Mortgage rates closed at 6.50% today. National inventory is up 20%. And almost none of that describes the Mid-Atlantic market we actually work in. Here's what April–May 2026 really looks like from Wilmington to Bethesda to Cherry Hill.
If you've been Googling "should I sell my house now," here's the short read for Houwzer’s core markets:
If you're in Wilmington, Bethesda, Chester County, Cherry Hill, Northern Virginia, or most of the Philly suburbs, the next eight to ten weeks are very likely the strongest selling window of 2026. South Florida is a different conversation. We'll get into both.
The 30-year fixed closed today at 6.50%, up 0.12%.
Not a crisis. Not great news either. What it actually is: the eighth or ninth time this spring that rates have wobbled inside a band running from about 6.20% to 6.55%. The Fed held in late April. The 10-year Treasury has been jumpy since the last CPI release. The bond market is doing what it does whenever it can't decide what the Fed will do next — drifting sideways with sharp little spikes.
Most forecasters still see rates settling in the high-5s by year-end if inflation cooperates. That "if" is doing a lot of work. Nobody is calling for a dramatic drop in the next 60 days.
So here's the part nobody on cable is telling you: the buyers showing up to your open house this Saturday are roughly the buyers you'll have through the summer. They're not going to triple in number when rates fall a quarter point, because they've already adjusted. They penciled their pre-approvals at a 6 handle. A 0.12% intraday move doesn't change their decision tree.
The "wait for rates to drop" plan only works if you also believe the buyer pool is going to materially expand. It hasn't. The buyers in our markets right now are showing up with their financing in order. They've made peace with the rate. They're shopping.
If you're sitting on a 2.9% mortgage from 2021 and the math feels brutal — I get it. We'll come back to that calculation in a minute, because it deserves more than a one-liner. But don't let "rates ticked up 0.12% today" drive your decision. Inside a six-month window of choppy mid-6s, that's noise.
Yes, national inventory is up roughly 20% year over year. The national number is doing heavy lifting for places like Phoenix, Austin, and parts of Florida's Gulf Coast.
Pull the camera back to our markets and the picture flips, sometimes hard. Here's the state-by-state read.
Six months is balanced. Three is a seller's market. 0.8 is a different planet. Properties are moving in 23 days and closing slightly over list. New Castle and Sussex Counties are both running tight. If a buyer waited out spring 2025 hoping to find a softer Delaware market in spring 2026, they got the opposite.
Sellers in Maryland are sitting tight, which means the few who do list are competing with fewer rivals. Anne Arundel, Howard, and Montgomery Counties are all running tighter than the state average. Well-priced single-families in Bethesda, Towson, and Annapolis have gone pending in under two weeks this spring.
Delaware County, Chester County, Bucks County all running short. New listings in Chester County are down nearly 20% from last spring. In Bucks, days-on-market for the under-$700K bracket is sitting at 18.
Statewide median days on market is 55, but Camden, Burlington, and Mercer Counties are all moving faster than that. Our footprint inside New Jersey is running hotter than the headline number.
Loudoun and Fairfax are seeing five-plus offers on prepped homes in Vienna and Reston this spring. The federal hiring chatter from earlier this year hasn't fully evaporated, but the buyers we're seeing in NoVa are well-qualified and motivated, mostly contractors and consulting firms rather than direct federal hires.
The city's median sale price softened about 1.3% YoY, but that's mostly a mix shift — cheaper rowhomes selling, fewer high-end transactions closing. Single-family homes in the broader Philly metro were up 7.4% in March. So "Philly is cooling" depends entirely on which Philly you mean. A row in Fishtown is not the same product as a colonial in Lower Merion. The data treats them as if they live on the same block. They don't.
South Florida has the most national-headline-shaped market we operate in: rising insurance costs, condo association assessments after the 2025 structural reforms, inventory on the rise. If you're selling a single-family home in Boca, Delray, or West Palm, your strategy this spring needs to factor those headwinds in honestly. We will not pretend otherwise. Even there, well-prepared homes priced inside the comp band are still moving — they're just not getting the bidding-war treatment a Wilmington single-family will.
