Every year, the Austin market follows a rhythm. Most people miss it entirely.
The Real Estate Calendar:
When the Austin Market Moves,
and Why
Shipman Partners Real Estate • Austin, Texas • 2026 • 18 min read
Every January, the Austin real estate market does the same thing. Sales volume drops by roughly 40 percent from the June peak. Days on market climb toward 80 or 90 days on average. The phones get quieter. Listings sit longer. Sellers get more flexible.
Then spring arrives, and the entire market shifts in a matter of weeks.
This pattern is not new. It has played out with remarkable consistency in the Austin MSA through market booms, corrections, rate cycles, and population surges. The specific numbers change year to year, but the seasonal shape stays the same. Understanding it gives both buyers and sellers a real advantage, especially in a market where timing a transaction well can be worth tens of thousands of dollars.
This guide walks through each phase of the year, anchored in actual Unlock MLS data from 2016 through early 2026. We skip 2020 through 2022 intentionally. The pandemic years produced conditions that have no parallel in normal market cycles and would skew any seasonal baseline beyond usefulness.
The Year at a Glance
The charts below show what the Austin market actually does across a typical year, based on Unlock MLS closed sales data from 2023, 2024, and 2025. Three consistent patterns emerge regardless of overall market conditions: volume spikes sharply in late spring and summer, days on market compress significantly during that window, and both metrics reverse as fall arrives.
The Seasonal Snapshot
| Period | Activity Level | Typical Monthly Sales | Avg DOM Range | Sale/List Ratio | Leverage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nov – Jan | Low | 1,500 – 2,000 | 80 – 90+ days | ~94–95% | Buyer |
| Jan – Feb | Building | 1,800 – 2,200 | 75 – 88 days | ~95–96% | Buyer |
| Feb – Apr | Moderate-High | 2,200 – 2,800 | 60 – 75 days | ~96–97% | Shifting |
| May – Aug | Peak | 2,800 – 3,500+ | 50 – 62 days | ~97–99% | Seller |
| Aug – Oct | Variable | 2,400 – 3,000 | 62 – 80 days | ~96–97% | Depends on Year |
November through January: The Holiday Pause
The data is unambiguous here. Monthly closed sales in the Austin MSA drop to their lowest point of the year between November and January, typically landing in the 1,500 to 2,000 range, compared to 3,000 or more during the summer peak. That is not a mild softening. It is a near-halving of transaction volume.
The reasons are predictable. Holiday spending competes directly with down payment savings. Family travel, school breaks, and year-end financial planning all pull attention away from real estate decisions. No one wants to schedule a showing between Thanksgiving and New Year's, and most sellers know it. The result is a market where motivated sellers quietly wait, serious buyers face almost no competition, and days on market stretch to their longest point of the year.
In 2025, average days on market peaked around 88 days in January before beginning their spring decline. In 2026, the January average was even higher, around 90 days, with a median of approximately 68 days. Compare that to the summer months when the average falls toward 55 and the median drops below 35. The seasonal spread is roughly 35 days on average and even more at the median level. That difference represents real negotiating leverage for buyers who show up in winter.
Austin MSA Unlock MLS, 2023–2025 pattern
January 2025 Unlock MLS 2025
Winter Average Unlock MLS 2024–2025
What This Means for Buyers
Winter buyers face almost no competition. Sellers who listed months ago and have not gone under contract are carrying costs, stress, and growing flexibility. A home sitting 90 days in January is far more negotiable than the same home was in June. Buyers who are pre-approved and genuinely ready to move can find their best leverage of the entire year in this window, if they are willing to look past the slower pace and shorter daylight hours.
What This Means for Sellers
If you have flexibility on timing, do not list in November or December. The buyer pool is thinner, days on market will be longer, and the sale-to-list ratio will reflect that reality. A late January or early February launch positions you ahead of the spring inventory surge while catching buyers who are already preparing to move. If circumstances require you to list now, presentation and pricing have to be precise, because you cannot rely on volume to overcome a weak first impression.
Section 03January through February: The Recovery and Rebuild
January is when the market starts thinking again. Holiday spending has wound down. New year goals are forming. Buyers who spent November and December mentally parked are beginning to run numbers, meet with lenders, and browse listings with real intent rather than casual curiosity.
The transaction data does not fully reflect this yet. Closings in January and February are still relatively low, because deals signed in February typically close in March or April. But under-contract activity and lender pre-approval volume begin picking up meaningfully in this window, which is why listings that enter the market in late January or early February often get more traction than the monthly volume figures alone would suggest.
