The Portland Region Q1 2026 Detached Homes Market Update

Q1 2026 detached homes: average price $659,197, median $580,000, and 3,349 sales in the Portland Region. Core (< $1M) dipped modestly, luxury new construction (≥ $1M) fell 44%, and CDOM rose in most counties. Mix shifts shaped pricing as smaller lots sold. Affordability improved, but demand held steady despite slightly lower mortgage rates.


Via Canva Pro

The first quarter of 2026 landed softer than the same period last year, even as mortgage rates eased from their 2025 highs. Activity across the region was steady enough to keep the market functional, but not strong enough to match last year’s pace. What emerged instead was a quarter defined by segmentation: different counties, and even different price tiers within counties, moved in noticeably different directions depending on what types of homes sold.

The core market—homes under $1 million—saw mild slippage, much of it tied to compositional changes. Smaller homes on smaller lots were more common this quarter, which pulled down average prices even as underlying values remained relatively stable. The luxury market told a different story. New construction in the $1M+ segment fell sharply, and that retreat alone accounted for a large share of the region’s year‑over‑year decline. With fewer high‑end new builds closing, luxury volume and pricing softened more noticeably than the core.

Across the region, buyers were active but deliberate, and sellers faced longer marketing times in most counties. Affordability improved modestly thanks to lower rates, but not enough to materially change buyer behavior. Taken together, Q1 2026 was not a dramatic quarter—just a quieter one, shaped as much by what sold as by how the market performed.

Table of Contents

Data Housekeeping

The Portland Region in this update comprises the six Oregon counties of Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill. These counties form a contiguous housing ecosystem centered on Portland—Multnomah as the core home county, with the others tightly integrated through commuting patterns, economic ties, and shared market dynamics (e.g., Yamhill’s strong connection via Highway 99W and wine-country adjacency). Beyond Yamhill, the MLS system changes, further distinguishing this six-county area from broader geographic aggregations. For a detailed overview—including county profiles, population data, key value influencers, and why this definition differs from the official seven-county Portland–Vancouver–Hillsboro MSA—see my dedicated page: The Portland Region – Six-County Market Area Overview.

Colored map of the six counties comprising the Portland Region: Clackamas, Columbia, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill.
The six-county Portland Region
Via SunCatcherStudio

All data is sourced from RMLS and reflects open-market detached single-family residential sales (excluding condos, attached homes, manufactured homes on leased land, and multifamily). SNL (“Sold Not Listed”) entries—off-market transactions entered retroactively—have been excluded to preserve consistency with true market activity.

All figures have undergone my standard cleaning process to address common RMLS accuracy challenges, including misclassifications (e.g., condos listed as detached), square footage/price typos, incomplete fields, status/date mismatches, and non-representative entries. For a detailed overview of these issues, their impact on market analysis, and how I mitigate them through automated flagging, cross-verification, and manual review, see our dedicated page: RMLS Data Accuracy Challenges.

Residential Housing Snapshot

MetricDetachedAttachedCondoManufact.
Total $ Volume$2.2B$161.0M$199.0M$31.8M
Average Price$659,197$444,672$389,438$547,486
Avg PPSF (TSF)$316.17$286.92$325.56$361.83
Avg Total SF2,1641,5761,1801,570
Avg Age (Yrs)46.0315.0932.0329.52
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.6550.066N/A8.228
Avg PABAI80.47104.13117.08110.07
Highest Sale$5,725,950$1,175,000$2,450,000$2,400,000
Lowest Sale$135,000$249,000$100,000$199,700
Price Spread Ratio42.414.7224.5012.02
PPSF Spread Ratio30.934.0811.9113.29
SF Spread Ratio23.464.1412.243.52
Avg CDOM80.2380.59119.62120.86
Total # of Sales3,34936251158
% of Market78.25%8.46%11.94%1.36%
Q1 2026 (4,280 total residential sales).
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Detached homes continue to define the structure of the Portland Region’s residential market in Q1 2026. They account for more than three‑quarters of all open‑market residential sales and over $2.2 billion of the region’s $2.6 billion in total dollar volume, and they remain the least affordable segment with a PABAI of 80.47. For readers new to the metric, a PABAI of 100 means a home is perfectly affordable to the median HUD MSA income; values below 100 indicate unaffordability, and values above 100 indicate more readily affordable conditions. Detached properties also sit on ten times the land of attached homes on average and are significantly larger, with an average dwelling size more than 500 square feet above attached and manufactured homes and over 1,000 square feet above condos. Their wide spread ratios across price, PPSF, and size reflect a segment that spans everything from sub‑$150,000 fixers to multi‑million‑dollar estates. This combination of scale, land intensity, and internal diversity will be explored in greater detail in this update.

In contrast, the other three segments help illustrate the pathways buyers take when detached becomes harder to access. Attached homes are the clearest counterpoint: the youngest segment (average age ~15 years), the most uniform by spread ratios, and the most “commodity‑like” product in the region. Their modest affordability (PABAI 104.2) and predictable size and pricing make them the safety‑net entry point for buyers priced out of detached. Condos and manufactured homes share surprising similarities—affordability (PABAI 117.08 and 110.07), age, CDOM, and even price ceilings—yet diverge sharply in average price because manufactured homes trade on land, while condos trade on HOA dues, the hidden variable that shapes their affordability profile.

Entry‑level opportunities still exist across the region, with the lowest Q1 sale closing at $100,000, but buyers must compromise on location, utility, condition, or quality—especially for detached fixers. Three of the four segments cluster in the low–mid $300s PPSF, underscoring that structure cost is relatively consistent across the metro; it is land and home size that creates the separation between detached and everything else. Spread ratios help illustrate this internal variation by comparing the highest and lowest values within each segment—higher ratios indicate a wider spectrum of product types and price points, while lower ratios signal a more uniform, commodity‑like segment. Detached homes’ wide spread ratios (Price 42.41, PPSF 30.93, SF 23.46) highlight its internal variability and set the stage for the segment‑specific analysis that follows.

Portland Region Q1 2026 Overview

Overall Regional Trends

The table below summarizes key metrics for detached single-family residential sales in the Portland Region (Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill counties) for Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$2.25 Billion$2.21 Billion-1.79%
Average Price$673,455$659,197-2.12%
Median Price$590,000$580,000-1.69%
Avg SP/OLP97.35%96.88%-0.48%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$320.27$316.21-1.27%
Avg HOA Dues$71.23$69.10-2.99%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.630.66+4.15%
Avg Age (Yrs)46.1446.03-0.24%
Avg CDOM72.1080.22+11.26%
Avg Total SF2,1672,164-0.16%
Total # of Sales3,3383,349+0.33%
# of New Constr.459461+0.44%
# of REOs1640+150.00%
# of Short Sales1114+27.27%
Average PABAI71.0580.47+13.26%
Note: The calculated average HOA dues is for sales reporting nonzero HOA dues (860 sales for Q1 2025 & 879 sales for Q1 2026). All other metrics use the full dataset for each quarter.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Key Observations From the Aggregate Data

The regional market showed modest softening in Q1 2026, with average and median prices both posting low‑single‑digit declines. Because total sales, average square footage, new‑construction activity, and the age of sold homes all remained essentially unchanged year over year, much of this movement reflects genuine price erosion rather than a shift in the types of homes selling. Dollar volume fell by nearly the same percentage as median price, reinforcing that the decline was driven by pricing rather than a contraction in activity.

