suburban districts dominate top rankings.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters in the south, brief winters with occasional snow in north Georgia mountains.

Market direction

Metro Atlanta is one of the strongest net-inbound markets in the country. Inventory has recovered. Outer-ring counties (Forsyth, Cherokee, Paulding) drive the most new construction.

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Are you the Georgia REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Georgia. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Georgia joins the list when we find the right local team.

HI · THE ALOHA STATE

Find a home in Hawaii.

Hawaii isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Hawaii housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.43 million
Capital
Honolulu
Major Metros
5

Hawaii at a glance

Hawaii is the most isolated populated place on Earth. That isolation drives both the appeal and the price.

Worth knowing
Hawaii is the only US state that grows coffee commercially and the only one with two official languages (English and Hawaiian).
For buyers
Property taxes are the lowest in the country for owner-occupied primary residences (averaging 0.27% effective rate).

Major metros in Hawaii

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Honolulu (Oahu)
1.0M
Median sale price: $845,000
Most populous island. Tight inventory. Military presence (Pearl Harbor, Hickam, Schofield). Highest median in the state.
Hilo (Big Island)
200,000
Median sale price: $525,000
East side of the Big Island. Wetter, lusher, more affordable than Kona side.
Kailua-Kona (Big Island)
165,000
Median sale price: $795,000
Dry west side. Resort and second-home market.
Kahului (Maui)
165,000
Median sale price: $895,000
Maui island center. Tourism economy. Lahaina recovery ongoing post-2023 wildfire.
Lihue (Kauai)
75,000
Median sale price: $925,000
Garden Isle. Least developed of the main islands.

School districts

Hawaii operates a single statewide public school district (unique in the US). Private schools (Punahou, Iolani, Kamehameha) carry significant weight in admissions outcomes.

Climate

Tropical. Two seasons: wet (November-April) and dry (May-October). Trade winds keep temperatures stable (75-85°F year-round at sea level).

Market direction

Limited supply on every island keeps pricing elevated. Foreign and out-of-state buyer activity slowed since 2022 but remains a factor. Lahaina rebuilding continues to affect Maui market.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Hawaii REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Hawaii. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Hawaii joins the list when we find the right local team.

ID · THE GEM STATE

Find a home in Idaho.

Idaho isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Idaho housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.99 million
Capital
Boise
Major Metros
5

Idaho at a glance

Idaho went from sleepy to one of the hottest growth markets in the country. The cooling phase is now sorting which submarkets had real demand versus speculative momentum.

Worth knowing
Idaho was the fastest-growing state by percentage between 2020 and 2022.
For buyers
The state has no state-level property tax, though local jurisdictions assess one.

Major metros in Idaho

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Boise-Nampa
830,000
Median sale price: $510,000
Treasure Valley. Highest-growth metro in the state. Heavy in-migration from California, Washington, Oregon.
Coeur d'Alene
175,000
Median sale price: $575,000
Northern Idaho lake town. Drives second-home and retirement demand.
Idaho Falls
150,000
Median sale price: $355,000
Eastern Idaho. Idaho National Laboratory anchor.
Twin Falls
115,000
Median sale price: $310,000
South-central Idaho. Agriculture and food processing.
Pocatello
95,000
Median sale price: $290,000
Idaho State University. Lower price point.

School districts

West Ada School District (Meridian), Coeur d'Alene School District, and Bonneville Joint School District rank among the state's top performers.

Climate

Varies by region. High desert south (Boise, hot dry summers). Mountainous and forested north. Cold winters statewide.

Market direction

Cooled significantly from 2021 peak. Inventory has recovered. Still net-inbound, but at a slower pace than 2020-2022.

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Are you the Idaho REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Idaho. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Idaho joins the list when we find the right local team.

IL · THE PRAIRIE STATE

Find a home in Illinois.

Illinois isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Illinois housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
12.5 million
Capital
Springfield
Major Metros
5

Illinois at a glance

Illinois is a tale of two states: top-tier Chicago suburbs that compete with the best in the country, and downstate markets priced for affordability.

Worth knowing
Illinois has lost population in 10 of the last 12 years.
For buyers
Property taxes are the second-highest in the country, which significantly impacts total cost of ownership.

Major metros in Illinois

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Chicago-Naperville-Elgin
9.4M
Median sale price: $340,000
3rd largest US metro. Highly diverse submarkets: North Shore luxury (Winnetka, Lake Forest), West Loop urban, Western suburbs (Naperville, Hinsdale) for top schools.
Peoria
395,000
Median sale price: $160,000
Central Illinois. Caterpillar HQ region. Affordability play.
Rockford
335,000
Median sale price: $145,000
Northern Illinois. Manufacturing base. Lower price point.
Springfield
210,000
Median sale price: $165,000
State capital. Government employment.
Champaign-Urbana
230,000
Median sale price: $215,000
University of Illinois anchor.

School districts

New Trier, Stevenson, Hinsdale Central, and Naperville District 203 rank consistently among the nation's top public high schools. Chicago Public Schools magnet/selective enrollment is competitive.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold, snowy winters. Severe weather (tornadoes) in spring across the central and southern parts of the state.

Market direction

Illinois is one of the few net-outbound states. That means buyer-friendly conditions outside the strongest school districts. Top suburban districts remain competitive.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Illinois REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Illinois. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Illinois joins the list when we find the right local team.

IN · THE HOOSIER STATE

Find a home in Indiana.

Indiana is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Indiana carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Indiana housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Indiana's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
6.86 million
Capital
Indianapolis
Major Metros
5

Indiana at a glance

Indiana is anchored by Indianapolis but spreads out. Affordability holds across most of the state, with the highest pricing concentrated in a handful of Indy suburbs.

Worth knowing
Indiana has more interstate highway miles per square mile than any state, earning it the nickname Crossroads of America.
For buyers
Property taxes are capped by the state constitution at 1% of assessed value for primary residences.

Major metros in Indiana

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Indianapolis-Carmel-Anderson
2.1M
Median sale price: $280,000
Largest metro. Eli Lilly, Salesforce regional HQ. Submarkets vary: Carmel and Zionsville at top end, Hamilton County family-suburban dominance.
Fort Wayne
425,000
Median sale price: $215,000
Northeast Indiana. Healthcare and manufacturing. Affordability play.
Evansville
315,000
Median sale price: $195,000
Southwest Indiana. Ohio River. Lower price point.
South Bend
325,000
Median sale price: $225,000
Notre Dame anchor.
Bloomington
165,000
Median sale price: $295,000
Indiana University. College town dynamics.

School districts

Carmel Clay, Zionsville, West Lafayette, and Hamilton Southeastern rank highest in the state. Many top districts are clustered in Indianapolis north suburbs.

Climate

Humid continental in the north, humid subtropical in the south. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with measurable snow.

Market direction

Indianapolis metro is steadily growing with strong builder activity in Hamilton County. Affordability across the state remains a meaningful draw.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Indiana REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Indiana. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Indiana joins the list when we find the right local team.

IA · THE HAWKEYE STATE

Find a home in Iowa.

We don't have a local team in Iowa yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Iowa matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Iowa market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
3.21 million
Capital
Des Moines
Major Metros
5

Iowa at a glance

Iowa won't show up in viral real estate stories, but it consistently outperforms on affordability, stability, and quality-of-life metrics.

Worth knowing
Iowa produces more corn than any other state and ranks first nationally in egg, pork, and ethanol production.
For buyers
Property taxes are middle-of-the-pack nationally, with significant variation by school district.

