Here’s a concise, forward-looking read on Tri-Cities annual home sales based on 1999–2025 annual sales:
The market has transitioned from cyclical volatility to a larger, more mature market with a higher long-term sales floor. While the 2021 peak is unlikely to be revisited without a major economic catalyst, the post-2023 data suggest durability. Future gains are more likely to come from demographic flow, inventory mix, and price-tier alignment than from raw volume expansion.
Long-Run Perspective
Two major growth eras, separated by a hard reset
- 1999–2006: Sales nearly tripled, reflecting population growth, easier credit, and strong household formation.
- 2007–2011: The housing bust cut annual sales by 37% from peak to trough. It was followed by several years of stagnation.
Structural recovery and a higher baseline after 2012
- From 2012 to 2019, sales climbed steadily signaling a healthier, demand-driven recovery rather than speculative excess.
- By 2016, the market permanently broke above the pre-crisis ceiling, establishing a new structural norm above 7,000 annual sales.
Pandemic surge created a temporary ceiling
- 2020–2021 marked an extraordinary expansion, peaking at 10,005 sales. It was an outlier driven by ultra-low rates, migration, and urgency.
- The pullback in 2022–2023 reflects normalization, not collapse.
2025 confirms stabilization at an elevated level
- 2025 sales (7,970) exceed every pre-2016 year and are +86% above the Great Recession low, reinforcing that the market has reset higher.
- Recent years show plateauing, not contraction, consistent with affordability limits and slower household growth.