Search volume for "should I sell my house now" jumped from about 580 searches in February to roughly 1,360 in April. More than double in two months. People are anxious, and they're Googling instead of calling agents. A lot of decisions are getting made on Reddit threads and YouTube clips that have nothing to do with what's happening in West Chester, or Cherry Hill, or Wilmington, or Bethesda.
We see it in our own pipeline too. Valuation requests are up. The conversion from valuation to listing is roughly the same as last year. The lag — the gap between "I requested a price" and "I'm ready to list" — has stretched out by about three weeks on average.
That's actually healthy. People are doing more research. But the practical effect: the people who do list this spring are competing with a smaller pool of seller rivals than they were 18 months ago.
If you locked at 3% in 2021, yes, you'd take a payment hit on a like-for-like move. Here's the actual number, not the abstraction:
A $500,000 loan at 3% is a $2,108 monthly principal-and-interest payment. The same balance at today's 6.50% is $3,160. That's a $1,052 monthly delta — about $12,600 a year — if you keep the loan size identical.
Almost nobody keeps the loan size identical.
If you're moving for a different reason — downsizing, divorce, a job change, kids out of the house, an aging parent, a too-small home office, a too-big yard — you're trading into a different loan size, often a smaller one. We've helped a lot of clients run that math, and for plenty of them the new payment ended up lower because the new house cost less. For others, the answer was "no, sit tight until 2027." Both answers are fine. Guessing in either direction without running the numbers isn't.
The other thing the "I'll lose my low rate" line ignores: every month you stay, your low rate is amortizing in your favor by less and less. The interest savings of a 3% mortgage are front-loaded. By year five of a 30-year loan at 3%, you're paying down meaningfully more principal than interest, which means the dollar value of "keeping that rate" gets smaller every quarter. Most people don't model this. They treat the low rate as a permanent asset. It isn't.
April through mid-June produces the highest sale-to-list ratios in every state we work. Realtor.com flagged April 12–18, 2026 as the national peak listing week. Wait until July and you compete with vacation schedules, hurricane-season anxiety in Florida, and back-to-school timing pressure that pulls families out of the search.
In a 0.8-months-of-supply market like Delaware, you can stretch on price. We routinely see Delaware homes list 2–3% over realistic comps and still get into multiple offers. In a softer market — parts of Center City Philly, some pockets of South Florida — you cannot. Listing those homes 2–3% over comp produces the worst possible outcome: 30 days on market, a price cut, a stale Zillow page, and a final sale price below what the right list price would have landed in week one. Different states, different counties, sometimes different zip codes inside the same county all want different pricing strategies. A flat-fee brokerage with national pricing software will miss that nuance every time.
With rates at 6.50%, every $10,000 of price has a real monthly cost — about $63 a month. Buyers feel that. They walk on a house that needs $15,000 in cosmetic work because they just calculated what financing that work costs them at 6.50% versus what they'd pay your seller-credit alternative. A pre-listing inspection, a $500 paint refresh, and a deep professional clean usually return 3–5x in final sale price right now. Skipping prep was a luxury sellers had in 2021. It is not a luxury they have today.
Some of the best Houwzer listings this spring took 14–18 days to find their offer. That's still inside historical norms. Ten years ago, 30 days was considered fast. The 2021–2022 "pending in 72 hours" rhythm was the anomaly, not the baseline. List well-priced and well-prepped this May, and if you don't have a deal in week one, the market didn't break. You're back in a real market.
Lisa in Montgomery County knows what a backyard fence is worth on Old Forty Foot Road. Mike in Chester County knows the difference between a Downingtown school zone and a West Chester school zone is worth $40K on a comparable house. That isn't a small thing. That is the entire ballgame, and it's the thing a national pricing algorithm or an out-of-area agent will miss.
We get this question a lot. Honest answer: in most of our footprint, you've already passed the early-2022 peak — and kept going.