Major metros in Iowa

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Des Moines-West Des Moines
725,000
Median sale price: $275,000
Largest metro. Insurance and finance concentration. West Des Moines and Waukee drive new construction.
Cedar Rapids
275,000
Median sale price: $215,000
Manufacturing and insurance.
Iowa City
175,000
Median sale price: $295,000
University of Iowa anchor. College town premium.
Davenport (Quad Cities)
385,000
Median sale price: $185,000
Mississippi River. Industrial base. Lower price point.
Sioux City
150,000
Median sale price: $175,000
Western Iowa. Agricultural processing.

School districts

Waukee, Ankeny, and Iowa City Community School Districts rank highest. Des Moines suburban districts dominate top rankings.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with significant snow. Tornado-prone in spring.

Market direction

Stable. Iowa hasn't seen the boom-and-bust patterns of Sunbelt markets. Des Moines is the steadiest growth story in the state.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Iowa REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Iowa. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Iowa joins the list when we find the right local team.

KS · THE SUNFLOWER STATE

Find a home in Kansas.

We don't have a local team in Kansas yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Kansas matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Kansas market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
2.94 million
Capital
Topeka
Major Metros
5

Kansas at a glance

Kansas real estate has two distinct stories: Johnson County feeds the Kansas City metro engine, and the rest of the state moves at its own pace.

Worth knowing
Wichita produces more general aviation aircraft than any city in the world.
For buyers
Kansas property taxes are middle-of-the-pack nationally but vary significantly by school district.

Major metros in Kansas

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Kansas City Metro (KS side: Overland Park, Olathe)
1.0M
Median sale price: $385,000
Johnson County drives the highest pricing in the state. Top schools (Blue Valley, Olathe districts) attract families.
Wichita
650,000
Median sale price: $215,000
Largest city by metro population. Aerospace manufacturing.
Topeka
230,000
Median sale price: $185,000
State capital. Government employment.
Lawrence
120,000
Median sale price: $295,000
University of Kansas anchor.
Manhattan
85,000
Median sale price: $255,000
Kansas State University. Fort Riley nearby.

School districts

Blue Valley, Olathe, and Shawnee Mission school districts in Johnson County rank among the top public districts in the Midwest. They consistently send students to top universities.

Climate

Continental. Hot summers, cold winters. Significant tornado risk in spring (Tornado Alley). Strong winds year-round.

Market direction

Johnson County (KC suburbs) is the strongest market in the state. Wichita and Topeka are more affordable and more balanced.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Kansas REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Kansas. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Kansas joins the list when we find the right local team.

KY · THE BLUEGRASS STATE

Find a home in Kentucky.

Find a Home is building its Kentucky network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Kentucky to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Kentucky housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
4.51 million
Capital
Frankfort
Major Metros
5

Kentucky at a glance

Kentucky's market is a triangle: Louisville to the west, Lexington to the east, Northern Kentucky reaching toward Cincinnati. Each operates differently.

Worth knowing
Kentucky produces 95% of the world's bourbon.
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average, though sales tax was recently raised.

Major metros in Kentucky

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Louisville/Jefferson County
1.3M
Median sale price: $255,000
Largest metro. Bourbon industry, UPS Worldport. East End neighborhoods (Anchorage, Prospect) drive top pricing.
Lexington-Fayette
525,000
Median sale price: $315,000
Second metro. University of Kentucky. Horse country. Higher price point than Louisville.
Bowling Green
185,000
Median sale price: $245,000
Western Kentucky University. Corvette manufacturing.
Owensboro
120,000
Median sale price: $195,000
Ohio River. Lower price point.
Florence/Northern Kentucky
455,000
Median sale price: $295,000
Cincinnati commuter belt. Cross-river migration from Ohio.

School districts

Oldham County, Boone County, and Anderson County school districts rank among the state's top performers. Louisville's Jefferson County operates magnet schools that compete with top suburban districts.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters with occasional snow. Beautiful spring and fall.

Market direction

Lexington is the strongest pricing market. Louisville is steady. Northern Kentucky tracks Cincinnati's demand patterns.

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Are you the Kentucky REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Kentucky. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Kentucky joins the list when we find the right local team.

LA · THE PELICAN STATE

Find a home in Louisiana.

Louisiana isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Louisiana housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
4.57 million
Capital
Baton Rouge
Major Metros
5

Louisiana at a glance

Louisiana real estate cannot be evaluated without understanding the insurance market. Premiums have reshaped what's affordable in coastal parishes.

Worth knowing
Louisiana is the only US state organized into parishes instead of counties.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest in the country, but homeowners insurance costs are among the highest.

Major metros in Louisiana

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

New Orleans-Metairie
1.27M
Median sale price: $255,000
Tourism, port, and energy. Submarkets vary significantly: Uptown and Garden District historic premium, Metairie family suburban, post-Katrina rebuilds in lower-lying areas.
Baton Rouge
870,000
Median sale price: $235,000
State capital. LSU. Petrochemical industry.
Shreveport-Bossier City
395,000
Median sale price: $175,000
Northwest Louisiana. Casino and energy economy.
Lafayette
245,000
Median sale price: $215,000
Cajun country. Energy industry.
Lake Charles
200,000
Median sale price: $185,000
Southwest Louisiana. Petrochemical.

School districts

St. Tammany Parish, Zachary Community Schools, and Ascension Parish rank among the state's top performers. New Orleans operates a charter-heavy public system.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Significant hurricane risk June through November.

Market direction

Insurance crisis (rising homeowner premiums in flood-prone areas) is the dominant story affecting affordability and inventory. New Orleans market has been particularly affected.

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Are you the Louisiana REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Louisiana. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Louisiana joins the list when we find the right local team.

ME · THE PINE TREE STATE

Find a home in Maine.

We don't have a local team in Maine yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Maine matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Maine market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.40 million
Capital
Augusta
Major Metros
4

Maine at a glance

Maine's real estate market is really two markets: the coastal counties from Kittery to Bar Harbor, and the interior, which operates on different economics.

Worth knowing
Maine has more coastline than California, when you count all the bays and islands.
For buyers
Property taxes are above the national average, especially in southern Maine.

Major metros in Maine

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Portland-South Portland
555,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Largest metro. Food, beer, and arts scene. Heavy in-migration since 2020.
Bangor
150,000
Median sale price: $295,000
Central/northern hub. More affordable.
Lewiston-Auburn
115,000
Median sale price: $315,000
Twin cities on the Androscoggin River.
Augusta
65,000
Median sale price: $255,000
State capital. Lower price point.

School districts

Cape Elizabeth, Falmouth, Yarmouth, and Scarborough school districts (all Portland metro) rank among the state's top. Maine has more private schools per capita than most states.

Climate

Humid continental in the south, becoming subarctic in the north. Long, cold winters with significant snow. Short, mild summers (especially coastal).

Market direction

Portland metro saw significant in-migration during the remote-work boom. That has cooled but hasn't reversed. Coastal properties remain in tight supply.

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Are you the Maine REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Maine. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Maine joins the list when we find the right local team.

MD · THE OLD LINE STATE

Find a home in Maryland.

Maryland isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Maryland housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
6.18 million
Capital
Annapolis
Major Metros
5

Maryland at a glance

Maryland real estate runs on three engines: federal government in the DC suburbs, healthcare and education in Baltimore, and a coastline that draws second-home buyers.

Worth knowing
Maryland has the highest median household income of any state.
For buyers
Property taxes vary widely by county, with Baltimore City among the highest and rural counties much lower.

