If you saw headlines that talked about how âhome sales fell sharply in January,â it probably raised an eyebrow â especially if youâre thinking about selling your house. But context matters.
Yes, in January, home sales declined. But that has more to do with seasonality and the weather than it does with any big drop-off in demand.Â
Whatâs Really Behind the Decline?
Reports coming out of the National Association of Realtors (NAR) say the pace of home sales fell roughly 8.4% last month compared to the month before. And thatâs true. But it isnât necessarily cause for alarm.
Data show itâs normal for sales to dip in January. In the last 4 years, that pattern has held true all but once. And sure, the decline we saw this year was a steeper drop off than the norm (the yellow bars on the right), but that can be explained too. More on that in a moment.
The really important part youâre not going to get from the headlines is this: typically speaking, the pace of home sales picks back up in February as the spring market starts to take off. Thatâs shown in the green bars below.

So even though the market slowed a bit momentarily, it should start to pick back up.
And just in case youâre wondering, why the bigger drop this year, especially with mortgage rates being lower than last year? Hereâs your answer. As Realtor.com explains:
âWinter storm Fern, which dumped snow and ice across large swaths of the country, likely disrupted some closings, weighing on the data and making it difficult to pick out the housing market momentum trend from the weather noise.â
This January, 40 states were hit with widespread winter weather according to the National Weather Service. And in real estate, that slows down the momentum. Hereâs why.
Existing home sales data tracks closed transactions, not new contracts. So, if inspections, appraisals, or final walk-throughs get delayed by storms, those deals often slide into the next month instead of falling apart â especially when buyers and sellers are still trying to move forward.
Will Home Sales Pick Back Up?
Januaryâs missing sales are more likely âpostponedâ than âlost.â They havenât disappeared. Theyâre just taking a little longer to close.
The rest of the data still points to a market that has traction heading into spring.
Affordability has improved for the 7th month in a row, and buyers are regaining negotiating power in many markets throughout the nation. So, this one monthly report doesnât mean buyers arenât buying. It just means, as the weather warms up, activity should too.
Bottom Line
Donât confuse a weather-impacted month with a market losing steam. If anything, improving affordability is an indicator of more activity to come, not less.
If you have questions about what youâre hearing online or in the news, call or text me at 201-780-0498. Because the truth is, a little context can give you back your peace of mind.