Affordability improved meaningfully, with the regional PABAI rising from 71.05 to 80.47. This improvement was driven less by price relief and more by the combination of rising HUD MSA incomes and the fact that Q1 2025 mortgage rates were among the most punishing of the cycle. Even with this improvement, the region remains broadly unaffordable to the median household, but the year‑over‑year shift marks a notable easing of conditions compared to the prior winter.

One nuance becomes clear only when the market is sliced: while the regional average lot size increased slightly, this was driven by the ≥$1M segment, where larger‑parcel properties made up a greater share of sales. In the core market (<$1M), average lot size actually declined, and that shift contributed to the mild price softening in that segment. This compositional effect is not visible in the aggregate data but becomes important when interpreting the underlying dynamics of the detached market.

Distressed sales, while still a small share of the market, increased materially. REOs more than doubled and short sales rose as well, bringing the distressed share from 0.80% to 1.61% of all closings. These are not systemic levels, but they may represent early signs of pressure at the margins—particularly among households who purchased or refinanced during the peak‑rate environment. Marketing times lengthened for the second consecutive year, with CDOM rising more than 11%. This continues the multi‑quarter pattern of a market weighed down by persistently high interest rates, where buyers remain active but more selective, and sellers face longer exposure before securing a contract.

Portland Region Scatter Plots

To visualize the distribution of individual detached homes sales prices across Q1 2026, the following scatter plot shows sales price against date of sale:

The scatter plot below illustrates the distribution of individual detached home sales across Q1 2026, with each point representing a single closing. The vast majority of activity—more than 3,000 of the 3,349 sales—occurred below $1 million, forming the dense mid‑band that represents the functional core of the detached market. Above $1 million, the cloud begins to thin, with a smaller set of luxury transactions extending into the $3–5 million range; these outliers contribute to the segment’s wide price spread but do not define overall market behavior. The vertical dispersion in the chart reflects the extraordinary diversity of detached housing in the region, ranging from sub‑1,000‑square‑foot cottages to 9,000‑square‑foot luxury builds, combined with differences in land, location, and condition. Sales are evenly distributed across the quarter, showing a market that remained active and steady, and the absence of any clear trend reinforces that the modest year‑over‑year price erosion observed in the aggregate data reflects broader conditions rather than intra‑quarter softening.

Core Market (< $1M)

The core market—detached single‑family homes closing under $1 million—continues to anchor the region’s detached activity, representing 91.61% of all sales and 81.03% of total dollar volume in Q1 2026. Because this segment accounts for nearly all transactions, it provides the clearest view of underlying market conditions. Year‑over‑year changes are modest, but they reveal a market that remains functional, rate‑weighted, and subtly reshaped by a shift in land characteristics that is not visible in the regional aggregates.

The table below shows core-market metrics for Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryCore (< $1M) Q1 2025Core (< $1M) Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$1.81 Billion$1.79 Billion-1.07%
Average Price$592,021$583,036-1.52%
Median Price$570,000$565,000-0.88%
Avg SP/OLP97.54%97.12%-0.43%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$312.73$308.78-1.27%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.510.45-11.48%
Avg Age (Yrs)46.9746.46-1.07%
Avg CDOM69.0075.11+8.86%
Avg Total SF2,0072,005-0.09%
Total # of Sales3,0543,068+0.46%
# of New Constr.407432+6.14%
% of $ Volume80.43%81.03%+0.74%
% of Market91.49%91.61%+0.13%
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Price levels in the core segment softened slightly, with average price down about 1.5% and median price slipping just under 1%. These declines are small but meaningful—and importantly, they are partly compositional. While total square footage, average age, and the number of sales remained essentially unchanged, average lot size contracted from 0.51 to 0.45 acres, a notable shift for detached homes. Smaller parcels naturally pull down both price and PPSF, even when structure size is stable. This nuance is masked in the regional overview, where the >$1M segment—characterized by larger lots—pulled the overall average upward. Only by slicing the market does the underlying trend become clear: the core segment sold slightly less land this year, and that contributed to the mild price erosion.

PPSF followed the same pattern, declining from $312.73 to $308.78 (‑1.3%). With total square footage essentially flat (2,007 → 2,005), this movement reflects both the modest softening in pricing and the shift toward smaller lots. In a detached market where land is a major component of value, even small changes in parcel size can influence price metrics in ways that are not immediately visible without segmentation.

New construction strengthened the segment, rising from 407 to 432 closings (+6.1%). This increase helped keep the average age of sold homes stable and indicates that builders continue to find demand in the entry‑to‑mid‑level detached market despite elevated borrowing costs. The steady flow of new inventory also contributes to the segment’s overall stability, offering buyers predictable options within the core price band.

Market tempo slowed, with average cumulative days on market rising from 69 to 75 days (+8.8%). This increase mirrors the broader regional pattern and reflects the behavior of affordability‑conscious buyers navigating higher rates: more comparison shopping, more negotiation, and more time before committing. The slight decline in the SP/OLP ratio (97.54% → 97.12%) reinforces this dynamic, showing that buyers in the core segment have gained a bit more leverage than they held a year ago.

Overall, the core market remains structurally stable. Prices softened modestly, lots trended smaller, new construction strengthened, and buyers took more time to transact—all consistent with a detached market adjusting to persistent rate pressure rather than reacting to distress or volatility. The compositional shift in land is the key nuance this quarter: it explains part of the mild price decline and highlights why slicing the market is essential for understanding the true dynamics beneath the regional averages.

Core Market (< $1M) Scatter Plot

To visualize pricing behavior within the core detached segment, the following scatter plot shows individual sales under $1 million across Q1 2026:

Most core‑market sales fall between $300,000 and $800,000, and this is where the scatter plot forms its densest cluster; 86.95% of detached sales occur within this range. Activity becomes noticeably thinner above $800,000 and tapers further as prices approach the $1 million threshold. The even spread of points across the quarter indicates a steady, active market with no visible intra‑quarter trend—consistent with a segment that is stable, rate‑weighted, and not experiencing rapid shifts in buyer or seller behavior. The mild year‑over‑year softening observed in the core market reflects broader conditions and subtle compositional changes rather than any short‑term movement within the quarter.

Luxury Market (≥ $1M)

The luxury segment—detached homes closing at $1 million or more—remains a small but influential share of the regional market, representing 8.39% of all sales and 18.97% of total dollar volume in Q1 2026. Activity held essentially flat year over year, with total sales dipping only slightly (284 → 281), but the composition of what sold shifted in ways that meaningfully shaped the segment’s pricing and tempo.

The table below shows luxury-market metrics for Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryLuxury (≥ $1M) Q1 2025Luxury (≥ $1M) Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$440.0 Million$418.9 Million-4.79%
Average Price$1,549,154$1,490,724-3.77%
Median Price$1,275,000$1,289,900+1.17%
Avg SP/OLP95.31%94.33%-1.03%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$401.34$397.33-1.00%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.932.90+50.04%
Avg Age (Yrs)37.2441.27+10.82%
Avg CDOM105.49136.05+28.97%
Avg Total SF3,8913,897+0.15%
Total # of Sales284281-1.06%
# of New Constr.5229-44.23%
% of $ Volume19.57%18.97%-3.05%
% of Market8.51%8.39%-1.38%
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The most striking change this quarter is the sharp increase in market time. Average cumulative days on market rose from 105 to 136 days, a nearly 29% jump that pushes the segment well past the four‑month mark. This reflects a luxury market where buyers remain active but highly selective, and where elevated borrowing costs have lengthened decision cycles. The decline in the SP/OLP ratio (95.31% → 94.33%) reinforces this dynamic: sellers are conceding more at the negotiation table to secure a contract.

