“I think that while a lot of times it's easy to look at the last five years and feel like that is the way it is, that's normal; if you look on a historical timeline, I think what we're actually seeing right now is a normalizing of the market,” Cottar said at the June 10 Houston Northwest Chamber of Commerce luncheon. “We're getting it back to something that's more sustainable because those 3.5% interest rates ... and those price points of $50,000 and $100,000 over asking—those things are not sustainable.”Also of note
During the first three months of 2025, 45% of Spring households could afford to buy a median-priced home, compared to 34% in Harris County, according to HAR's Q1 Housing and Rental Affordability Report released May 8.
In the first quarter, the median price of a home in the Spring area was $252,990, with a minimum qualifying annual household income of $78,800. Harris County’s median home was $325,000, and its minimum qualifying income was $100,400, according to the report.
Out of the 19 submarkets within Harris County, Spring was tied for the third-most affordable area. Alief and Humble were the only two submarkets where more people could afford the median home price, HAR reported.