International Economic

US home‑price growth loses steam in March amid rising mortgage rates

By Iain Gilbert

Date: Tuesday 26 May 2026

(Sharecast News) - US home‑price growth slowed in March, according to the latest S&P/Case‑Shiller data, with the national index rising 0.7% year‑on‑year, down from 0.8% in February.
S&P said more than half of the 20 major US housing markets recorded annual declines, pointing to a "broadening and deepening housing slowdown". With consumer inflation running roughly 3.3% in March, home values fell in real terms for the tenth consecutive month.

Chicago remained the strongest market with a 6.1% annual gain, ahead of New York at 4% and Cleveland at 3%, while Seattle was the weakest performer, down 2.5% year‑on‑year, with Denver, Tampa, Dallas and Phoenix also posting declines. Los Angeles and Washington also slipped into negative territory.

S&P highlighted the widening divergence between regions, noting that Midwest and Northeast markets were still seeing modest growth while much of the Sun Belt and West continued to weaken.

On a monthly basis, the national index rose 0.7% before seasonal adjustment, while the ten‑city and 20‑city composites gained 1.2% and 1%, respectively. After seasonal adjustment, however, the national and 20‑city indices both fell 0.2%, and the 10‑city edged down 0.03%. Over the past six months, national prices have risen just 0.3%, matching the prior half‑year and signalling a market "nearly at a standstill".

S&P also noted that mortgage rates have resumed climbing, with the 30‑year fixed rate rising back to around 6.4% by late March, further tightening affordability for buyers.













Reporting by Iain Gilbert at Sharecast.com

Article Archive

Free Membership To Digital Look

Discover the full range of Investor's Tools and Services from Digital Look - voted 'Best Research & Information Provider 2007' by Investors Chronicle.

Click here to see what you have free access to.

Top of Page