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Ohio Housing Markets Tighten As Inventory Drops 24% Below National Average

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Ohio recorded 2.1 months of supply in the week ending Nov. 28, compared to 2.8 nationally, with Columbus leading price cuts at 51.6% while maintaining the state’s highest median price at $384,900. The statewide data reflects activity across Ohio’s 10 tracked metros, with Columbus, Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, and Dayton representing the largest markets by volume.

The state’s median list price reached $279,000, up 5.3% from $265,000 a year earlier, while homes spent a median 49 days on market, unchanged from Nov. 29, 2024. Active inventory climbed to 18,390 homes, a 22.1% increase year-over-year, as 2,212 homes were absorbed during the week against 1,696 new listings.

Inventory and pace

Ohio’s housing supply remains constrained at 2.1 months, positioning the state 24% below the national average of 2.8 months. The state recorded 18,390 active listings, with 45.1% featuring price reductions—a level indicating softer demand compared to the typical 30-35% range. Meanwhile, 8.1% of actives were relisted properties, within normal parameters.

Homes moved at a median pace of 49 days, significantly faster than the national median of 77 days. Weekly absorption totaled 2,212 homes, down 5.7% from 2,345 during the same week in 2024, while new listings reached 1,696 units.

Pricing

The statewide median list price of $279,000 represents a 5.3% annual gain and sits 34.4% below the national median of $425,000. Price per square foot reached $162, compared to $210 nationally. The high percentage of price cuts at 45.1% suggests sellers are adjusting expectations to meet market conditions, while only 1% of listings saw price increases.

How it compares

Ohio’s market operates in slight seller-favorable conditions, with tighter inventory and faster sales pace than national benchmarks. The state’s 2.1 months of supply falls well below the national 2.8 months, while homes sell 28 days faster than the U.S. median. However, the elevated share of price reductions at 45.1% exceeds typical levels, indicating pricing pressure despite limited inventory.

How metros compare

Columbus price cuts at 51.6% exceeded Toledo’s 38.7% by 13 percentage points, despite Columbus commanding an 83% higher median price at $384,900 versus Toledo’s $209,900. Akron homes moved fastest at 42 days on market, while Columbus took 56 days compared to the state median of 49 days. All tracked metros maintained seller-favorable conditions with months of supply ranging from 1.4 to 2.9.

What to watch

Monitor whether Ohio’s 45.1% price reduction rate moderates toward the 30-35% baseline, which would signal firming demand. Track if the gap between weekly absorption (2,212) and new listings (1,696) narrows, potentially easing the state’s tight 2.1 months of supply. Watch Columbus pricing dynamics, where the combination of highest prices and highest reduction rates suggests a market seeking equilibrium.

HousingWire used HW Data to source this story. For deeper insights into your local market dynamics, generate housing market reports here. For enterprise clients looking to license the same market data at a larger scale, visit HW Data.