Pricing signals are mixed but ultimately point toward softening. Average price fell 3.8%, while median price rose 1.2%—a divergence explained by a significant compositional shift. The average lot size of sold luxury homes increased dramatically, from 1.93 to 2.90 acres (+50%). Larger parcels tend to pull the median upward even when underlying pricing is flat or declining. This is consistent with the modest drop in PPSF (‑1.0%) and the decline in average price, both of which indicate that the underlying value trend is softening despite the median tick upward.

The segment also skewed older this year, with average age rising from 37 to 41 years. This is directly tied to the steep decline in new‑construction closings (52 → 29, down 44%). With fewer new deliveries entering the upper market, older resale inventory made up a larger share of what sold. These resales helped keep total unit volume nearly flat.

Overall, the luxury market in Q1 2026 reflects a slower, more deliberate segment shaped by higher rates, fewer new‑construction offerings, and a shift toward larger, older properties. Demand remains present, but buyers are taking more time, negotiating more firmly, and showing greater sensitivity to price and condition. The compositional shift toward larger lots also helps explain why the regional average lot size appeared stable even as the core market contracted—an important nuance that becomes visible only when the market is segmented.

Luxury Market (≥ $1M) Scatter Plot

To visualize pricing behavior in the upper end of the detached market, the scatter plot below shows individual sales at or above $1 million across Q1 2026.

Most luxury‑segment sales cluster between $1 million and $2 million, with activity thinning noticeably above $2 million and only a small number of outliers reaching into the $4–6 million range. The distribution remains steady across the quarter, with no visible intra‑quarter trend—consistent with a segment that is active but slower‑moving, shaped more by buyer selectivity and longer marketing times than by rapid shifts in pricing. The wide vertical spread reflects the diversity of the upper market, where property characteristics vary substantially in size, age, and acreage. The mild softening observed in the luxury metrics aligns with what the scatter shows: a functioning but rate‑weighted segment where buyers are taking more time, negotiating more firmly, and concentrating their activity in the lower half of the luxury price band.

Sales Volume

A treemap visualizing the distribution of detached single-family home sales by county in Q1 2026 clearly illustrates the market’s geographic concentration.

Sales volume remains heavily concentrated in the region’s Big Three countiesMultnomah, Washington, and Clackamas—which together account for 90.98% of all detached transactions. Multnomah leads with 36.22% of sales, followed by Washington at 30.34% and Clackamas at 24.43%, forming the structural core of regional activity. The remaining counties—Yamhill, Columbia, and Hood River—collectively contribute less than 10% of sales, and their smaller footprints are clearly visible in the treemap.

This distribution underscores how dependent the detached market is on the Big Three for both volume and trend formation. Regional pricing, tempo, and compositional shifts are shaped primarily by these counties, while the outlying markets play a supporting but comparatively limited role. The treemap also reinforces why segmentation by price tier is essential: even within this dominant tri‑county block, the mix of property types, lot sizes, and buyer profiles varies enough to influence the broader narrative when examined more closely.

The bar chart below compares monthly sales volume across the three months of Q1 for 2025 and 2026.

Monthly activity varied between the two years, but total quarterly volume was nearly identical (3,338 vs. 3,349). January posted the largest difference, with 2026 starting slower (‑119 sales), while February and March both exceeded their 2025 counterparts. March in particular showed a notable lift, adding 117 more sales than the prior year and offsetting January’s deficit. The overall pattern reflects a market that remains active and steady despite rate pressure: timing shifted within the quarter, but the total number of homes changing hands was effectively unchanged. This reinforces the broader theme of Q1 2026—a functional, rate‑weighted market where buyer activity persists even as conditions evolve.

Sales Price

The bar chart below compares monthly average sales prices across the three months of Q1 for 2025 and 2026.

Note: The y-axis starts at $600,000 to allow better examination of monthly differences.

Average prices in January and February 2026 trailed their 2025 counterparts, down 3.9% and 4.4%, respectively. March posted a modest gain of 0.97%, but the improvement was not enough to offset the softer performance earlier in the quarter. The overall pattern reflects a market that began the year under mild price pressure before stabilizing toward the end of the quarter. This aligns with the broader Q1 narrative: steady sales volume, longer marketing times, and modest year‑over‑year softening shaped partly by composition and partly by rate‑driven buyer behavior.

New Construction

The bar graph below shows monthly total detached single-family sales in Q1 2026, with new construction volume nested within each bar to illustrate the portion of sales that were newly built.

New‑construction activity held remarkably steady throughout the quarter, ranging from 12% to 15% of monthly sales and totaling 461 closings, or 13.77% of all Q1 transactions. This consistency indicates that builders are delivering homes at a stable cadence and have adapted effectively to the higher‑rate environment. Even as resale activity fluctuated month to month, new‑construction volume remained a reliable contributor to overall supply, helping to support market stability and providing buyers with fresh inventory options across the region.

New‑construction activity in Q1 2026 landed almost exactly on par with the prior year—461 closings vs. 459, a difference of just two homes. This near‑perfect match is remarkable given the higher‑rate environment and reflects how effectively builders have adapted their pipelines, pricing, and product mix to current conditions.

At the county level, the distribution shifted modestly. Clackamas posted a small gain, Multnomah held perfectly steady, and Washington County—which continues to dominate the region’s new‑construction landscape—remained essentially unchanged with 230 closings, representing nearly half (49.89%) of all new‑construction sales. Smaller counties showed more volatility: Columbia saw a jump from 1 to 9 closings, Hood River recorded a single new‑construction sale, and Yamhill experienced a notable decline.

The dollar value of new construction closings provides additional context on builder activity and investment scale. The table below shows new construction sales volume by dollar amount for Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CountyQ1 2025 $ AmountQ1 2026 $ Amount% Change% of Total 2026 $ Amount
Clackamas$111,923,639$103,211,227-7.78%4.68%
Columbia$590,000$4,716,300699.37%0.21%
Hood River$0$514,0000.02%
Multnomah$41,125,069$36,451,666-11.36%1.65%
Washington$178,646,937$157,578,442-11.79%7.14%
Yamhill$19,039,763$15,075,863-20.82%0.68%
Sum$351,325,408$317,547,498-9.61%14.38%
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The following double bar chart provides the above information at a glance.

Even though the number of new‑construction closings in Q1 2026 nearly matched the prior year, total dollar volume declined by 9.61%. This reflects a meaningful shift in the mix of what builders delivered. The upper end of the market retreated this quarter, and because luxury new‑construction homes typically carry price points roughly double those of core‑market builds, the reduction in high‑value deliveries had an outsized impact on total dollars.

Washington County—still the region’s dominant new‑construction hub—saw an 11.79% decline in dollar volume despite only a slight dip in unit count. Clackamas and Multnomah posted similar declines, while Yamhill experienced a sharper drop. Smaller counties showed volatility in percentage terms, but their absolute dollar contributions remain minimal.

