From the Mortgage Point
Relisted Homes Hit Highest January Level Since 2016
Nearly 45,000 U.S. homes that were delisted in 2025 were relisted for sale in January 2026, the highest January figure dating back to 2016.
That figure is a record 3.6% of homes that were on the market in January, a new report from real estate brokerage Redfin revealed.
Home delistings rose last year because it was, and remains, a buyer’s market, Redfin said.
The brokerage noted that buyers retreated because of high housing costs and economic uncertainty, which meant sellers far outnumbered buyers. That gave negotiating power to buyers who were in the market, with some of them scoring homes that had lingered on the market for far less than the asking price, Redfin said.
Not all sellers were willing to negotiate, however.
Redfin noted that many chose to delist and try again later instead of cutting their price—especially if moving wasn’t urgent and/or they needed to get a certain price to break even after buying the home at the peak of the pandemic market.
Delistings hit a record high of 112,788 in December.
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More than a third (36.1%) of homes relisted in January were listed for less than their original list price (the price they first listed at last time), Redfin noted.
That’s the highest January share in records dating back to 2016, Redfin said.
“If you delisted your home last year after cutting the price from $550,000 to $525,000, don’t try to relist it now at $550,000,” said W.J. Eulberg, a Redfin Premier real estate agent in Milwaukee. “Buyers are savvy. They know how long your home has been on the market, how many times it has been delisted and relisted, and your original asking price.”