The U.S. housing market is flashing another warning signal. A new Realtor.com report shows that an unusually high number of home sellers are pulling their listings off the market, walking away from deals and abandoning sale plans at a rate not seen since tracking began in 2022.
The trend is emerging months before the winter slowdown, suggesting deeper issues: affordability pressures, rising carrying costs, and shifting buyer demand. For everyday Americans and investors who follow housing as a key gauge of economic momentum, these patterns matter.
Sellers Are Exiting the Market at an Unusually High Rate
Housing activity typically cools in late fall, and it is common to see more listings removed as sellers wait out the slow season. This year is different.
Realtor.com found that delistings in October were up 45.5 percent year to date and nearly 38 percent higher than October 2024 based on data reported with a one month lag.
The platform labeled this an “unusually high rate,” noting it is the highest delisting year on record. Delistings began rising in June and have stayed elevated for five consecutive months. About 6 percent of active listings are being removed every month, a pattern normally seen only at the bottom of winter when buyer traffic is at its lowest.
The forces behind this shift are straightforward. Sellers who listed at aspirational prices in early 2025 have not been able to secure offers. Higher mortgage rates have pushed buyers to the sidelines, and even those still shopping are far more selective. Instead of cutting prices, many homeowners are choosing to withdraw their listings entirely.
Buyers Are Fleeing to More Affordable “Refuge Markets”
Another key change in the market is where buyers are choosing to shop. According to the report, more Americans are gravitating toward what Realtor.com calls refuge markets. These are cities that did not experience the massive price spikes seen in 2020 through 2022 and still offer relatively affordable entry points.
“Rising delistings and the growth of refuge markets capture the push and pull defining today’s housing market,” said Danielle Hale, chief economist at Realtor.com. “These dynamics reflect how higher rates and years of rapid price growth have rewritten the rules of engagement for both buyers and sellers.”
Hale expects next year to bring some relief. A combination of potentially lower mortgage rates and more consistent inventory could shift the market toward a more balanced environment where buyers and sellers regain firmer footing.
Refuge markets seeing strong price performance include:
- Grand Rapids, Michigan: Prices up 5.5 percent year over year
- St. Louis, Missouri: Prices up 5 percent
- Cleveland, Milwaukee, and Pittsburgh: Also among the top performers
Even with recent gains, homes in these markets remain 20 percent to 30 percent cheaper than the national median price, making them appealing to both first time buyers and long term investors.
High Priced Cities Are Seeing the Sharpest Pullbacks
Markets that experienced the biggest appreciation over the past five years are now seeing the steepest rise in delistings. Sellers in Miami, Denver, and Houston are pulling back at the highest rates compared with newly listed homes.
The national median list price in November was 0.4 percent lower than November 2024, the first meaningful year over year decline in a while. Yet prices are still 36 percent higher than in November 2019, before the pandemic era boom.
New listings were up just 1.7 percent from a year earlier, a modest increase that is nowhere near enough to offset buyer affordability challenges.
Contract Cancellations Are Surging Too
Another troubling sign: even when buyers and sellers do reach an agreement, deals are falling apart at elevated rates.
Redfin data shows 15 percent of home purchase contracts were canceled in October, up from 14 percent a year earlier and significantly higher than pre pandemic norms.
Some cities are experiencing a much deeper pullback:
- San Antonio: 21 percent of pending sales fell through
- Fort Lauderdale, Florida: 20 percent
- Fort Worth, Texas: 19.7 percent
- Las Vegas: 19.2 percent
- Jacksonville, Florida: 19.2 percent
These cancellations reflect the same pressures driving delistings: high mortgage rates, appraisal issues, weakening buyer budgets, and mounting uncertainty over the economic outlook.
Why This Matters for Homeowners
The U.S. housing market is one of the most important real economy indicators. When sellers pull listings and buyers cancel contracts at elevated levels, it typically signals stress that can ripple through broader sectors.
Key takeaways:
- Affordability remains the core issue. With mortgage rates still elevated compared to pre pandemic norms, many buyers are simply priced out.
- Sellers are clinging to pandemic era valuations. Rather than cut prices, they prefer to withdraw their homes.
- Refuge markets are becoming the new growth centers. Investors looking for above average appreciation may find stronger fundamentals in these mid sized, more affordable cities.
- Contract cancellations show buyer confidence is fragile. This can weigh on homebuilder stocks, mortgage lenders, and consumer spending tied to housing activity.
If mortgage rates decline meaningfully in 2026, the current freeze could thaw quickly. For now, buyers and sellers are locked in a stalemate, and the data shows both sides are increasingly willing to walk away.