Austin benefits here from Texas's mild winters. Unlike northern markets where January showings require buyers to negotiate snow-covered driveways and frozen curb appeal, Austin in late January and February is increasingly pleasant, with temperatures often in the 60s and 70s. That reduces the weather friction that suppresses activity in colder markets, which is one reason Austin's spring market tends to build earlier than the national average.
NAR's 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers found that first-time buyers now represent just 21% of the market nationally, the lowest share since NAR began tracking this figure in 1981. The median first-time buyer age has risen to 40 years old, and the median down payment has climbed to 10%. These buyers are not impulsive. January and February are typically when they are finishing their financial preparation, watching rate movement, and waiting for a tax refund that may close the gap on their closing cost needs.
The Tax Refund Effect
Tax refund season is a legitimate real estate catalyst that gets overlooked in most market analysis. For buyers who have been close to ready but not quite there, a refund of a few thousand dollars can cover closing costs, pay off the credit card balance affecting their debt-to-income ratio, or simply provide the psychological confirmation that the timing is right. NAR research has documented the refund-to-purchase pipeline among first-time and move-up buyers, particularly in the February through April window when refunds arrive and spring listings begin to build.
February through April: The Market Wakes Up
This is the most consequential window in the real estate calendar for both buyers and sellers, and it is also the most misread. Most people think "spring market" means May. The data says it starts earlier than that.
In the 2026 data through April, monthly closed sales climbed steadily from approximately 1,500 in January to nearly 2,800 by April, with days on market declining from around 90 down toward 67 over the same period. That compression is happening right now, in real time, before the summer peak has even arrived.
Jan – Apr 2026 Unlock MLS 2026 YTD
Jan – Apr 2026 Unlock MLS 2026 YTD
YTD 2026 Unlock MLS 2026 YTD
YTD 2026 Unlock MLS 2026 YTD
The spring buildup is driven by a convergence of factors that are nearly impossible to replicate at any other time of year. Families who held off on listing or buying to avoid disrupting the school year are back in the market. Corporate relocation cycles are in full swing, with employees needing to be settled before summer. In-migration from other states, which remains a consistent driver of Austin demand, concentrates in the spring as people time moves around job start dates and school enrollment deadlines.
Sellers who list in February or early March are catching a buyer pool that is motivated and active, but not yet competing against the full spring inventory wave that arrives in April and May. That window is real and it closes quickly.
University of Texas semester cycles, major employer relocation packages from the North Austin tech corridor, and the city's unusually high in-migration rate all accelerate Austin's spring market relative to the national baseline. Families arriving from California, the Pacific Northwest, and the Northeast typically try to close before AISD and surrounding district school years begin in late August, which means they start their search in March and April and need to be under contract by June at the latest.
Thinking about buying this spring?
Let's talk about what the current market looks like for your budget and timeline.May through August: Peak Season
The data makes this window unmistakable. Monthly closed sales in the Austin MSA peak somewhere between 3,000 and 3,500 during June and July in typical years. Days on market compress to their lowest point. The sale-to-list ratio climbs to 97, 98, sometimes 99 percent. In 2016, when the market was tighter, the median sale-to-list ratio briefly exceeded 100 percent during the summer months.
Nationally, NAR research confirms the same pattern at scale: over 18,000 existing homes change hands per day in June, and homes sold during peak season command a roughly 16 percent price premium compared to homes sold in December through February. That premium is the market's way of expressing what happens when maximum buyer demand meets a fixed supply of desirable homes.
June/July Peak Unlock MLS 2023–2025 pattern
Summer 2025 Unlock MLS 2025
Summer Peak Unlock MLS 2024–2025
Summer 2016 Unlock MLS 2016
The School Schedule Effect
The primary driver is school calendars, and it is more mechanical than most people realize. A family that wants their children enrolled in a new school district when AISD and surrounding districts open in late August needs to be in their home before that date. Working backward: closing by late July requires being under contract by mid-June, which requires actively searching by April or May at the latest. Multiply that logic across thousands of families in the metro and you have the structural engine that powers the summer surge every single year.
The NAR's 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers notes that the share of buyers with children under 18 has dropped to a historic low of 24%, compared to 58% in 1985. The summer cycle is still dominant, but the market is now also driven by single buyers, retirees, and investors who are timing their moves around factors other than school calendars. That broader buyer base means the summer surge is more durable than the school-schedule explanation alone would suggest.