The overall pattern shows that builders maintained production levels but shifted toward more moderately priced offerings, resulting in a lower aggregate dollar footprint even as total units held steady. This aligns with the broader Q1 dynamic: the luxury segment softened, and that softness reflected directly in the new‑construction dollar totals.

Cumulative Days on Market

The bar chart below compares average cumulative days on market (CDOM) across the three months of Q1 for 2025 and 2026.

Marketing time increased across all three months, with January up 7.9%, February up 16.9%, and March up 11.2% compared with the prior year. The consistent rise reflects a market where buyers remain active but more deliberate, taking longer to commit as elevated rates continue to shape decision‑making. While sales volume held steady quarter over quarter, the longer exposure times indicate that sellers needed more patience in Q1 2026, and that homes generally required additional time to find the right match.

The bar chart below breaks out average CDOM by market segment for the three months of Q1 2026, comparing core (< $1M) and luxury (≥ $1M) properties.

Across all three months, luxury homes required substantially more time to sell, with differences ranging from 42 to 85 days. In January, the gap was widest—luxury listings averaged 166 days on market compared with 81 days for core‑market homes, a spread of nearly three months. February and March showed similar patterns, with luxury homes consistently taking 1.5 to 2.5 months longer to secure a buyer. This disparity reflects the natural dynamics of the upper market, where higher price points, specialized features, and a smaller buyer pool contribute to longer marketing times even in steady conditions.

HOA Dues

While HOA dues are not a defining feature of the detached‑home market, they are far from rare. More than a quarter of all detached sales in Q1 2026 were located in communities with mandatory dues.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026
# of HOA Sales860879
Total Sales3,3383,349
% of Market25.76%26.25%
HOA dues count are sales reporting nonzero HOA dues.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The share of detached homes with HOA dues edged slightly higher this year, rising to 26.25% of all sales. This reflects the continued prevalence of master‑planned communities, private streets, and shared‑amenity neighborhoods across the region—especially in newer suburban developments. While dues for detached homes are generally modest, they represent a persistent monthly expense for a meaningful portion of buyers and remain an important part of the carrying‑cost profile for these properties.

The bar chart below compares average monthly HOA dues (for reporting sales) for Q1 2025 and Q1 2026:

Average HOA dues for detached homes remained relatively modest across all counties, with most falling between $50 and $75 per month. Year‑over‑year changes were small and mixed: some counties saw slight decreases, while others posted mild increases. These shifts reflect normal variation in community‑level budgeting rather than any broad regional trend. Although detached‑home dues are a fraction of those seen in the attached and condominium segments, they remain a consistent monthly obligation for more than a quarter of buyers and continue to shape affordability at the margins.

Miscellaneous Statistics & Standout Transactions

A few notable extremes and outliers from Q1 2026 illustrate the wide range of value drivers across the six-county region.

Lowest close price: $135,000—a 1963 fixer in Lafayette (Yamhill County). Not much information was given, but tax records show it was sold to an LLC, so the site may be redeveloped. Exterior photos of this property are currently available online.

Highest close price: $5,725,950—a 1990 lakefront estate in Lake Oswego (Clackamas County). The custom-built residence features high-quality finishes, a swimming pool, and excellent views of the Lake. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Smallest Home: 485 sq. ft.—a 1946 cabin in Hood River County. The property was habitable at the time of sale. Given the two-acre lot, the cabin may be eventually demoted to an ADU and a larger residence built. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Largest Home: 8,913 sq. ft.—a 1999 estate home in Portland’s Forest Park neighborhood. The property is situated on a private, forested 10-acre lot and offers expansive rooms. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Largest Lot: 103.62 Acres—a 2008 custom home in Vernonia (Columbia County). The property is located along the Nehalem River and has a half mile of frontage. The property was used as an inn in the past. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Longest CDOM: 1,259 days—a $1.9M listing in Happy Valley (Clackamas County) that closed at $1.7M. The 2005 home is 7,070 sq. ft. and is located in a gated community. Photos of this property are currently available online.

These outliers demonstrate that detached single-family home ownership in the Portland Region can begin around $135,000 for buyers who are patient, flexible, and prepared to address condition or location factors. They stand in contrast to the region’s severely strained affordability.

With the regional aggregate trends, segment splits, monthly patterns, and notable outliers now in view, the remainder of this update turns to a county-level breakdown. The following sections present year-over-year comparisons for each of the six counties in the Portland Region—Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas, Yamhill, Columbia, and Hood River—ordered by Q1 2026 sales volume descending. Each county snapshot includes key metrics, commentary on local drivers, and any segment-specific observations that help explain broader regional patterns.

Multnomah County Q1 2026 Stats

The table below summarizes key metrics for Multnomah County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$756.1 Million$740.9 Million-2.02%
Average Price$624,914$610,761-2.26%
Median Price$540,000$525,000-2.78%
Avg SP/OLP97.82%97.57%-0.25%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$318.13$313.92-1.33%
Avg HOA Dues$58.52$66.21+13.15%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.230.29+28.18%
Avg Age (Yrs)67.1867.79+0.91%
Avg CDOM65.8967.13+1.88%
Avg Total SF2,0662,057-0.44%
Total # of Sales1,2101,213+0.25%
# of New Constr.66660.00%
# of REOs921+133.33%
# of Short Sales660.00%
Average PABAI75.1385.58+13.91%
HOA figures are for homes reporting nonzero dues. All other metrics use the full dataset.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Multnomah County was one of the most stable submarkets in the region this quarter. Total sales were essentially unchanged (1,210 → 1,213), and average cumulative days on market held nearly flat (65.9 → 67.1 days). This is notable because the broader region saw a more pronounced slowdown in tempo; Multnomah’s size and liquidity helped keep marketing times steady even as rates remained elevated.

Prices softened modestly across all major measures. Average price (‑2.26%), median price (‑2.78%), and PPSF (‑1.33%) all moved in the same direction and by similar magnitudes, reflecting mild, rate‑weighted pressure rather than any structural shift in demand. The increase in average lot size (0.23 → 0.29 acres, +28%) appears to be a compositional change rather than a land‑value story, as it did not prevent prices from easing.

New construction held perfectly steady at 66 closings, a rare outcome among the counties and a sign of a stable, predictable supply pipeline. REOs increased from 9 to 21, but the absolute number remains very small—just 1.7% of all sales—so this does not indicate distress.

Affordability improved meaningfully. Multnomah’s PABAI rose from 75.13 to 85.58, a 13.9% gain, driven largely by slightly better mortgage rates and income growth. Even with this improvement, Multnomah remains less affordable than the regional average (80.47), reflecting its higher baseline pricing and urban cost structure.

The scatter plot of all Multnomah County sales in Q1 2026 reinforces these themes:

Most sales cluster below $1 million, with a consistent spread across the quarter and only a small number of outliers above $2 million. There is no visible intra‑quarter trend or volatility spike—just a steady, well‑distributed flow of transactions. This visual stability mirrors the metrics: Multnomah continues to function as the region’s most liquid and predictable submarket, with steady demand, steady tempo, and only mild softening at the margins.

