U.S. Home Prices Rose 1.9% in June, Says S&P Case-Shiller

New York, NY, August 26, 2025-- The U.S. National Index for home prices rose 1.9% in June, according to the S&P Cotality Case-Shiller Indices, while the 20-City Composite and the Ten-City Composite continue to display growth of 2.1% and 2.6%, respectively.

"June's results mark the continuation of a decisive shift in the housing market, with national home prices rising just 1.9% year-over-year-the slowest pace since the summer of 2023" said Nicholas Godec, CFA, CAIA, CIPM, head of fixed income tradables & commodities at S&P Dow Jones Indices. "What makes this deceleration particularly noteworthy is the underlying pattern: The modest 1.9% annual gain masks significant volatility, with the first half of the period showing declining prices (-0.6%) that were more than offset by a 2.5% surge in the most recent six months, suggesting the housing market experienced a meaningful inflection point around the start of 2025.

"The geographic divergence has become the story's defining characteristic. New York's 7.0% annual gain stands as a stark outlier, leading all markets by a wide margin, followed by Chicago (6.1%) and Cleveland (4.5%). This represents a complete reversal of pandemic-era patterns, where traditional industrial centers now outpace former darlings like Phoenix (-0.1%), Tampa (-2.4%), and Dallas 

(-1.0%). Tampa's decline marks the worst performance among all tracked metros, while several Western markets including San Diego (-0.6%) and San Francisco (-2.0%) have joined the negative column-a remarkable transformation from their earlier boom years.

"For the first time in years, home prices are failing to keep pace with broader inflation,” Godec observed. “From June 2024 to June 2025, the Consumer Price Index climbed 2.7%, substantially outpacing the 1.9% gain in national home prices. This reversal is historically significant: During the pandemic surge, home values were climbing at double-digit annual rates that far exceeded inflation, building substantial real wealth for homeowners. Now, American housing wealth has actually declined in inflation-adjusted terms over the past year-a notable erosion that reflects the market's new equilibrium.”


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