What This Means for Sellers
This is the window you are working toward if you have flexibility. Presentation and pricing need to be dialed in before you list, because competition among buyers is highest and the window for capturing that demand is shorter than it feels. A home that misses its first two weeks on the market in June does not get that momentum back.
What This Means for Buyers
More inventory, more competition. Bidding situations and escalation clauses are most common in May through July. Buyers who are pre-approved, clear on their priorities, and prepared to move decisively tend to do significantly better than those still working through their decision-making process. This is the window where showing up unprepared is the most expensive mistake in the real estate calendar.
Section 06August through October: The Unpredictable Quarter
In a typical year, this is where the market begins to cool. The school-driven buyer deadline has passed. Families who needed to move have moved. Listings that did not sell in June and July start accumulating days on market, and sellers who held firm on price through the summer begin to reassess.
The fall window can be excellent for buyers for exactly this reason. Sellers who have been on market since spring are measurably more flexible. Homes carrying 90 or 120 days on market by September often see genuine price adjustments that reflect real negotiating room, not just cosmetic reductions. And unlike the winter slowdown, fall still has reasonable inventory levels, which means buyers have choices rather than just leverage.
The Texas Real Estate Research Center documented an unusual pattern in their October 2024 Texas Housing Insight report. Rather than the expected post-summer decline, statewide single-family sales increased 8.8% in October to 28,859 transactions. In the Unlock MLS data for 2024, the closed sales curve shows a dip in August followed by a second surge in October and November, instead of the typical straight decline. San Antonio led with a 17% October gain, Houston was up 12%, and Austin gained 7%. The cause was the Federal Reserve's rate cuts beginning in September 2024, which unlocked a wave of buyers who had been sidelined by elevated mortgage rates through the summer.
This is the core lesson of the August to October window: the seasonal baseline is a starting point, not a forecast. Rate movements, major employer announcements, and shifts in consumer confidence can override the typical fall cooling in ways that are difficult to predict but consequential if you are in the middle of a transaction.
What This Means for Sellers
Price accurately heading into fall. Buyers who are active in September and October know they have leverage, and they will use it. A home priced for June market conditions in September is likely to sit through winter. That said, watch rate news closely: a Fed cut or a meaningful drop in the 10-year treasury yield can reignite buyer activity in days, as 2024 demonstrated.
What This Means for Buyers
Fall is often the most underrated window in the calendar. Sellers are flexible, inventory is still present, and you can close before the holiday freeze sets in. The risk is the rate wildcard: if rates drop, competition returns quickly. Acting in September or early October, before a potential rate catalyst, can give you the best of both the off-peak leverage and the pre-surge inventory.
When the Pattern Breaks
Interest rate decisions are the single biggest override of seasonal patterns. 2022 proved this in one direction: the Fed's aggressive rate hikes compressed what should have been a strong summer market into a visible pullback. 2024 proved it in the other direction: rate cuts in the fall produced transaction volume that defied the usual post-summer decline. Any year with a significant rate move will behave differently from the seasonal baseline.
Major employer announcements affect Austin specifically and significantly. When a large company announces an Austin campus, a hiring expansion, or a corporate headquarters relocation, it creates a wave of buyer demand that arrives on its own timeline, not the seasonal one. The North Austin semiconductor corridor, the Domain employment cluster, and the ongoing growth of the defense and space technology sectors all generate relocation demand that operates outside the school calendar cycle.
Year-end tax strategy creates a small but real December uptick in certain years. Investors and business owners with capital gains considerations sometimes close transactions in December specifically for tax timing purposes. TRERC data showed a stronger-than-expected fourth quarter for Texas home sales in 2024, driven in part by this dynamic alongside the rate environment.
Weather events can freeze the market temporarily and cause deferred demand to release in the following weeks. Winter Storm Uri in February 2021 is the most recent Austin example: a market that should have been building spring momentum instead stalled for several weeks before rebounding sharply once conditions normalized.