Washington County Q1 2026 Stats

The table below summarizes key metrics for Washington County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$697.4 Million$665.7 Million-4.55%
Average Price$678,423$655,226-3.42%
Median Price$638,950$604,250-5.43%
Avg SP/OLP97.54%96.86%-0.70%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$318.99$307.81-3.50%
Avg HOA Dues$70.55$70.98+0.61%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.410.33-19.46%
Avg Age (Yrs)30.0030.11+0.34%
Avg CDOM72.4479.97+10.39%
Avg Total SF2,2112,198-0.58%
Total # of Sales1,0281,016-1.17%
# of New Constr.233230-1.29%
# of REOs17+600.00%
# of Short Sales41-75.00%
Average PABAI66.0376.94+16.51%
HOA figures are for homes reporting nonzero dues. All other metrics use the full dataset.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Washington County showed a mild but noticeable softening in Q1 2026, with most metrics drifting slightly lower while overall activity remained stable. Total sales dipped only marginally (1,028 → 1,016, ‑1.17%), but the county experienced a more meaningful increase in marketing time: CDOM rose from 72.4 to 80.0 days (+10.39%). This was a larger tempo shift than in Multnomah and reflects a market where buyers took longer to commit, particularly in the mid‑tier price ranges.

Prices declined across all major measures. Average price (‑3.42%), median price (‑5.43%), and PPSF (‑3.50%) all moved downward in a coordinated way, indicating broad, rate‑weighted softening rather than a compositional anomaly. The sharper decline in median price suggests that the lower and middle segments of the market felt more pressure—a pattern consistent with the employment uncertainty tied to Intel’s layoffs, which disproportionately affect Washington County’s buyer pool.

Average lot size decreased from 0.41 → 0.33 acres (‑19.46%), which contributed to the price movement but does not fully explain it. Most other structural metrics—home size, age, HOA dues, and new‑construction volume—were essentially unchanged. New construction in particular held steady (233 → 230), reinforcing Washington County’s role as the region’s largest and most consistent builder hub.

Affordability improved meaningfully. Washington’s PABAI rose from 66.03 to 76.94, a 16.5% increase, driven by slightly better mortgage rates and income growth. Even so, the county remains less affordable than the regional average (80.47), reflecting its higher baseline pricing and strong demand for newer suburban housing.

The scatter plot reinforces these themes: a dense cluster of sales between $500k and $900k, a thinner upper tier, and a handful of outliers above $1.5M. There is no visible intra‑quarter trend — just steady, slightly slower activity. Overall, Washington County remained functional and active, but with softer pricing and a more deliberate buyer pace than last year.

The following is a scatter plot of all Washington County sales in Q1 2026:

The scatter plot reveals a dense cluster of sales between $500k and $900k, a thinner upper tier, and a handful of outliers above $1.5M. There is no visible intra‑quarter trend—just steady, slightly slower activity. Overall, Washington County remained functional and active, but with softer pricing and a more deliberate buyer pace than last year.

Clackamas County Q1 2026 Stats

The table below summarizes key metrics for Clackamas County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$607.5 Million$620.5 Million+2.13%
Average Price$796,232$758,529-4.74%
Median Price$644,000$637,283-1.04%
Avg SP/OLP96.64%96.51%-0.13%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$331.32$331.56+0.07%
Avg HOA Dues$82.72$71.50-13.56%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.050.91-14.12%
Avg Age (Yrs)36.9936.64-0.97%
Avg CDOM73.2994.03+28.29%
Avg Total SF2,4002,358-1.71%
Total # of Sales763818+7.21%
# of New Constr.120128+6.67%
# of REOs48+100.00%
# of Short Sales13+200.00%
Average PABAI64.2272.51+12.91%
HOA figures are for homes reporting nonzero dues. All other metrics use the full dataset.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Clackamas County was one of the few counties to post an increase in total dollar volume this quarter, rising 2.13% year over year. This wasn’t driven by higher prices—average and median prices both dipped—but rather by more sales overall (763 → 818, +7.21%). Clackamas was one of the most active counties in Q1, and that higher transaction count helped offset modest price softening.

Prices declined in a way that clearly reflects compositional changes rather than value erosion. Average price fell 4.74%, but PPSF held almost perfectly flat ($331.32 → $331.56, +0.07%). At the same time, both average home size (‑1.71%) and average lot size (‑14.12%) decreased. This combination tells a consistent story: the mix shifted toward smaller homes on smaller parcels, pulling down the averages even as underlying price per square foot remained stable.

Marketing time increased sharply. Average CDOM rose from 73.3 to 94.0 days (+28.29%), one of the largest tempo shifts in the region. Buyers were more deliberate, and sellers needed more patience—especially in the upper‑end segments, which tend to be more sensitive to rate conditions and seasonal timing.

New construction increased (120 → 128, +6.67%), reinforcing Clackamas County’s role as a growth corridor with steady builder activity. REOs and short sales rose in percentage terms but remain extremely small in absolute numbers and do not indicate distress.

Affordability improved but remains strained. Clackamas’ PABAI rose from 64.22 to 72.51 (+12.91%), yet the county remains one of the least affordable in the region, driven in part by the presence of high‑value submarkets such as Lake Oswego and West Linn. One important feature of the PABAI is that it’s not strongly influenced by outliers. Since the index averages affordability ratios across every sale—not just a median price—high‑end transactions have only a muted effect on the final number. This makes county‑to‑county comparisons more stable and meaningful.

The following is a scatter plot of all Clackamas County sales in Q1 2026:

The following scatter plot zooms in on sales below $1,000,000:

The scatter plots reinforce these themes. Most sales cluster below $1M, with a healthy mid‑range and a handful of very high‑end outliers extending above $5M. There is no visible intra‑quarter trend—just steady activity across a wide price spectrum. The visual spread mirrors the metrics: active and stable, with price softening driven primarily by mix rather than market weakness.

Yamhill County Q1 2026 Stats

The table below summarizes key metrics for Yamhill County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$127.4 Million$120.4 Million-5.47%
Average Price$571,125$611,154+7.01%
Median Price$485,000$499,500+2.99%
Avg SP/OLP97.43%95.07%-2.42%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$312.30$311.90-0.13%
Avg HOA Dues$56.43$52.70-6.61%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.622.22+36.85%
Avg Age (Yrs)36.0936.83+2.04%
Avg CDOM84.09100.55+19.57%
Avg Total SF1,8661,956+4.82%
Total # of Sales223197-11.66%
# of New Constr.3927-30.77%
# of REOs110.00%
# of Short Sales03
Average PABAI86.3593.13+7.85%
HOA figures are for homes reporting nonzero dues. All other metrics use the full dataset.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Yamhill County experienced one of the sharper slowdowns in sales activity this quarter. Total transactions fell from 223 → 197 (‑11.66%), which in turn pulled total dollar volume down 5.47%. Yet despite fewer sales, both average and median prices increased—a signal that the mix shifted toward larger, higher‑acreage properties rather than broad‑based appreciation.

That mix shift is visible in the structural metrics. Average lot size rose dramatically (1.62 → 2.22 acres, +36.85%), and average home size increased as well (1,866 → 1,956 SF, +4.82%). PPSF, however, remained essentially unchanged (‑0.13%), confirming that underlying values were stable and that the higher averages were driven by the types of homes selling, not by rising prices across the board.

Marketing time lengthened meaningfully. Average CDOM climbed from 84.1 to 100.6 days (+19.57%), crossing the 100‑day threshold and signaling a slower, more deliberate market. This is typical for rural counties with a wide range of property types and a thinner buyer pool, especially when larger acreage properties dominate the quarter’s activity.