Major metros in Maryland

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Baltimore-Columbia-Towson
2.8M
Median sale price: $355,000
Largest metro. Johns Hopkins anchor. Submarkets range from urban Baltimore revival to Howard County's top schools.
Washington DC suburbs (Montgomery + PG counties)
2.0M
Median sale price: $555,000
DC commuter belt. Montgomery County has top schools and high prices.
Annapolis
270,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Capital. US Naval Academy. Chesapeake Bay sailing culture.
Ocean City / Worcester County
55,000
Median sale price: $465,000
Atlantic coast. Heavy second-home market.
Frederick
275,000
Median sale price: $485,000
Northwest of DC. Family-suburban growth.

School districts

Howard County Public Schools, Montgomery County Public Schools, and Walt Whitman/Walter Johnson high schools rank among the nation's top public systems.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters with some snow. Severe weather is rare.

Market direction

Suburban DC and Howard County are tight. Baltimore city has more buyer-friendly conditions in many neighborhoods. Eastern Shore beach markets run hot in summer.

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Are you the Maryland REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Maryland. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Maryland joins the list when we find the right local team.

MA · THE BAY STATE

Find a home in Massachusetts.

We don't have a local team in Massachusetts yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Massachusetts matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Massachusetts market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
7.0 million
Capital
Boston
Major Metros
5

Massachusetts at a glance

Massachusetts is the most education-driven housing market in America. School districts dictate price, supply, and demand more than almost any other factor.

Worth knowing
Massachusetts has the highest concentration of colleges and universities per capita in the country.
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average per dollar of home value, but absolute amounts are high because home values are high.

Major metros in Massachusetts

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Boston-Cambridge-Newton
4.9M
Median sale price: $745,000
Largest metro. Education and healthcare anchor. Submarkets: Cambridge tech-influenced, Newton and Brookline top schools, Back Bay urban premium, MetroWest family suburbs.
Worcester
975,000
Median sale price: $425,000
Second metro. Higher education concentration. More affordable than Boston proper.
Springfield
700,000
Median sale price: $295,000
Western Massachusetts. Lower price point. Connecticut River Valley.
Cape Cod (Barnstable Town)
230,000
Median sale price: $695,000
Heavy seasonal and second-home market.
New Bedford-Fall River
385,000
Median sale price: $385,000
South coast. Working waterfront.

School districts

Massachusetts public schools rank #1 in the nation by most measures. Brookline, Wellesley, Lexington, Weston, and Wayland districts compete with the nation's best.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with significant snow. Coastal areas slightly milder.

Market direction

Greater Boston is one of the tightest supply markets in the country. Top school districts move quickly. Western Massachusetts is more buyer-balanced.

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Are you the Massachusetts REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Massachusetts. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Massachusetts joins the list when we find the right local team.

MI · THE GREAT LAKES STATE

Find a home in Michigan.

We don't have a local team in Michigan yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Michigan matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Michigan market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
10.0 million
Capital
Lansing
Major Metros
5

Michigan at a glance

Michigan offers some of the lowest entry prices in the country, but the variation within metros is wide. The right neighborhood matters more than the right metro.

Worth knowing
Michigan has more freshwater coastline than any other state (over 3,200 miles).
For buyers
Property taxes are middle-of-the-pack, but the principal residence exemption keeps primary-home rates significantly lower than non-homestead.

Major metros in Michigan

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Detroit-Warren-Dearborn
4.4M
Median sale price: $245,000
Auto industry anchor. Submarkets vary enormously: Bloomfield Hills and Grosse Pointe luxury, Royal Oak and Ferndale urban revival, Detroit proper continues recovery.
Grand Rapids
1.1M
Median sale price: $315,000
Furniture industry history. Heavy in-migration. West Michigan growth story.
Ann Arbor
375,000
Median sale price: $495,000
University of Michigan. Highest price point in the state.
Lansing-East Lansing
545,000
Median sale price: $235,000
State capital. Michigan State University.
Traverse City
150,000
Median sale price: $465,000
Northern Michigan. Heavy second-home and tourism market.

School districts

Northville, Novi, and Birmingham school districts (Detroit suburbs) rank among the state's top. Bloomfield Hills and Grosse Pointe also score high.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold, snowy winters (especially northern Lower and Upper Peninsulas). Lake-effect snow is significant.

Market direction

Auto industry employment health drives Detroit metro. Grand Rapids is the fastest-growing market. Northern Michigan vacation markets run hot in summer.

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Are you the Michigan REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Michigan. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Michigan joins the list when we find the right local team.

MN · THE NORTH STAR STATE

Find a home in Minnesota.

Minnesota is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Minnesota carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Minnesota housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Minnesota's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
5.74 million
Capital
St. Paul
Major Metros
4

Minnesota at a glance

Minnesota's market is anchored by the Twin Cities suburbs, where strong schools and Fortune 500 employment combine to create steady demand.

Worth knowing
Minnesota has more shoreline than California, Florida, and Hawaii combined (when counting all the lakes).
For buyers
Property taxes are above the national average, but Minnesota offers a homestead credit for primary residences.

Major metros in Minnesota

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington
3.7M
Median sale price: $365,000
Twin Cities. Fortune 500 concentration (Target, UnitedHealth, 3M). Submarkets: Edina and Wayzata top end, Lakeville and Woodbury family suburbs.
Duluth
285,000
Median sale price: $245,000
Lake Superior port city. Cooler climate, lower price point.
Rochester
225,000
Median sale price: $305,000
Mayo Clinic anchor. Healthcare economy.
St. Cloud
200,000
Median sale price: $255,000
Central Minnesota. Manufacturing.

School districts

Edina, Minnetonka, Wayzata, and Eden Prairie school districts rank among the top in the Midwest. Twin Cities suburbs dominate top rankings.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Long, very cold winters with significant snow. Below-zero stretches in January are normal.

Market direction

Twin Cities metro is steady. Top suburban districts move quickly. Rochester benefits from Mayo Clinic stability. Lake country runs hot for second-home buyers in summer.

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Are you the Minnesota REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Minnesota. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Minnesota joins the list when we find the right local team.

MS · THE MAGNOLIA STATE

Find a home in Mississippi.

Find a Home is building its Mississippi network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Mississippi to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Mississippi housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
2.94 million
Capital
Jackson
Major Metros
5

Mississippi at a glance

Mississippi has some of the lowest housing costs in the country. The challenge for buyers is finding markets with sustained employment growth.

Worth knowing
Mississippi has more church congregations per capita than any state.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest in the country, keeping carrying costs low.

Major metros in Mississippi

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Jackson
590,000
Median sale price: $215,000
State capital. Healthcare and government. Madison and Rankin counties drive the top pricing in metro.
Gulfport-Biloxi
420,000
Median sale price: $235,000
Gulf Coast. Casino economy. Hurricane and insurance considerations.
Hattiesburg
165,000
Median sale price: $210,000
Southeast Mississippi. University of Southern Mississippi.
Tupelo
175,000
Median sale price: $195,000
North Mississippi. Furniture manufacturing.
DeSoto County (Memphis MS suburbs)
190,000
Median sale price: $305,000
Memphis commuter belt. Highest growth in the state.

School districts

Madison County Schools, DeSoto County Schools, and Rankin County rank highest. Many top private schools throughout the state (Jackson Prep, MRA, Lamar).

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Hurricane risk June through November on the Gulf Coast. Tornado risk in spring.

Market direction

DeSoto County (Memphis suburbs) is the strongest growth market. Gulf Coast affected by insurance complexity. Jackson metro varies widely by county.

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Are you the Mississippi REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Mississippi. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Mississippi joins the list when we find the right local team.

MO · THE SHOW-ME STATE

Find a home in Missouri.

