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The path forward is clear, Joanne Goguen writes, stay local, stay informed, and remain focused on delivering value at every step of the transaction.
Although much of the national conversation centers on a “market reset,” the New England real estate market is telling a different story — one defined by structural constraint, consistency and resilience.
Across New Hampshire, Maine and Vermont, inventory remains significantly below pre-pandemic levels — still more than 50 percent lower across much of the Northeast. New construction continues to lag, and while higher interest rates have tempered activity, they have not fundamentally shifted the supply-demand imbalance that defines our region.
As a result, home prices have remained stable with modest appreciation. Median prices are up approximately 3-5 percent year over year in most markets through early 2026, according to state Realtor association data. At the same time, transaction volume has softened modestly, with many areas reporting mid-single-digit declines in closed sales -driven largely by limited supply rather than a meaningful drop in buyer demand.
Days on market have normalized from the unprecedented pace of prior years but remain relatively stable, typically ranging from 30 to 70 days depending on location and price point. Well-positioned homes continue to attract strong interest and move efficiently.
Nationally, the picture looks very different. Inventory has risen, days on market have lengthened, and price reductions have become more common in many parts of the country, particularly across the Sunbelt.
In those markets, the conversation is about adjustment. In New England, it is about navigating a market defined by constraint.
But stability presents its own challenge. When the market isn’t creating urgency or momentum, performance, not conditions, becomes the differentiator.
Local expertise in a hyperlocal market
New England has always been a collection of hyperlocal markets, and that reality has only intensified.
Conditions can vary dramatically, not just by state, but by county, town and even neighborhood. Coastal markets behave differently than inland communities. Second-home markets move differently than primary-home markets. Commuter towns respond differently than rural areas.
In this environment, broad national narratives matter less than local insight.
Buyers and sellers are increasingly relying on agents who can interpret micro-trends — pricing sensitivity, shifts in buyer behavior and inventory dynamics that don’t always show up in the headlines. The ability to provide that level of insight has become a defining advantage.
Consistency is the new competitive advantage
In a market without dramatic swings, there is no shortcut to success.
The agents who are succeeding today are those who remain focused on fundamentals: consistent communication, proactive engagement and the ability to translate market conditions into clear, confident guidance.
Across our organization and throughout the New England market, one pattern is clear: Agents who stay engaged in their business and deeply connected to their local market continue to outperform.
Not because conditions are easier — but because consistency compounds. This is a market that rewards discipline.
Recognizing the people behind the performance
What stands out most in today’s environment is not just the stability of the market, but the professionalism required to perform within it.
Our agents and staff have remained focused on what matters most: serving clients at a high level, navigating complexity with confidence and delivering results without relying on market-driven momentum. They have adapted to higher interest rates, guided clients through limited inventory, and maintained a level of service that builds trust and long-term relationships.
In a market that doesn’t create easy wins, they have created their own. Their ability to remain steady, collaborative and client-focused continues to drive performance — not just within our organization, but across the broader New England real estate community.
A market that rewards focus
The absence of a “reset” does not mean the absence of opportunity — it simply shifts where that opportunity lives.
In New England, success is not driven by timing the market — it is driven by understanding it.
For agents and brokerage leaders alike, the path forward is clear: Stay local, stay informed, and remain focused on delivering value at every step of the transaction.
Because in a market defined by stability and constrained supply, it’s not the conditions that determine success — it’s the discipline, expertise and professionalism of the people operating within it.
And that is where New England continues to stand apart.
Joanne Goguen is the CEO and President of Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate The Masiello Group in New Hampshire, Vermont and Maine. Connect with her on LinkedIn or Facebook.