New construction declined sharply (39 → 27, ‑30.77%), one of the steepest drops in the region. This reflects fewer subdivision deliveries and a shift toward resale activity on larger parcels. REOs and short sales remain negligible in number and do not indicate distress.

Affordability improved modestly. Yamhill’s PABAI rose from 86.35 to 93.13 (+7.85%), placing it among the more affordable counties in the region—well above the regional average (80.47). This aligns with its lower baseline pricing and rural character, even as larger properties influenced this quarter’s mix.

The following is a scatter plot of all Yamhill County sales in Q1 2026:

The following scatter plot zooms in on sales below $1,000,000:

Most sales cluster below $1M, with a handful of high‑end outliers reaching into the multi‑million‑dollar range. The distribution is wide, typical of a rural county with diverse housing stock. Overall, Yamhill’s Q1 performance reflects fewer sales, larger properties, stable underlying values, and a slower market tempo.

Columbia County Q1 2026 Stats

The table below summarizes key metrics for Columbia County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$48.48 Million$44.83 Million-7.52%
Average Price$484,812$521,336+7.53%
Median Price$468,500$471,350+0.61%
Avg SP/OLP95.43%96.11%+0.71%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$278.74$275.14-1.29%
Avg HOA Dues$26.37$35.20+33.46%
Avg Lot Size (ac)2.093.54+69.41%
Avg Age (Yrs)47.3439.91-15.70%
Avg CDOM96.5681.29-15.81%
Avg Total SF1,8801,952+3.79%
Total # of Sales10086-14.00%
# of New Constr.19+800.00%
# of REOs12+100.00%
# of Short Sales01
Average PABAI92.74100.27+8.12%
HOA figures are for homes reporting nonzero dues. All other metrics use the full dataset.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Columbia County remains the smallest and most variable market in the region, and that scale is essential context when interpreting quarterly changes. Total sales fell from 100 → 86 (‑14%), which alone explains the decline in total dollar volume (‑7.52%). With so few transactions, even modest shifts in the types of homes selling can move averages more than in the larger counties.

That mix shift is clearly visible this quarter. Average lot size increased dramatically (2.09 → 3.54 acres, +69.41%), and average home size rose as well (1,880 → 1,952 SF, +3.79%). These structural changes helped lift the average sale price by 7.53%, even though PPSF declined slightly (‑1.29%) and median price barely moved (+0.61%). This is a textbook example of how acreage‑heavy quarters can buoy averages without indicating broad appreciation.

Interestingly, Columbia was one of the few counties where marketing time improved. Average CDOM fell from 96.6 to 81.3 days (‑15.81%), suggesting that the buyers who were active in Q1 were decisive, even as overall activity thinned. The county also saw a notable increase in new construction closings (1 → 9), though the absolute numbers remain too small to draw structural conclusions.

Affordability remains Columbia County’s defining characteristic. Its PABAI rose from 92.74 to 100.27, making it the most affordable county in the region by a wide margin and the only one with a PABAI above 100. This reflects its lower baseline pricing, rural character, and the relative absence of high‑cost submarkets.

The following is a scatter plot of all Columbia County sales in Q1 2026:

The scatter plot reinforces the small‑market dynamics. Most sales cluster below $600k, with a handful of outliers extending upward. The distribution is wide but thin, typical of a rural county with diverse property types and limited transaction volume. Overall, Columbia’s Q1 performance reflects fewer sales, larger properties, stable underlying values, and the strongest affordability profile in the region.

Hood River County Q1 2026 Stats

The table below summarizes key metrics for Hood River County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

CategoryQ1 2025Q1 2026% Change
Total $ Volume$11.06 Million$15.38 Million+39.03%
Average Price$790,029$809,316+2.44%
Median Price$654,200$745,000+13.88%
Avg SP/OLP93.64%92.61%-1.11%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$420.77$480.64+14.23%
Avg HOA Dues$41.66$27.08-35.00%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.851.12-39.43%
Avg Age (Yrs)62.3635.00-43.87%
Avg CDOM153.86120.11-21.94%
Avg Total SF1,9591,928-1.62%
Total # of Sales1419+35.71%
# of New Constr.01
# of REOs01
# of Short Sales00
Average PABAI60.8664.79+6.46%
HOA figures are for homes reporting nonzero dues. All other metrics use the full dataset.
Single-Family Detached Residential | Q1 2025 & Q1 2026
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Hood River County is by far the smallest market in the region, and that scale shapes how its quarterly metrics should be interpreted. With only 19 sales this quarter, even a handful of transactions can meaningfully shift averages. For that reason, the most appropriate approach here is to report the changes rather than infer broad trends.

Total sales increased from 14 → 19 (+35.71%), and total dollar volume rose proportionally (+39.03%). Average and median prices both increased—average price by 2.44% and median price by 13.88%—but these movements reflect the specific mix of homes that sold rather than market‑wide appreciation. The structural metrics confirm this: homes sold this quarter were younger on average (62.4 → 35.0 years, ‑43.87%) and sat on much smaller lots (1.85 → 1.12 acres, ‑39.43%). These shifts alone can easily move median and average prices in a small dataset.

Price per square foot increased ($420.77 → $480.64, +14.23%), but again, with so few sales, this reflects the characteristics of individual properties rather than a reliable directional signal. Average home size was nearly unchanged (‑1.62%), reinforcing that PPSF is being influenced by the composition of the sales rather than broad pricing pressure.

Marketing time improved meaningfully. Average CDOM fell from 153.9 to 120.1 days (‑21.94%), though both figures remain high relative to the metro counties. This is typical for a small, rural, and lifestyle‑driven market where unique properties take longer to match with the right buyer.

Affordability improved modestly. Hood River’s PABAI rose from 60.86 to 64.79 (+6.46%), but because the county had only 19 sales, this value should be interpreted with caution. The index is most reliable in segments with at least 20–30 transactions, and Hood River’s small sample size means quarterly fluctuations may reflect mix rather than underlying affordability conditions. PABAI is generally more meaningful for this county on a semi‑annual or annual basis.

The following is a scatter plot of all Hood River County sales in Q1 2026:

The scatter plot reinforces the small‑sample dynamics. Prices vary widely from sale to sale, with a handful of higher‑priced transactions early in the quarter and a cluster of mid‑range sales later on. There is no meaningful intra‑quarter trend—just the natural variability of a market with very few transactions.

Closing Thoughts

Taken together, the first quarter of 2026 reads as a softer, more composition‑driven period for the Portland region. Most counties posted lower dollar volume than last year, and even where prices held steady, the underlying story often came down to the types of homes that sold rather than broad market movement. Smaller homes and smaller lots were more common in several counties, while others saw the opposite—larger rural properties that lifted averages despite thinner activity. Across the board, the data shows a market that is functioning, but not accelerating.

The core and luxury segments reinforced this pattern. The sub‑$1M market slipped modestly, shaped largely by mix and by buyers who remained price‑sensitive despite slightly better mortgage rates. The luxury market, meanwhile, saw a sharper pullback, driven in large part by a steep decline in new construction closings. With fewer high‑end builds delivering, luxury volume contracted and marketing times lengthened, underscoring how sensitive the upper tier remains to both rates and inventory cycles.

Affordability improved across all counties, but not enough to materially change behavior. Buyers were active but deliberate, sellers needed more patience, and the region continued to operate in a narrow band between stability and constraint. Q1 wasn’t a dramatic quarter—just a quieter one, shaped by rate‑sensitivity, local variation, and the ongoing influence of what sells in any given slice of time. As we move into the spring and summer markets, the question is less about momentum and more about whether mortgage rates will continue to weigh upon the market.