Find a Home is building its Missouri network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Missouri to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Missouri housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
6.20 million
Capital
Jefferson City
Major Metros
5

Missouri at a glance

Missouri's market is balanced: two major metros (St. Louis and Kansas City) each with their own dynamics, plus growing secondary markets.

Worth knowing
Missouri is the only US state that touches eight others (tied with Tennessee).
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average, with significant variation by county.

Major metros in Missouri

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

St. Louis
2.8M
Median sale price: $245,000
Largest metro. Submarkets vary: Clayton/Ladue luxury, Kirkwood and Webster Groves top schools, urban Central West End revival.
Kansas City (MO side)
1.5M
Median sale price: $285,000
Tech and finance growth. Lee's Summit and Liberty drive top family-suburban pricing on Missouri side.
Springfield
475,000
Median sale price: $245,000
Southwest Missouri. Healthcare and education.
Columbia
215,000
Median sale price: $275,000
University of Missouri.
St. Joseph
125,000
Median sale price: $165,000
Northwest Missouri. Lower price point.

School districts

Ladue, Kirkwood, Clayton (St. Louis suburbs), and Lee's Summit (KC suburbs) rank among the state's top public districts.

Climate

Humid continental in the north, humid subtropical in the south. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters. Tornado-prone in spring.

Market direction

St. Louis and Kansas City both steady. Springfield growing. Statewide affordability remains a strong draw.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Missouri REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Missouri. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Missouri joins the list when we find the right local team.

MT · THE TREASURE STATE

Find a home in Montana.

Montana isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Montana housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.13 million
Capital
Helena
Major Metros
5

Montana at a glance

Montana real estate is mostly two stories: Bozeman/Big Sky and Flathead/Glacier, which run on out-of-state buyer demand. The rest of the state operates very differently.

Worth knowing
Montana has more cattle than people.
For buyers
Montana has no state sales tax.

Major metros in Montana

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Billings
190,000
Median sale price: $395,000
Largest city. Energy and healthcare.
Bozeman
125,000
Median sale price: $695,000
Yellowstone gateway. Montana State University. Highest pricing in the state by a wide margin.
Missoula
125,000
Median sale price: $565,000
University of Montana. Cultural hub.
Great Falls
85,000
Median sale price: $305,000
Central Montana. Lower price point.
Kalispell/Flathead
115,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Glacier National Park gateway. Heavy second-home market.

School districts

Bozeman School District 7, Missoula County Public Schools, and Helena School District rank among the state's top. Rural districts vary widely.

Climate

Continental, modified by mountains. Cold winters statewide. Eastern plains hot in summer; western mountains mild. Significant snow.

Market direction

Bozeman and Flathead saw extreme price appreciation 2020-2022. Cooled somewhat but remain among the most expensive secondary markets in the country.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Montana REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Montana. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Montana joins the list when we find the right local team.

NE · THE CORNHUSKER STATE

Find a home in Nebraska.

Nebraska is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Nebraska carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Nebraska housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Nebraska's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.97 million
Capital
Lincoln
Major Metros
4

Nebraska at a glance

Nebraska real estate doesn't make headlines, which is part of the appeal: steady employment, stable pricing, affordable across most submarkets.

Worth knowing
Nebraska is the only state with a single-house, nonpartisan legislature.
For buyers
Property taxes are above the national average, which Nebraska tax reform efforts have attempted to address.

Major metros in Nebraska

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Omaha-Council Bluffs
975,000
Median sale price: $285,000
Largest metro. Berkshire Hathaway and Mutual of Omaha anchor. Strong insurance and finance employment.
Lincoln
345,000
Median sale price: $295,000
State capital. University of Nebraska.
Grand Island
85,000
Median sale price: $215,000
Central Nebraska. Agricultural processing.
Kearney
75,000
Median sale price: $235,000
Central Nebraska. University of Nebraska Kearney.

School districts

Westside Community Schools, Elkhorn Public Schools, and Lincoln Public Schools rank among the state's top. Omaha suburbs dominate top rankings.

Climate

Continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with significant snow. Severe weather including tornadoes in spring and summer.

Market direction

Omaha and Lincoln both growing steadily. Affordability remains a strong selling point. Insurance and finance employment provides stability.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Nebraska REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Nebraska. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Nebraska joins the list when we find the right local team.

NV · THE SILVER STATE

Find a home in Nevada.

Find a Home is building its Nevada network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Nevada to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Nevada housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
3.18 million
Capital
Carson City
Major Metros
3

Nevada at a glance

Nevada's two metros operate on different engines: Las Vegas runs on tourism and hospitality, Reno on tech and California outmigration.

Worth knowing
Nevada has no state income tax.
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average, with a cap on annual increases for primary residences.

Major metros in Nevada

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Las Vegas-Henderson
2.3M
Median sale price: $435,000
Largest metro. Tourism and hospitality core. Submarkets: Summerlin master-planned, Henderson family-suburban, Las Vegas proper varies.
Reno-Sparks
490,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Northern Nevada. Tech corridor (Tesla Gigafactory). Heavy in-migration from California Bay Area.
Carson City
60,000
Median sale price: $445,000
State capital. More residential than Reno.

School districts

Clark County School District (Las Vegas) is the 5th largest in the country and varies widely by school. Top charter and magnet schools (West Career, A-TECH) are competitive.

Climate

Desert. Hot, dry summers (100°F+ June through September in Vegas). Mild winters in the south. Reno gets real snow.

Market direction

Cooled significantly from 2022 peak. Vegas remains net-inbound but inventory has recovered. Reno tracks Bay Area demand patterns.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Nevada REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Nevada. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Nevada joins the list when we find the right local team.

NH · THE GRANITE STATE

Find a home in New Hampshire.

We don't have a local team in New Hampshire yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for New Hampshire matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the New Hampshire market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.40 million
Capital
Concord
Major Metros
4

New Hampshire at a glance

New Hampshire's housing demand is fundamentally about tax arbitrage and Massachusetts commuters. Southern New Hampshire benefits most.

Worth knowing
New Hampshire has no state income tax and no general sales tax.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the highest 5 states nationally because they fund most local services.

Major metros in New Hampshire

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Manchester-Nashua
425,000
Median sale price: $475,000
Largest metro. Boston commuter belt for southern Hillsborough County. Highest growth in the state.
Portsmouth (Seacoast)
55,000
Median sale price: $695,000
Atlantic coast. High demand from Boston-area buyers.
Concord
45,000
Median sale price: $415,000
State capital.
Lakes Region (Laconia)
75,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Lake Winnipesaukee area. Second-home market.

School districts

Bedford, Hollis-Brookline, and Windham school districts rank among the state's top. Many top private schools (Phillips Exeter, St. Paul's).

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with significant snow. Long fall foliage season.

Market direction

Southern New Hampshire is one of the tightest markets in New England, driven by Massachusetts buyers seeking lower property taxes and no income tax.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the New Hampshire REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in New Hampshire. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. New Hampshire joins the list when we find the right local team.

NJ · THE GARDEN STATE

Find a home in New Jersey.

Find a Home is building its New Jersey network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in New Jersey to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the New Jersey housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
9.50 million
Capital
Trenton
Major Metros
5

New Jersey at a glance

New Jersey real estate cannot be discussed without property taxes. They reshape what's affordable, where families settle, and how long they stay.

Worth knowing
New Jersey is the most densely populated US state.
For buyers
Property taxes are the highest in the country, which significantly affects affordability calculations.

