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Quarterly Market Report

Hurricane housing market
Q4 2025

Q4 was the strongest growth quarter of 2025 on dollar terms. Sales up thirty four percent, volume up forty six, median up twelve, average up nine. Time on market tightened, the high tier returned, and the pipeline opens 2026 deep. The Washington County MLS, the honest read.

Hurricane single family, Q4 2025

The numbers,
year over year.

Every figure below is Hurricane single-family residential for Q4 2025, set against Q4 2024. Same period, one year apart.

Scope and source

Hurricane single-family residential. Q4 2025 compared to Q4 2024. Closed transactions only.

Based on information from the Washington County Board of REALTORS® Multiple Listing Service for the period 10/1/2025 through 12/31/2025.

Median sale price
$580,500 +12% YoY

Up from $515,443 last Q4. The fall quarter's median came in twelve percent above last fall's.

Sold dollar volume
$75.7M +46%

Total single-family dollar volume closed in Q4, up from $51.7M last Q4. The strongest growth quarter of 2025 in dollar terms.

Active inventory
456 +39%

Homes available at quarter end, up from 328 last Q4. Shelf still deep but ending well off the summer high.

Days on market
70 18 days faster

Median days from list to under contract for the quarter, down from 88 last Q4. The clock tightened twenty percent.

New listings
163 +24%

New single-family listings during the quarter, up from 131 last Q4. Sellers stayed active through the fall.

Percent of list price
98% Down 1 point

Sellers closed at about ninety-eight percent of list, same as last Q4. Across all residential, the average Hurricane home traded roughly twelve thousand under list.

Average sale price
$688,170 +9%

Up from $630,353 last Q4. Average climbed nine percent on the high-tier return.

Under contract
103 +22%

Single-family homes under contract at quarter end, up from 84 a year ago. Pipeline opens 2026 in strong shape.

Closed sales
110 +34%

Single-family homes closed in Q4, up from 82 a year ago. Sales count grew thirty four percent.

The full picture

Every metric, Q4 2025 vs Q4 2024

Metric Q4 2024 Q4 2025 Change
Median sale price $515,443 $580,500 up 12%
Average sale price $630,353 $688,170 up 9%
Closed sales 82 110 up 34%
Sold dollar volume $51.7M $75.7M up 46%
Active inventory 328 456 up 39%
New listings 131 163 up 24%
Under contract 84 103 up 22%
Days on market (sold) 88 70 down 18 days
Days to close 120 106 down 11%
Avg days active listings sit 164 160 down 2%
Percent of list price 99% 98% down 1 point
The picture

Hurricane, the quarter at a glance

Median sale price trend

Median single-family sale price by month. Each line is a year; the current year is highlighted in sky blue. Watch how prices move with the seasons and where this year sits against prior years.

$660k $585k $510k Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 2025
Median price, year over year

Q4 2025 against Q4 2024, single-family median sale price.

$515,443 Q4 2024 $580,500 Q4 2025
Q4 at a glance

The strongest growth quarter of the year.

Q4 ended the year as the loudest growth quarter on dollar terms. Sales count grew thirty four percent year over year, dollar volume up forty six percent, the median up twelve percent, the average up nine. The quarter's arc told the story: October absorbed the summer shelf at the tightest dollar gap in the year, November brought the high tier back in volume, December closed loud on a year-end push. The combination produced the cleanest quarter of the year for sellers.

The supply story eased through the quarter. Active inventory ended thirty nine percent above last Q4, but the absorption rate finally kept pace with new listings. Time on market dropped twenty percent across the quarter. The pipeline at year end ran twenty two percent above last Q4, which loads January well. For the short read on where your home would price into this, my what is my home worth in Hurricane page is the fastest place to start.

What changed since last year

Everything moved in sellers' favor.

Q4 is the cleanest year-over-year read in this entire dataset. Four of the four headline metrics moved in seller-favorable directions: sales up thirty four percent, volume up forty six, the median up twelve, the average up nine. Time on market dropped twenty percent, and the percent-of-list ratio held at ninety eight. The growth came from absolute volume, not just base effect; this Q4 was the busiest fall in this dataset.

The internal mix moved up. The average climbed faster than the median through November and December, which says the upper tier returned to the table after its summer pause and stayed at the table through year end. The middle of the market never stopped transacting, so the combination produced both volume growth and a richer mix.

If you are selling

A quarter that rewarded the prepared seller.

Q4 produced the best combination of buyer demand, manageable competition, and pricing discipline in the entire 2025 dataset. The well-prepared, correctly-priced home moved at faster pace than the summer or spring. Pricing discipline held, the high tier transacted, and the dollar gap on the typical home tightened. If you were waiting through the noise of summer for a window that rewarded a clean launch, this quarter was it.