What trends do you expect to see in Q2 2026? I’d love to hear your thoughts—feel free to reply here or reach out directly.

Sources & Further Reading

All data presented in this quarterly update is sourced directly from RMLS and has been subjected to our rigorous cleaning and validation process to ensure reliability for detached single-family residential analysis in the six-county Portland Region. The trends, comparisons, and commentary are the result of original appraisal expertise and independent analysis—not aggregated from secondary sources or news summaries.

Coda

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The 2025 Portland Region Detached Homes Market in Review

The Portland Region detached homes market recorded 17,083 sales in 2025. Overall, the market remained stable—modest gains in volume (+2.11%) and prices (+0.84% median to $599,990) amid longer CDOM (+11.09% to 59.15 days) and reduced new construction (-11.86%). Tight supply (~2.9 months) supported price resilience in a selective, balanced environment.

Famous Portland White Stag sign in trees in autumn colors.
Portland White Stag sign with trees in autumn colors.
Via Canva Pro

The Portland Region’s detached single-family home market in 2025 remained in a state of equilibrium—a continuation of the balanced conditions observed throughout the quarterly updates. After the sharp rate-driven shifts of 2022–2023, the region has settled into a new normal: modest growth, increased buyer selectivity, and persistent supply constraints. Prices held firm with slight upward movement, transaction volume grew incrementally, and marketing times lengthened as buyers became more deliberate in a still-elevated borrowing environment.

This stability was not uniform across segments or submarkets. Core properties continued to drive the majority of activity, while luxury showed resilience in select pockets. New construction retreated further, pushing the average home age older and reinforcing resale dominance. Months of supply stayed tight, supporting price levels without dramatic volatility.

The following sections provide a regional overview, segment breakdown, monthly trends, and detailed county-level statistics.

Table of Contents

Data Housekeeping

The Portland Region in this review comprises the six Oregon counties of Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill. These counties form a contiguous housing ecosystem centered on Portland—Multnomah as the core home county, with the others tightly integrated through commuting patterns, economic ties, and shared market dynamics (e.g., Yamhill’s strong connection via Highway 99W and wine-country adjacency). Beyond Yamhill, the MLS system changes, further distinguishing this six-county area from broader geographic aggregations. For a detailed overview—including county profiles, population data, key value influencers, and why this definition differs from the official seven-county Portland–Vancouver–Hillsboro MSA—see my dedicated page: The Portland Region – Six-County Market Area Overview.

Colored map of the six counties comprising the Portland Region: Clackamas, Columbia, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill.
The six-county Portland Region
Via SunCatcherStudio

All data is sourced from RMLS and reflects open-market detached single-family residential sales (excluding condos, attached homes, manufactured homes on leased land, and multifamily). SNL (“Sold Not Listed”) entries—off-market transactions entered retroactively—have been excluded to preserve consistency with true market activity.

All figures have undergone my standard cleaning process to address common RMLS accuracy challenges, including misclassifications (e.g., condos listed as detached), square footage/price typos, incomplete fields, status/date mismatches, and non-representative entries. For a detailed overview of these issues, their impact on market analysis, and how I mitigate them through automated flagging, cross-verification, and manual review, see the dedicated page: RMLS Data Accuracy Challenges.

Important note for the 2025 annual review: I published quarterly updates for each quarter of 2025, and sharp readers may notice that the total sales count here exceeds the sum of the four quarterly figures. This occurs because some agents delay updating records for months after closing. A recent comprehensive check of all non-close-sale data uncovered additional stragglers that were not captured in the quarterly snapshots. As a result, this full-year aggregation provides the most complete and accurate picture of 2025 detached home activity in the region.

Portland Region 2025 Overview

The Portland Region’s detached single-family home market in 2025 remained in a state of equilibrium—modest gains across key metrics despite increased buyer selectivity and a continued retreat in new construction.

Overall Regional Trends

The table below summarizes key metrics for detached single-family residential sales in the Portland Region (Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill counties) for all of 2025 compared with 2024.

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$11.4 Billion$11.7 Billion+2.11%
Average Price$676,839$682,557+0.84%
Median Price$595,000$599,990+0.84%
Avg SP/OLP97.92%97.24%-0.69%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$320.37$321.05+0.21%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.650.64-0.51%
Avg Age (Yrs)43.0048.52+12.84%
Avg CDOM53.2459.15+11.09%
Avg Total SF2,1802,203+1.04%
Total # of Sales16,87217,083+1.25%
# of New Constr.2,1081,858-11.86%
Avg Supply (Mos.)2.662.92+9.77%
# of REOs111110-0.90%
# of Short Sales2337+60.87%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Key Observations From the Aggregate Data

The 2025 full-year metrics reinforce the theme of stability that defined the quarterly updates—modest gains in volume and prices occurred within a market that remained balanced rather than shifting dramatically in any direction.

  • Modest overall growth with compositional support: Total sales volume rose +2.11% to $11.7 billion on +1.25% more transactions (17,083 closings). Median and average close prices advanced +0.84% each—to $599,990 and $682,557—while average PPSF edged +0.21% to $321.05 despite homes becoming slightly larger (+1.04% to 2,203 SF). Normally, larger average sizes exert downward pressure on PPSF; the fact that PPSF held positive suggests underlying value support through quality or compositional shifts in the sold inventory.
  • Aging inventory and reduced new construction: Average home age increased +12.84% to 48.52 years, driven primarily by a -11.86% decline in new construction closings (1,858 vs 2,108 in 2024). This shift skewed the transaction mix toward older existing stock, limiting fresh supply and reinforcing resale dominance.
  • Increased buyer selectivity: Average cumulative days on market lengthened +11.09% to 59.15 days—a clear sign of greater deliberation and caution. Even as mortgage rates eased gradually through 2025 (from early highs near 7.0% to year-end levels around 6.1–6.2%), rates remained elevated relative to historical norms and sustained the lock-in effect for many homeowners. Buyers took more time to decide, compare, and negotiate, contributing to the modest dip in SP/OLP ratio to 97.24% (-0.69%).
  • Tight supply conditions: Months of supply averaged approximately 2.9 months—well below the traditional 4–6 month benchmark for balance. This continued tightness supported price resilience and prevented broader volatility, even as selectivity rose.
Line graph showing the weekly 30-year fixed mortgage rate for 2025.

The gradual downward trend in weekly 30-year fixed mortgage rates throughout 2025—from early-year highs near 7.0% to year-end levels around 6.1–6.2%—provided some affordability relief compared to 2024. However, rates remained elevated relative to recent historical norms and continued to contribute to buyer caution, as evidenced by the increase in average cumulative days on market.

Portland Region Scatter Plots

To visualize the distribution of individual sale prices across 2025, the following scatter plots show sales price against date of sale. The first graph displays the full range of transactions, while the second focuses on the $0–$2M range. In both, the red line represents a fitted trendline across all transactions.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in the Portland Region during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The full-range scatter illustrates the complete distribution of detached single-family home sales prices in the Portland Region for 2025. The majority of transactions cluster in the lower bands, with occasional high-end outliers extending up to $10M+. The fitted trendline shows no clear upward or downward direction, reinforcing the year’s price stability.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in the Portland Region during 2025, with a focus on sales at or below $2 million. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The zoomed view focuses on the $0–$2M range, revealing a dense “wall” of sales below approximately $1.3M–$1.5M throughout the year. Density thins noticeably above that level, highlighting the core market’s dominance in transaction volume while higher-price sales remain comparatively sparse and scattered. This pattern aligns with the broader stability theme: modest gains supported by compositional factors rather than broad appreciation.