Major metros in New Jersey

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Newark/Jersey City (NYC metro NJ side)
5.6M
Median sale price: $525,000
NYC commuter belt. Submarkets: Hoboken/Jersey City urban premium, Montclair top schools, Short Hills/Millburn luxury suburbs.
Philadelphia metro NJ side (Camden, Cherry Hill)
1.4M
Median sale price: $355,000
Philly commuter belt. More affordable than NYC suburbs.
Atlantic City-Hammonton
275,000
Median sale price: $295,000
South Jersey. Casino economy.
Trenton-Princeton
385,000
Median sale price: $455,000
State capital. Princeton University drives a premium submarket.
Jersey Shore (Ocean County)
650,000
Median sale price: $485,000
Heavy second-home and retiree demand.

School districts

Millburn, Princeton, West Windsor-Plainsboro, and Tenafly school districts rank among the nation's top public systems.

Climate

Humid subtropical in the south, humid continental in the north. Hot, humid summers. Mild to cold winters depending on region.

Market direction

Tight inventory in top school districts and NYC commuter towns. Jersey Shore runs hot for second-home buyers. Property tax burden is the dominant cost concern.

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Find a Home is interviewing local agents in New Jersey. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. New Jersey joins the list when we find the right local team.

NM · THE LAND OF ENCHANTMENT

Find a home in New Mexico.

New Mexico is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent New Mexico carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the New Mexico housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of New Mexico's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
2.11 million
Capital
Santa Fe
Major Metros
4

New Mexico at a glance

New Mexico real estate is a tale of two markets: Santa Fe runs on out-of-state buyers paying for culture and scenery; Albuquerque runs on labs, tech, and affordability.

Worth knowing
Santa Fe is the oldest state capital in the country, founded in 1610.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 10 states nationally.

Major metros in New Mexico

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Albuquerque
915,000
Median sale price: $335,000
Largest metro. Sandia National Labs. Tech and defense.
Santa Fe
155,000
Median sale price: $685,000
State capital. Arts, tourism, and Native American culture. Highest pricing in the state.
Las Cruces
220,000
Median sale price: $295,000
Southern New Mexico. NMSU.
Rio Rancho
105,000
Median sale price: $345,000
Albuquerque suburb. Family-suburban growth.

School districts

Rio Rancho Public Schools, Albuquerque Public Schools (varies by school), and Santa Fe Public Schools serve most of the state's population. Charter and private schools play significant roles in Albuquerque.

Climate

Arid to semi-arid. Hot, dry summers. Mild to cold winters depending on elevation. Significant variation between high desert and mountain communities.

Market direction

Santa Fe is one of the priciest mid-size markets in the country, driven by out-of-state buyers. Albuquerque is more accessible. Statewide inventory varies widely.

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Are you the New Mexico REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in New Mexico. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. New Mexico joins the list when we find the right local team.

NY · THE EMPIRE STATE

Find a home in New York.

New York is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent New York carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the New York housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of New York's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
19.6 million
Capital
Albany
Major Metros
5

New York at a glance

New York is the most internally varied real estate market in the country. The state contains markets that compete for the highest prices nationally and markets that compete for the lowest.

Worth knowing
Upstate New York and downstate New York are essentially different real estate markets with different drivers.
For buyers
Property taxes vary by 5x between upstate (lower) and downstate suburbs (highest in the country alongside New Jersey).

Major metros in New York

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

New York City metro
19.5M
Median sale price: $685,000 (regional median)
Most complex US housing market. Submarkets are essentially countries: Manhattan luxury, Brooklyn revival, Westchester top schools, Long Island commuter, Hudson Valley remote-work.
Buffalo-Niagara Falls
1.16M
Median sale price: $235,000
Western New York. Affordable. Tech and healthcare growth.
Rochester
1.05M
Median sale price: $215,000
Photonics and healthcare. Lower price point.
Albany-Schenectady-Troy
880,000
Median sale price: $325,000
State capital. Government and tech.
Syracuse
650,000
Median sale price: $200,000
Central New York. Lower price point.

School districts

Scarsdale, Jericho, Great Neck, Syosset (NYC metro), Bronxville, and Pittsford (Rochester) rank among the nation's top public districts.

Climate

Highly variable. NYC humid subtropical. Upstate humid continental with significant lake-effect snow. Western New York gets harsher winters than coastal areas.

Market direction

NYC metro top school districts move very quickly. Buffalo and Rochester are among the most affordable mid-size metros in the Northeast. Hudson Valley still feeling 2020-2022 remote-work effects.

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Find a Home is interviewing local agents in New York. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. New York joins the list when we find the right local team.

ND · THE PEACE GARDEN STATE

Find a home in North Dakota.

We don't have a local team in North Dakota yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for North Dakota matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the North Dakota market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
780,000
Capital
Bismarck
Major Metros
4

North Dakota at a glance

North Dakota offers some of the most affordable housing in the country with employment driven by energy, agriculture, and the Fargo tech and healthcare cluster.

Worth knowing
North Dakota produces more honey than any other state.
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average.

Major metros in North Dakota

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Fargo-Moorhead
260,000
Median sale price: $305,000
Largest metro (counts the Minnesota side). Strong job growth. Microsoft, healthcare.
Bismarck
135,000
Median sale price: $305,000
State capital. Energy and government.
Grand Forks
100,000
Median sale price: $240,000
University of North Dakota. Lower price point.
Minot
75,000
Median sale price: $275,000
Energy and Air Force base.

School districts

Fargo Public Schools, West Fargo Public Schools, and Bismarck Public Schools serve most of the state. Districts are smaller than in many states.

Climate

Continental. Hot, dry summers. Long, extreme winters (-20°F is common). Significant wind year-round.

Market direction

Fargo metro is the strongest growth story. Bakken oil-field activity affects western North Dakota markets.

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Are you the North Dakota REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in North Dakota. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. North Dakota joins the list when we find the right local team.

OH · THE BUCKEYE STATE

Find a home in Ohio.

Ohio is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Ohio carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Ohio housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Ohio's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
11.8 million
Capital
Columbus
Major Metros
5

Ohio at a glance

Ohio's three Cs (Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati) each operate as their own real estate market, with Columbus pulling the strongest growth right now.

Worth knowing
Ohio is the only state where each city has a 50-50 chance of being a major league sports city.
For buyers
Property taxes are middle-of-the-pack, with significant variation between school districts.

Major metros in Ohio

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Columbus
2.2M
Median sale price: $285,000
Fastest-growing Ohio metro. Intel chip plant under construction. Ohio State University. Strong tech and finance employment.
Cleveland-Elyria
2.0M
Median sale price: $215,000
Healthcare anchor (Cleveland Clinic). Affordable by national standards. Lakewood and Shaker Heights driving urban revival.
Cincinnati
2.3M
Median sale price: $265,000
Procter & Gamble and Kroger HQ. Mason and West Chester top suburbs.
Akron
700,000
Median sale price: $185,000
Tire industry history. Lower price point.
Dayton
810,000
Median sale price: $195,000
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Lower price point.

School districts

Solon, Indian Hill (Cincinnati), New Albany-Plain (Columbus), and Hudson school districts rank among the state's top performers.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with significant snow, especially in the lake-effect zone near Cleveland.

Market direction

Columbus is the strongest growth story (Intel's $20B chip plant is a major driver). Cincinnati and Cleveland are steady. Affordability remains a major draw statewide.

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Are you the Ohio REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Ohio. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Ohio joins the list when we find the right local team.

OK · THE SOONER STATE

Find a home in Oklahoma.

We don't have a local team in Oklahoma yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Oklahoma matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Oklahoma market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
4.05 million
Capital
Oklahoma City
Major Metros
4

Oklahoma at a glance

Oklahoma's market is balanced between two metros (OKC and Tulsa) plus a network of college towns and military bases.

