real estate, Detroit, Miami, housing market

Detroit Passes Miami As The Fastest-Appreciating U.S. Housing Market

Metro Detroit has bested Miami in the housing market...find out how!


Miami’s long reign as the nation’s hottest housing market is over, with Detroit now at the top of home appreciation growth.

Fortune magazine reported that home prices shot up 5.2% year-over-year in November 2023, the most substantial annual growth rate recorded since January. 

Detroit, an auto manufacturing hub until the 1970s, posted the highest year-over-year gain at an 8.7% increase, knocking Miami from its 16-month run in the top spot of highest-appreciating cities.

The news is significant for the Motor City, considering that as recently as 2010, homes were being sold in Detroit for $1, and one in five houses in the city was empty. Detroit’s downtown area has been revitalized in recent years, with a construction boom leading to a rise in green spaces, businesses, and housing. 

Miami didn’t fall too far, however, landing in second place at 8.3%. Charlotte, North Carolina, finished in third place at 7.4%.

The COVID-19 pandemic caused millions of people to relocate while keeping their jobs, as working from home became commonplace for computer-based workers. One of the most popular places Americans relocated to was the Sunshine State. 

Business Insider reports that Florida’s population jumped by 1.9% from 2021 to 2022 — a net gain of 417,000 new residents. It was the first year since 1957 that Florida held the distinction of being America’s fastest-growing state. 

As a result, housing demand skyrocketed there, and in September 2023 Zillow named Florida the second-most valuable real estate market in the U.S. The top housing markets have stayed hot through the pandemic, defying the belief that home prices would drop as interest rates continue to climb.

“This continued strength remains remarkable amid the nation’s affordability crunch but speaks to the pent-up demand that is driving home prices higher,” Selma Hepp, CoreLogic chief economist, said, according to Fortune. “Markets where the prolonged inventory shortage has been exacerbated by the lack of new homes for sale recorded notable price gains over the course of 2023.”

CoreLogic credits gains in home values to job gains thanks to the Inflation Reduction Act and the CHIPs Act as “helping to spur housing demand.”


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