If you are weighing a January launch, the pipeline at year-end opens 2026 deeper than 2025 opened. See how I take a Hurricane home to market on my sell your Hurricane home page, and the net sheet calculator turns the headline into a real net.

Get your pricing band
If you are buying

A buyer's window that closed during the quarter.

For Hurricane buyers, Q4 was the inflection point. The summer's deep shelf gave way to faster absorption, the time on market dropped, and the pricing discipline held. By December, the leverage that defined July and August was meaningfully reduced. Serious buyers who acted in October closed at the tightest dollar gap of the year. Those who waited into December found a shelf that was still deep but moving faster than expected.

The pocket-by-pocket variation widened through the quarter. The high-end pockets like Sand Hollow Resort and Firerock picked up pace through November. Mid-tier pockets like Falcon Ridge and Pecan Valley ran a steadier pace throughout.

The season

Fall the way it is supposed to feel.

Hurricane's Q4 normally trades through three phases: October's busy close, November's pre-holiday slowdown with serious buyers, December's quiet holiday rhythm. The 2025 Q4 followed that template but at louder volume. The snowbirds arrived and started transacting, the retirees finalized year-end moves, and the high-tier vacation-home shoppers returned to the table after the summer pause.

Looking ahead

Q1 2026 opens on the deepest pipeline in this dataset.

The pipeline at quarter end is the deepest year-opening setup in this dataset. January closings should land at strong pace, the high-tier transaction rate looks ready to carry into spring, and the shelf has worked down enough to keep absorption matched with supply. If new listings arrive at the same pace they did to open 2025, the spring sets up for a balanced market with strong activity on both sides.

City-wide quarter numbers are not your home. The no-obligation valuation is the calibrated read.

Pricing your home

The city number is not your number.

Hurricane is layered. A primary-residence single-family home in Sky Mountain, Dixie Springs, or Cordero trades on a completely different curve than an STR-zoned condo or townhouse at Sand Hollow Resort or in parts of Pecan Valley, and the gap between the two has only widened in the last twelve months. A citywide median averages those two markets together into a number that fits almost no individual home. Real pricing starts at your parcel, comparing recent closings inside your subdivision and your product type, then adjusts for view, lot, and rental rights. The fastest read on where your home likely lands is the what is my home worth in Hurricane page, then a full home valuation turns the band into a calibrated number.

Timing matters more here than in cities without an active STR overlay. If you are deciding between listing now and waiting, the should I sell now or wait calculator runs the math on carry cost against probable appreciation, and the seller net sheet shows what you would actually pocket once the costs you cannot avoid come out. Getting the first list price right in week one is the single biggest lever you control, because the Hurricane buyer pool is more selective than it was a year ago and any overpriced listing quietly trains the market to wait you out.

Hurricane neighborhoods

STR or primary residence. Two cities under one zip code.

Hurricane is not one market either. Sand Hollow Resort STR product trades against a national pool of Vrbo and Airbnb investors and underwrites off projected nightly revenue. Sky Ranch, Hurricane Views, Falcon Ridge, and Dixie Springs trade against Wasatch Front buyers on conventional financing. Two homes four hundred yards apart can have completely different rental rights, completely different buyer pools, and completely different price discovery. National algorithms miss this entirely.

That is why the neighborhood lens is the starting point here, not a footnote. Whether your home sits in a Cordero or Firerock primary-residence pocket, on a Sand Hollow Championship Course view lot, or inside a designated STR overlay, the marketing pitch has to match the actual buyer pool for the product type. My full breakdown of every Hurricane area, what it offers, who buys there, the rental rules, and how it tends to price, lives on the Hurricane neighborhoods guide. Start there before you anchor to a single listing.

Your next move

The sale is one half of a two-part move.

Most Hurricane sellers are landing somewhere next, and the two halves go far smoother planned as one. If you are scaling up for a Sky Ranch view lot or a Cordero floor plan with more room, my moving up in Hurricane guide covers the sequencing so you are never stuck owning two homes or scrambling with none. If you are unlocking equity and going the other way toward a low-maintenance single level closer to town, the right-sizing in Hurricane page walks through doing it without leaving money on the table.

New construction is genuinely worth a look in either direction, because Hurricane carries more active and entitled lots than any city in the region. Sand Hollow Resort, Cordero, Copper Rock, Firerock, and Peach Springs Estates all run consistent inventory with active builder incentives. My new construction in Hurricane guide breaks down the active communities and the builder bench behind them. When you are ready to list, the full story of how I take a Hurricane home to market lives on my sell your Hurricane home page. Whichever direction you are headed, I can quarterback both sides of it at once.

What is your Hurricane home worth at year end?

The data above is the market. Your home is specific. Start with a no-obligation valuation and get an honest pricing band for your exact home in your exact Hurricane pocket. No pressure and no signup wall, and you won't get added to a marketing list.

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