Worth knowing
Oklahoma has more Native American tribes (39) than any other state.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 10 states nationally.

Major metros in Oklahoma

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Oklahoma City
1.47M
Median sale price: $245,000
Largest metro. Energy industry. Edmond and Norman drive top family-suburban pricing.
Tulsa
1.03M
Median sale price: $230,000
Second metro. Energy and aerospace. Jenks and Bixby drive top pricing.
Norman
130,000
Median sale price: $285,000
University of Oklahoma.
Lawton
125,000
Median sale price: $155,000
Fort Sill military base. Lower price point.

School districts

Jenks, Edmond, Bixby, and Deer Creek school districts rank among the state's top performers.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Significant tornado risk in spring (heart of Tornado Alley).

Market direction

OKC and Tulsa both steady. Energy industry stability supports demand. Statewide affordability remains a strong selling point.

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Are you the Oklahoma REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Oklahoma. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Oklahoma joins the list when we find the right local team.

OR · THE BEAVER STATE

Find a home in Oregon.

Oregon isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Oregon housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
4.23 million
Capital
Salem
Major Metros
5

Oregon at a glance

Oregon's housing market splits cleanly between Portland metro and the rest of the state, with Bend running its own out-of-state-buyer-driven dynamic.

Worth knowing
Oregon has no state sales tax.
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average, but Measure 50 caps annual assessment increases.

Major metros in Oregon

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro
2.5M
Median sale price: $525,000
Largest metro. Tech (Intel, Nike). Submarkets: West Hills luxury, Lake Oswego top schools, Beaverton/Hillsboro suburbs, Portland proper varies widely.
Eugene-Springfield
385,000
Median sale price: $445,000
University of Oregon. Outdoor culture.
Salem
435,000
Median sale price: $425,000
State capital.
Bend
210,000
Median sale price: $625,000
Central Oregon high desert. Heavy in-migration from California. Outdoor recreation.
Medford-Ashland
225,000
Median sale price: $435,000
Southern Oregon. Wine and theater.

School districts

Lake Oswego, West Linn-Wilsonville, and Beaverton school districts (all Portland metro) rank among the state's top.

Climate

Maritime in the west (mild, wet), continental high desert in the east. Portland gets significant rain October through May.

Market direction

Portland metro has cooled significantly since 2022. Bend remains expensive due to limited supply. Affordability concerns drive policy debates.

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Are you the Oregon REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Oregon. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Oregon joins the list when we find the right local team.

PA · THE KEYSTONE STATE

Find a home in Pennsylvania.

Pennsylvania isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Pennsylvania housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
13.0 million
Capital
Harrisburg
Major Metros
5

Pennsylvania at a glance

Pennsylvania is two states in one: Philadelphia's Northeast Corridor pricing and Pittsburgh's Rust Belt revival, with everything else in between.

Worth knowing
Pittsburgh has more bridges than any city in the world (446).
For buyers
Property taxes vary widely by school district, sometimes by 3x within a metro.

Major metros in Pennsylvania

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington
6.2M
Median sale price: $295,000
Largest metro. Submarkets: Main Line luxury (Lower Merion, Radnor), Bucks County family suburbs, Center City urban premium.
Pittsburgh
2.4M
Median sale price: $215,000
Tech revival (Carnegie Mellon, Uber, Google). Mt. Lebanon and Upper St. Clair drive top family pricing.
Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton
865,000
Median sale price: $305,000
Lehigh Valley. Manufacturing and logistics.
Harrisburg-Carlisle
590,000
Median sale price: $285,000
State capital.
Lancaster
560,000
Median sale price: $315,000
Amish country tourism. Strong agricultural base.

School districts

Lower Merion, Radnor, Tredyffrin-Easttown (all Philly Main Line), Mt. Lebanon (Pittsburgh), and Unionville-Chadds Ford rank among the nation's top public districts.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with significant snow, especially in the western and northern parts of the state.

Market direction

Philadelphia metro is steady. Pittsburgh is one of the most affordable mid-size metros with strong job growth in tech. Statewide affordability is meaningful compared to nearby New York and New Jersey.

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Are you the Pennsylvania REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Pennsylvania. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Pennsylvania joins the list when we find the right local team.

PR · THE ISLAND OF ENCHANTMENT

Find a home in Puerto Rico.

We don't have a local team in Puerto Rico yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Puerto Rico matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Puerto Rico market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
3.20 million
Capital
San Juan
Major Metros
4

Puerto Rico at a glance

Puerto Rico real estate has unique advantages for US buyers: no international complications, tropical climate, and tax incentives that have reshaped certain coastal markets.

Worth knowing
Puerto Rico is a US territory, so US citizens can move there without visas or international real estate complications.
For buyers
Puerto Rico has its own property tax system, generally lower than mainland equivalents for primary residences.

Major metros in Puerto Rico

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

San Juan
2.2M
Median sale price: $285,000
Largest metro. Tourism, finance, healthcare. Condado and Isla Verde drive top pricing.
Ponce
130,000
Median sale price: $175,000
Southern coast. Historic city.
Mayagüez
70,000
Median sale price: $185,000
Western coast. University.
Dorado
40,000
Median sale price: $725,000
Heavy beachfront and luxury development.

School districts

Puerto Rico operates a single statewide public education system. Many top private schools (CIM, Robinson, Saint John's).

Climate

Tropical. Hot, humid year-round. Hurricane risk June through November. Rainy season May through November.

Market direction

Act 60 tax incentives have drawn US mainland investor demand to coastal communities since 2017. San Juan central submarkets remain stable; coastal luxury (Dorado, Palmas del Mar) has appreciated significantly.

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Are you the Puerto Rico REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Puerto Rico. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Puerto Rico joins the list when we find the right local team.

RI · THE OCEAN STATE

Find a home in Rhode Island.

Rhode Island is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Rhode Island carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Rhode Island housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Rhode Island's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.10 million
Capital
Providence
Major Metros
3

Rhode Island at a glance

Rhode Island's housing market is anchored by Providence and elevated by Newport. Coastal proximity drives much of the demand.

Worth knowing
Rhode Island is the smallest US state by area but more densely populated than most.
For buyers
Property taxes vary significantly by town, with some of the highest rates in New England.

Major metros in Rhode Island

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Providence-Warwick
1.6M
Median sale price: $435,000
Largest metro (extends into Massachusetts). Brown University. East Side luxury, Cranston and Warwick family-suburban.
Newport
60,000
Median sale price: $795,000
Historic coastal. Heavy second-home and tourism market. Mansion district.
South County (Narragansett, South Kingstown)
125,000
Median sale price: $595,000
Coastal communities. University of Rhode Island.

School districts

Barrington, East Greenwich, and South Kingstown school districts rank among the state's top performers. Many top private schools (Lincoln, Wheeler, Moses Brown).

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Cold winters with moderate snow. Coastal location moderates extremes.

Market direction

Providence metro is tight in the strongest school districts. Newport runs hot for second-home buyers. Statewide inventory is limited.

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Are you the Rhode Island REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Rhode Island. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Rhode Island joins the list when we find the right local team.

SC · THE PALMETTO STATE

Find a home in South Carolina.

We don't have a local team in South Carolina yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for South Carolina matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the South Carolina market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
5.37 million
Capital
Columbia
Major Metros
5

South Carolina at a glance

South Carolina's market is a four-engine economy: Charleston charm, Greenville's industrial growth, the Grand Strand tourism corridor, and Hilton Head resort dynamics.

Worth knowing
South Carolina has more BMW manufacturing capacity than any state, including Germany.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 5 states for primary residences (with significant exemptions for owner-occupied homes).