Section 08The Numbers: 2016 to 2026
Looking across the full available dataset makes the seasonal pattern clearer and puts current market conditions in context. The table below uses Unlock MLS annual data for the Austin MSA, excluding 2020 through 2022 as outlined above.
| Year | Total Sales | Median Price | Avg DOM | Median DOM | Avg Sale/List | Total Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | 31,974 | $281,000 | 46 | 18 | 98.6% | $11.17B |
| 2017 | 33,165 | $295,000 | 50 | 22 | 98.4% | $12.23B |
| 2018 | 34,113 | $307,300 | 52 | 24 | 98.4% | $13.04B |
| 2019 | 36,499 | $315,000 | 52 | 23 | 98.7% | $14.44B |
| 2023 | 30,382 | $451,855 | 63 | 36 | 97.4% | $17.57B |
| 2024 | 30,837 | $440,900 | 67 | 41 | 97.4% | $17.59B |
| 2025 | 29,520 | $435,000 | 73 | 48 | 97.2% | $16.96B |
| 2026 (Jan–Apr) | 8,898 | $420,000 | 82 | 52 | 97.3% | $5.01B |
The pre-pandemic baseline years tell a consistent story. From 2016 through 2019, average days on market ranged from 46 to 52 days, median DOM stayed between 18 and 24 days, and sale-to-list ratios held at 98.4 to 98.7 percent. Transaction volume grew every single year, from 31,974 sales in 2016 to a pre-pandemic peak of 36,499 in 2019. That is the market operating under normal, healthy conditions before rate spikes and pandemic-era dynamics reshaped it.
The post-pandemic picture looks different. Average DOM has risen every year since 2023: from 63 to 67 to 73 days, with the 2026 YTD figure of 82 days representing the highest point in the full dataset. The median DOM tells the same story: 36 days in 2023, climbing to 52 days through April 2026. Homes are sitting roughly twice as long today as they did during the 2016 to 2019 baseline.
At the same time, the sale-to-list ratio has remained remarkably stable across all four years, hovering right around 97.2 to 97.4 percent. Sellers are accepting roughly 97 cents on the dollar on average, which has not changed materially despite the inventory buildup. What has changed is how long it takes to get there.
*2026 figure reflects Jan–Apr YTD average. Includes winter months which carry the highest DOM of the year. Full-year average will be lower as spring and summer compression takes hold. Source: Unlock MLS.
The 2016 comparison is the most instructive long-term data point in this table. Ten years ago, the Austin MSA saw 31,974 sales at a median price of $281,000, with an average DOM of just 46 days and a median of 18 days. The median sale-to-list ratio briefly exceeded 100% during the summer peak. Today's market operates at a fundamentally different price level with significantly more time required to complete a transaction. The seasonal shape, however, is nearly identical to what it was in 2016.
Section 09How to Use This Information
Seasonal timing is one tool among several. It will not overcome a bad price or a poorly prepared listing. But for buyers and sellers who are already doing the fundamentals right, understanding the calendar can meaningfully change their outcome.
- Get pre-approved before February. The spring market moves faster than most buyers expect, and arriving unprepared costs you houses.
- January and early February are the lowest-competition windows of the year. Sellers who have been listed since fall are often far more flexible than their asking price suggests.
- In peak season (May through July), come in clean. Pre-approval, minimal contingencies, and fast response times matter more in this window than any other. Hesitation is expensive.
- Watch rate news in fall. A Fed cut or rate drop can reignite buyer demand within days. The window of reduced fall competition can close faster than most people expect.
- First-time buyers: time your tax refund intentionally. A refund arriving in February or March can close the gap on closing cost readiness and position you for the spring market.
- Late February to mid-March is generally the optimal listing window. You catch motivated buyers ahead of the spring inventory surge, with less seller competition than April or May.
- If you missed spring, fall is not lost. Rate-sensitive buyers re-enter the market quickly when rates soften. Monitor the macro environment before deciding to pull a listing.
- Price for the market you are in, not the market you remember. Avg DOM has risen every year since 2023. A 2022-era pricing strategy in 2026 is a guaranteed way to sit.
- Presentation determines your first two weeks. The data shows that homes which do not go under contract in the first 14 days face a statistically longer and more discounted path to closing.
- Watch your monthly DOM data. When active listings rise and median DOM climbs, the window is shifting before you feel it in your showing count.
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All Austin MSA residential sales data, including total sales volume, median sold price, average and median days on market, sale-to-list ratios, and sold dollar volume, sourced from Unlock MLS annual and monthly reports for 2016, 2023, 2024, 2025, and January through April 2026. Years 2020 through 2022 excluded as noted due to pandemic-era market conditions not representative of normal seasonal cycles. National housing seasonality data from the National Association of Realtors (NAR) Economists' Outlook blog, "Navigating the Housing Market: A Seasonal Perspective," April 2024. NAR 2025 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers (survey period July 2024 through June 2025). Texas statewide fall 2024 anomaly data from the Texas Real Estate Research Center (TRERC) at Texas A&M University, Texas Housing Insight, October 2024. Market conditions change. This post does not replace a current comparative market analysis or individualized professional advice.