Before you replace anything, read this! Click here
Despite the hordes of buyers hoping to take advantage of low mortgage interest rates, builders still aren’t putting up enough new homes to meet the demand.
With mortgage rates hitting bargain-basement lows, monthly existing home sales shot up 11% in June, says a recent report.
Builders, worried about the election and the world economy, applied for fewer new-home construction permits in June. And fewer homes means higher prices.
Which U.S. cities are seeing the biggest monthly increases—and decreases—in the costs of renting a home? Well, the results are a bit unexpected.
The major credit reporting agencies have a big change in the works that could bolster a lot of people’s credit scores.
Foreign buyers spent less on U.S. properties over the past year, a trend that analysts expect to continue. Heres what that means for home hunters.
Pending home sales were down in May as the home buying frenzy that has swept the nation was tempered by the dearth of affordable properties on the market.
Home price increases may finally be starting to slow down. The key word here is “starting.”
Renters better start downsizing their worldly goods. The average size of a brand-new apartment this year is 8% smaller than it was in 2006, says a new report.
Despite the growing desperation of buyers to secure their dream homes, sales and prices of newly constructed residences fell in May, says a new report.