Major metros in South Carolina

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Charleston-North Charleston
830,000
Median sale price: $485,000
Largest metro. Tourism, port, Boeing assembly plant. Historic downtown plus Mount Pleasant and Daniel Island.
Greenville-Anderson
950,000
Median sale price: $355,000
Upstate. BMW manufacturing. Strong job growth.
Columbia
835,000
Median sale price: $245,000
State capital. University of South Carolina.
Myrtle Beach
525,000
Median sale price: $305,000
Coastal tourism. Heavy second-home and retiree market.
Hilton Head Island
150,000
Median sale price: $725,000
Resort community. High second-home pricing.

School districts

Lexington-Richland 5, Beaufort County (Hilton Head), and Charleston County School District (varies) rank among the state's top performers. Many top private schools.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Hurricane risk June through November on the coast.

Market direction

Charleston and Greenville are both strong growth markets. Myrtle Beach corridor draws heavy retiree demand. Insurance complexity affects coastal pricing.

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Are you the South Carolina REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in South Carolina. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. South Carolina joins the list when we find the right local team.

SD · THE MOUNT RUSHMORE STATE

Find a home in South Dakota.

South Dakota is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent South Dakota carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the South Dakota housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of South Dakota's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
920,000
Capital
Pierre
Major Metros
3

South Dakota at a glance

South Dakota offers some of the best combinations of affordability, no income tax, and steady job growth in the country.

Worth knowing
South Dakota has no state income tax.
For buyers
Property taxes are middle-of-the-pack nationally.

Major metros in South Dakota

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Sioux Falls
300,000
Median sale price: $345,000
Largest metro. Healthcare and financial services (credit card industry). Strong job growth.
Rapid City
150,000
Median sale price: $315,000
Western South Dakota. Black Hills gateway. Tourism.
Aberdeen
45,000
Median sale price: $215,000
Northeast South Dakota. Agricultural processing.

School districts

Brandon Valley, Harrisburg, and Sioux Falls school districts serve the largest population. Districts vary widely by community.

Climate

Continental. Hot summers, very cold winters. Significant wind. Western South Dakota gets less snow than the east.

Market direction

Sioux Falls is one of the fastest-growing small metros in the country thanks to financial services. Black Hills (Rapid City) runs on tourism and second-home demand.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the South Dakota REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in South Dakota. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. South Dakota joins the list when we find the right local team.

UT · THE BEEHIVE STATE

Find a home in Utah.

Utah isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the Utah housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
3.42 million
Capital
Salt Lake City
Major Metros
5

Utah at a glance

Utah's market combines Silicon Slopes tech growth with world-class outdoor recreation. The combination keeps demand sticky even as prices have softened.

Worth knowing
Utah has the highest birth rate and the youngest median age of any US state.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 10 states nationally.

Major metros in Utah

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Salt Lake City
1.27M
Median sale price: $565,000
Largest metro. Tech corridor (Silicon Slopes). Park City and Cottonwood Heights drive top pricing.
Provo-Orem
725,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Utah Valley. BYU. Heavy tech industry growth.
Ogden-Clearfield
725,000
Median sale price: $445,000
Northern Utah. Hill Air Force Base. More affordable.
St. George
200,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Southwest Utah. Retirement and second-home market.
Park City
25,000
Median sale price: $2,150,000
Ski resort. One of the most expensive small markets in the country.

School districts

Park City School District, Alpine (Lehi/Highland), and Canyons School District (Sandy/Draper) rank among the state's top performers.

Climate

Semi-arid. Hot, dry summers. Cold winters with significant mountain snow (and the famous powder for skiing).

Market direction

Cooled significantly from 2022 peak. Utah remains net-inbound. Mountain resort markets (Park City, Deer Valley) run on out-of-state buyers.

JOIN THE NETWORK

Are you the Utah REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Utah. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Utah joins the list when we find the right local team.

VT · THE GREEN MOUNTAIN STATE

Find a home in Vermont.

We don't have a local team in Vermont yet. We're working on it. The right local agent for Vermont matters more than getting a generic state page live faster.

Here's an honest summary of the Vermont market using public data: the metros that drive activity, the school districts buyers ask about, the climate, and where prices are trending.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
650,000
Capital
Montpelier
Major Metros
3

Vermont at a glance

Vermont's housing market punches well above its population, driven by remote workers, second-home buyers, and a quality-of-life premium.

Worth knowing
Vermont has more cows per capita than any state and was the first state to legalize same-sex civil unions.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the highest in the country, which funds local schools and services.

Major metros in Vermont

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Burlington-South Burlington
225,000
Median sale price: $525,000
Largest metro. University of Vermont. Lake Champlain. Heavy in-migration since 2020.
Rutland
60,000
Median sale price: $285,000
Central Vermont. More affordable.
Stowe/Mountain Resort Towns
5,000
Median sale price: $895,000
Ski resort. Second-home market.

School districts

Champlain Valley School District, South Burlington School District, and Essex Westford rank among the state's top performers. Many top private schools.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Long, cold winters with heavy snow. Famous fall foliage.

Market direction

Burlington metro saw significant in-migration during remote-work boom. Stowe and other resort towns run on second-home demand from Boston and New York buyers.

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Are you the Vermont REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Vermont. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Vermont joins the list when we find the right local team.

VA · THE OLD DOMINION

Find a home in Virginia.

Virginia is on the Find a Home roadmap. We're choosing the local REALTOR® who'll represent Virginia carefully. Until then, this page gives you the public-data version of the Virginia housing market.

What you'll find below: metro populations and median prices, top school districts, climate basics, and the current direction of Virginia's market. Verifiable facts, not voice-mimicked claims.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
8.72 million
Capital
Richmond
Major Metros
5

Virginia at a glance

Virginia's market splits cleanly: Northern Virginia operates as a DC metro and dominates pricing, while everywhere else operates on its own economic engines.

Worth knowing
Virginia has more federal government employees than any state outside DC.
For buyers
Property taxes are below the national average, with significant variation by county.

Major metros in Virginia

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Northern Virginia (DC metro)
3.2M
Median sale price: $685,000
DC commuter belt. Federal contractors, defense, tech (Amazon HQ2 in Arlington). Loudoun and Fairfax counties drive top family pricing.
Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News
1.8M
Median sale price: $345,000
Hampton Roads. Largest naval concentration in the world.
Richmond
1.32M
Median sale price: $365,000
State capital. Insurance and tobacco history. Strong growth.
Charlottesville
220,000
Median sale price: $525,000
University of Virginia. Wine country.
Roanoke
315,000
Median sale price: $255,000
Southwest Virginia. Lower price point.

School districts

Falls Church City, Loudoun County, Fairfax County, and Henrico County rank among the state's top public districts. Many top private schools throughout NoVA.

Climate

Humid subtropical. Hot, humid summers. Mild winters. Mountains in the west, coast in the east.

Market direction

Northern Virginia is one of the tightest metros in the country, driven by federal jobs and Amazon HQ2 spillover. Richmond is the fastest-growing secondary metro.

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Are you the Virginia REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Virginia. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Virginia joins the list when we find the right local team.

WA · THE EVERGREEN STATE

Find a home in Washington.

Find a Home is building its Washington network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Washington to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Washington housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
7.95 million
Capital
Olympia
Major Metros
5

Washington at a glance

Washington's housing market is dominated by Seattle Eastside tech demand, with secondary markets gaining momentum as buyers seek more space.

Worth knowing
Washington has no state income tax.
For buyers
Property taxes are middle-of-the-pack, but high home values drive high absolute tax amounts in Seattle metro.