In Delaware, parts of Maryland, and the Philly suburbs, the appreciation curve has been gentle but consistent, and many homes are now above their 2022 number. In Northern Virginia, you're roughly flat to peak. In urban Philadelphia and South Florida, you're below peak in nominal terms, and meaningfully below peak in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. There's no universal answer. Your specific street has a specific number, and an agent who works that street can tell you what it is.
Houwzer is a 1%, full service listing brokerage. On a typical Mid-Atlantic transaction, a seller working with a traditional 3% listing-side commission would pay roughly $15,000–$25,000 to their listing agent's brokerage on a $500K–$800K home. Our commission is a fraction of that. We still advise on paying the buyer's agent the customary cooperating commission — that part of the math has shifted under the new NAR settlement rules, which we'll walk you through — but the listing-side savings are real, and on a single transaction they often cover the rate-payment delta we walked through earlier for the first few years of the new mortgage. That isn't a sales pitch. It's just the arithmetic.
In the Mid-Atlantic — Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, Virginia, and DC — yes, for most homeowners with a real reason to move. Inventory is tight (Delaware at 0.8 months of supply, Maryland down 21.7% YoY, Philly suburbs down ~20%), buyer pre-approvals are written at current rates, and April through mid-June is the highest sale-to-list ratio window of the year. South Florida is a different story; condo and insurance dynamics there warrant a more careful pricing conversation.
No, not as a primary strategy. Most forecasters expect rates to settle in the high-5s by year-end if inflation cooperates, but no one is calling for a meaningful drop in the next 60 days. The buyer pool has already adjusted to the mid-6s. A 0.25% drop will not double the number of buyers in your local market.
The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage closed at 6.50% on April 30, 2026, up 0.12% on the day. Rates have wobbled in a 6.20–6.55% band for most of spring 2026.
On a $500,000 loan held to the same balance, the principal-and-interest jumps from $2,108/month at 3% to $3,160/month at 6.50% — about $1,052/month or $12,600/year. The number shrinks if you're moving into a smaller house or a smaller loan, which most movers actually are.
Realtor.com flagged April 12–18, 2026 as the national peak listing week. The broader strong window in the Mid-Atlantic runs from early April through mid-June.
Delaware was sitting at approximately 0.8 months of supply heading into spring 2026, with average days on market around 23 and homes closing slightly over list price. New Castle and Sussex Counties are both running tight; statewide it remains a strong seller's market.
Active listings in Maryland fell 21.7% year over year in March 2026, and new listings dropped about 25%. The decline in supply has tightened competition in Anne Arundel, Howard, and Montgomery Counties, with well-priced homes in Bethesda, Towson, and Annapolis going pending in under two weeks.
It depends on which Philadelphia. The city's median sale price softened about 1.3% YoY, largely a mix-shift effect (more entry-level rowhomes, fewer high-end transactions). The broader Philly metro single-family market was up 7.4% YoY in March 2026. Suburban Philly counties — Chester, Bucks, Delaware County — remain firmly in seller's-market territory.
No credible forecaster is calling for a broad housing crash in 2026. Most expect flat to slightly positive national price movement. In supply-constrained markets like the Mid-Atlantic, low inventory continues to support prices.
On a $500K–$800K Mid-Atlantic transaction, a traditional 3% listing-side commission runs $15,000–$25,000. Houwzer's flat fee is a fraction of that. The savings on the listing side often cover several years of the rate-payment delta on a like-for-like move.
Rates are sticky in the mid-6s. They ticked up recently. They may tick down next week. The headline doesn't actually change your decision.
What changes your decision is your specific zip code, your specific house, your specific reason for moving, and the specific math of what you'd net at today's prices versus what you'd save by staying put for another twelve months.
The case for talking to someone now isn't "list this week or you'll miss out." It's that the spring window is genuinely tighter than the headlines suggest, the buyer pool is more rational than people assume, and the gap between national doom and Mid-Atlantic reality has rarely been wider. Twenty minutes on the phone with someone who actually works your zip code will tell you more than a month of headlines will.
If your house and your timing point to "wait until 2027," we will tell you that and we will mean it. We don't push.
Talk to a Houwzer agent about your home and your timing — no obligation, no pressure. Just an honest read on what your house would do in this market.