Minneapolis home buyers roared back last month, outpacing many suburban sales gains as mortgage rates dipped to new lows, making it the busiest October for home buyers in nearly two decades.
Last month there were 6,249 pending sales across the 16-county metro area, a nearly 22% increase over last year, according to a monthly sale report from the Minneapolis Area Realtors. In Minneapolis alone, pending sales were up 47% and in St. Paul sales increased almost 30%.
Most suburbs were popular with buyers, as well, but sales gains were generally more tempered than in the core cities.
"Despite some earlier challenges, Minneapolis and St. Paul are still seeing strong sales growth," said Linda Rogers, president of Minneapolis Area Realtors and a Twin Cities agent. "They're still quite competitive."
Sellers were also active in the core cities, with new listings up 35.5% in Minneapolis and nearly 23% in St. Paul. Both were far above the metro as a whole, which saw new listings increase 8.3%. At the end of the month there were only 8,080 active listings, a 34.5% decline compared with last year.
The October sales surge put to rest, at least for now, concerns about an urban exodus. Though many Twin Cities did decamp to the suburbs and to more rural areas to escape rising crime and high-density living in the suburbs, there were plenty of buyers to take their place. That was especially true for first-time buyers who might have been renting or living with their parents, but decided it was time to take advantage of falling mortgage rates.
On Thursday, Freddie Mac said the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage slipped to 2.72%, the 13th time this year rates fell to a new low.
Low rates are helping drive sales, but the battle for a dwindling number of for-sale homes is also boosting prices. The median price of all sales last month was $315,000, a 12.5% increase over last year. That median price has been increasing double-digits all summer, eroding some of the additional buying power that's come with low mortgage rates, and there's growing concern that many would-be buyers are getting priced out of the market.