Major metros in Washington

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Seattle-Bellevue
4.0M
Median sale price: $795,000
Tech anchor (Amazon, Microsoft). Submarkets: Bellevue and Mercer Island luxury, Eastside top schools, Seattle proper varies, suburbs like Sammamish and Kirkland sticky on demand.
Spokane
560,000
Median sale price: $425,000
Eastern Washington. More affordable. Strong in-migration from West Coast.
Tacoma
920,000
Median sale price: $535,000
South of Seattle. More accessible price point.
Olympia
300,000
Median sale price: $525,000
State capital.
Vancouver WA (Portland metro)
525,000
Median sale price: $485,000
Portland commuter belt. Cross-state tax-advantaged buying.

School districts

Bellevue, Lake Washington, Mercer Island, and Issaquah school districts (all Seattle Eastside) rank among the nation's top public districts.

Climate

Maritime (mild, wet) west of the Cascades; semi-arid east of the Cascades. Seattle gets significant rain October through May; Spokane gets real snow.

Market direction

Seattle Eastside is one of the tightest, priciest markets in the country. Spokane has cooled but remains net-inbound. Vancouver WA draws buyers seeking Oregon-style culture without income tax.

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Are you the Washington REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Washington. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Washington joins the list when we find the right local team.

WV · THE MOUNTAIN STATE

Find a home in West Virginia.

West Virginia isn't live yet on Find a Home, but it's coming. We're interviewing local REALTORS® who actually know these neighborhoods, schools, and price ranges.

While we're recruiting, here's a factual snapshot of the West Virginia housing market: real metro data, real school districts, real market direction. No hype, no fake expertise.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
1.78 million
Capital
Charleston
Major Metros
4

West Virginia at a glance

West Virginia offers some of the lowest housing costs in the country, with the Eastern Panhandle drawing buyers priced out of DC and Baltimore.

Worth knowing
West Virginia is one of the most forested states in the country (about 78% tree cover).
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 5 states nationally.

Major metros in West Virginia

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Charleston
245,000
Median sale price: $185,000
State capital. Coal industry legacy. Low price point.
Huntington-Ashland
350,000
Median sale price: $165,000
Ohio River. Marshall University.
Morgantown
140,000
Median sale price: $275,000
West Virginia University anchor. Strongest growth in state.
Eastern Panhandle (Martinsburg)
165,000
Median sale price: $355,000
DC and Baltimore commuter belt. Strongest pricing in state.

School districts

Eastern Panhandle districts (Berkeley, Jefferson) rank among the state's top. Morgantown's Monongalia County School District performs well.

Climate

Humid subtropical to humid continental depending on elevation. Hot summers, cold winters with significant snow at higher elevations.

Market direction

Eastern Panhandle is the strongest market thanks to DC commuters and remote workers. Morgantown grows steadily with WVU. Coalfield communities face long-term economic transition.

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Are you the West Virginia REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in West Virginia. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. West Virginia joins the list when we find the right local team.

WI · THE BADGER STATE

Find a home in Wisconsin.

Find a Home is building its Wisconsin network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Wisconsin to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Wisconsin housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
5.91 million
Capital
Madison
Major Metros
5

Wisconsin at a glance

Wisconsin's market is anchored by Milwaukee and Madison, with secondary college towns and a meaningful second-home market in the lake country.

Worth knowing
Wisconsin produces more cheese than any other state (a quarter of the US total).
For buyers
Property taxes are above the national average, but the school-funding system is more centralized than many states.

Major metros in Wisconsin

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Milwaukee-Waukesha
1.57M
Median sale price: $285,000
Largest metro. Brewing and manufacturing heritage. Submarkets vary: North Shore (Whitefish Bay, Fox Point) luxury, Waukesha County family-suburban.
Madison
680,000
Median sale price: $395,000
State capital. University of Wisconsin. Tech and biotech.
Green Bay
330,000
Median sale price: $265,000
Northeast Wisconsin. Paper industry. Packers home.
Appleton
245,000
Median sale price: $285,000
Fox Cities. Manufacturing.
Eau Claire
175,000
Median sale price: $245,000
Western Wisconsin. UW Eau Claire.

School districts

Whitefish Bay, Mequon-Thiensville, Elmbrook, and Middleton-Cross Plains (Madison) rank among the state's top public districts.

Climate

Humid continental. Hot, humid summers. Long, cold winters with significant snow.

Market direction

Milwaukee and Madison both steady. Lake country (Door County, Northwoods) runs hot for second-home buyers in summer.

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Are you the Wisconsin REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Wisconsin. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Wisconsin joins the list when we find the right local team.

WY · THE EQUALITY STATE

Find a home in Wyoming.

Find a Home is building its Wyoming network. We're not pretending to be the local experts here yet. We are recruiting REALTORS® who live and work in Wyoming to fill that role.

In the meantime, here's what we know about the Wyoming housing market based on public data: where people are buying, what the schools look like, what the weather does, and where prices are headed.

Currently active in Tennessee
Population
585,000
Capital
Cheyenne
Major Metros
4

Wyoming at a glance

Wyoming has two completely different real estate markets: Jackson Hole at one extreme and the rest of the state at the other.

Worth knowing
Wyoming has no state income tax and is consistently rated one of the most tax-friendly states in the country.
For buyers
Property taxes are among the lowest 5 states nationally.

Major metros in Wyoming

Median sale prices below reflect 2025 third-quarter public data. These move; treat them as directional.

Cheyenne
100,000
Median sale price: $365,000
Largest city. State capital. Government and military (Warren AFB).
Casper
80,000
Median sale price: $295,000
Central Wyoming. Oil and gas.
Jackson Hole (Teton County)
25,000
Median sale price: $2,650,000
Ski and national park gateway. One of the highest median prices in the country.
Laramie
33,000
Median sale price: $285,000
University of Wyoming.

School districts

Teton County School District (Jackson) and Albany County (Laramie) rank among the state's strongest. Districts are small and varied.

Climate

High plains continental. Cold winters statewide. Wind is a constant. Mountain communities (Jackson) have alpine climate.

Market direction

Jackson Hole runs on out-of-state ultra-wealthy buyers and is essentially its own market. Cheyenne and Casper operate at national-affordable price points.

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Are you the Wyoming REALTOR® we’re looking for?

Find a Home is interviewing local agents in Wyoming. If you live and work here, we want to hear from you. The right partner gets named on this page: photo, license, byline, and the calls.

Where Find a Home is live today

Currently active in: Tennessee, California, Florida, Texas, and North Carolina. Wyoming joins the list when we find the right local team.

AB · EXPANDING

Find a home in Alberta.

We have 1 active team growing in Alberta, plus 0 REALTORS® in our network not yet onboarded.

If you live and work in Alberta, we'd love to talk to you.

NB · EXPANDING

Find a home in New Brunswick.

We have 1 active team growing in New Brunswick, plus 0 REALTORS® in our network not yet onboarded.

If you live and work in New Brunswick, we'd love to talk to you.

ON · EXPANDING

Find a home in Ontario.

We have 1 active team growing in Ontario, plus 0 REALTORS® in our network not yet onboarded.

If you live and work in Ontario, we'd love to talk to you.

Brokerage: eXp Realty · TN License #262943. All real estate professionals on this site are licensed in their respective states.

Fair Housing: We support fair housing and equal opportunity. We do not discriminate based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, national origin, age, sexual orientation, gender identity, or source of income.

MLS Disclaimer: Listing data shown via Ruuster IDX feed. Source MLS feeds include RealTracs, UCAR, ETAR, and Greater Smoky Mountains MLS. Property information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Listings courtesy of the listing brokerage and agent.

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