The biggest home price gains since the Great Recession are drawing thousands of would-be sellers — underwater and otherwise — back into the housing market at a time when buyers are struggling to find available homes.
Case-Shiller reported this week that Twin Cities home prices posted the sixth-largest gain among the 20 metro areas it tracks. Those rising values drove a recent 20 percent gain in new home listings, giving the area market a potent and much-needed boost.
"The phones are ringing again," said Dan Arrigoni, president of U.S. Bank Home Mortgage, noting that homeowners are regaining a sense of confidence they haven't felt in years."We all know someone with a home that's sold in a day with three or four offers."
The median home sale price for the Twin Cities metro area in April rose 12.2 percent to $182,312 — the highest since September 2008, according to the Minneapolis Area Association of Realtors. Home prices have been on the rise for much of the past two years, but have accelerated in recent months as the dwindling supply of available homes is causing buyers to pay top dollar for move-in ready properties.
The shift is spurring many homeowners — even those who once owed more than their house was worth — to test the market. Todd and Laura Bjorgo doubted that they'd ever sell their two-bedroom townhouse in Cottage Grove for the amount they still owed on the property.
But with an agent telling them the house is worth $30,000 more than last year, they are painting, cleaning and sprucing up the yard in hopes of hitting the market next week.
"I'm just scrambling to get everything ready," said Todd Bjorgo, 42, who wants to upgrade to a house with a yard and more space for his two toddlers. "With prices rising, everyone else is going to be doing the same thing."
Higher home values have helped those underwater, in particular, because they're now able to command prices that will satisfy what they owe on their mortgages, said John Schuster, a top listing agent with Coldwell Banker Burnet. During much of the downturn, 80 percent of his business consisted of short sales that helped underwater owners sell their homes. But such distressed sales now account for a smaller share of his business.