Bottom-line Summary

The 2025 Portland Region detached single-family home market delivered a year of continued equilibrium—modest gains in volume and prices persisted within a balanced, non-volatile environment. While cumulative days on market lengthened and new construction retreated, the overall picture remained one of stability three years after the rapid mortgage rate rise. Supply stayed tight, buyer selectivity increased modestly, and prices held firm with slight upward movement, reflecting a market that has settled into a sustainable new normal.

Core Market (< $1M)

The core market—homes under $1 million—continued to anchor the majority of activity in the Portland Region during 2025, driving most of the transaction volume while showing modest resilience amid broader selectivity. This segment remained the primary engine of market movement, with buyers in this price range facing affordability constraints yet benefiting from greater availability of inventory compared to the luxury tier.

The following table compares core market metrics (< $1M) in 2025 with 2024:

CategoryCore (< $1M) 2024Core (< $1M) 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$9.04 Billion$9.19 Billion+1.71%
Average Price$592,349$596,742+0.74%
Median Price$570,525$575,000+0.78%
Avg SP/OLP98.15%97.47%-0.69%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$311.84$312.93+0.35%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.420.46+10.06%
Avg Age (Yrs)46.3948.93+5.48%
Avg CDOM49.9956.50+13.02%
Avg Total SF2,0072,026+0.91%
Total # of Sales15,26015,406+0.96%
# of New Constr.1,9041,698-10.82%
# of REOs79.16%78.84%-0.39%
# of Short Sales90.45%90.18%-0.29%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The core market—homes under $1 million—continued to anchor the majority of activity in the Portland Region during 2025, accounting for 90.18% of total sales count and 78.84% of dollar volume. This segment drove the bulk of transaction movement while demonstrating modest resilience amid broader selectivity pressures. Transaction volume grew slightly (+0.96% to 15,406 sales), and dollar volume advanced +1.71% to $9.19 billion. Median and average close prices rose +0.78% and +0.74% respectively—to $575,000 and $596,742—with average PPSF edging +0.35% to $312.93 despite a modest increase in average home size (+0.91% to 2,026 SF).

The core segment experienced more pronounced lengthening of marketing times than the region overall, with average cumulative days on market rising +13.02% to 56.50 days. This reflects heightened buyer caution in the more rate-sensitive price range, though sellers conceded only modestly more ground (SP/OLP ratio 97.47%, down -0.69%). New construction in core declined -10.82% to 1,698 closings, contributing to an older average age (+5.48% to 48.93 years) and further emphasizing resale dominance. Notably, average lot size in core increased +10.06% to 0.46 acres—a compositional shift that likely supported the modest PPSF gain by adding value through additional land.

Overall, the core market remained the foundation of regional activity in 2025, absorbing the majority of demand while navigating increased selectivity and reduced fresh supply. Its performance—modest gains in volume and prices with firmer PPSF resilience—helped maintain the year’s broader equilibrium.

Luxury Market (≥ $1M)

The luxury segment—homes priced at $1 million and above—represented a smaller but resilient portion of the Portland Region’s 2025 detached single-family market. While core properties drove the majority of transaction volume, luxury homes showed greater stability in certain metrics, particularly time on market, amid a year of overall equilibrium. This segment benefited from buyers who were often less rate-sensitive and more decisive when the right property aligned with their preferences.

The following table compares luxury market metrics (≥ $1M) in 2025 with 2024:

CategoryLuxury (≥ $1M) 2024Luxury (≥ $1M) 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$2.38 Billion$2.47 Billion+3.63%
Average Price$1,476,662$1,470,905-0.39%
Median Price$1,259,667$1,255,000-0.37%
Avg SP/OLP95.72%95.11%-0.63%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$401.07$395.59-1.37%
Avg Lot Size (ac)2.812.33-17.16%
Avg Age (Yrs)39.3844.71+13.55%
Avg CDOM84.0083.47-0.63%
Avg Total SF3,8133,829+0.41%
Total # of Sales1,6121,677+4.03%
# of New Constr.204160-21.57%
% of $ Volume20.84%21.16%+1.49%
% of Market9.55%9.82%+2.75%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Luxury homes accounted for 9.82% of total sales count and 21.16% of dollar volume in 2025, with transaction count rising +4.03% to 1,677 and dollar volume advancing +3.63% to $2.47 billion. Median and average close prices softened slightly—down -0.37% to $1,255,000 and -0.39% to $1,470,905—while average PPSF declined -1.37% to $395.59.

Average cumulative days on market showed resilience, dipping -0.63% to 83.47 days, in contrast to the core segment’s more pronounced lengthening (+13.02% to 56.50 days). This suggests that well-positioned high-end homes are still finding buyers efficiently, and emphasizes the need to price homes realistically.

New construction in luxury fell more sharply (-21.57% to 160 closings), contributing to a shift toward resale dominance within the segment.

Average lot size decreased -17.16% to 2.33 acres, though this may reflect a compositional move toward smaller urban or estate parcels rather than a broad trend.

Overall, the luxury market demonstrated relative strength in marketing time and modest dollar-volume growth, even as per-unit metrics softened. This resilience—particularly in time on market—helped balance the year’s broader selectivity, with luxury buyers remaining committed when the right property appeared.

Sales Volume

Washington, Clackamas, and Multnomah counties together accounted for nearly 91% of the region’s detached single-family sales in 2025, underscoring their central role in overall market activity. The following treemap visualizes the distribution by county, sized by sales count:

This treemap graph illustrates the sales volume of single-family homes in the Portland Region for 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Multnomah led with 6,459 sales (37.81% of regional total), followed by Washington (5,046 sales, 29.54%) and Clackamas (3,986 sales, 23.33%). Yamhill contributed 964 sales (5.64%), Columbia 487 sales (2.85%), and Hood River 141 sales (0.83%). This geographic concentration remained highly consistent with 2024—the top three counties held ~90.68% of sales in 2025 compared to ~90.26% the prior year—reflecting the region’s enduring urban and suburban dominance.

The modest year-over-year shifts in county shares (e.g., Multnomah up slightly to 37.81%, Washington down to 29.54%, Clackamas essentially flat) further illustrate the stability that characterized 2025. Smaller counties showed greater percentage volatility due to lower base volumes, but the overall distribution reinforced a balanced market without significant reallocation of activity.

Monthly sales counts in 2025 followed a classic seasonal pattern typical of the Portland Region—lower activity in winter, a ramp-up through spring, peak momentum in late spring and early summer, a modest dip in early fall, and a surprising late-year rebound. The following bar chart shows total detached single-family sales by month for 2025:

This bar graph shows the number of single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for each month of 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The chart reveals the expected seasonality: weakest in January and February, building steadily to a spring peak in May and then gradually declining until October (1,686—the year’s highest month) before tapering in November and December. This late-year strength in October and December helped offset softer mid-spring and summer months compared to 2024, contributing to the modest annual increase in total closings.

Monthly sales counts in 2025 tracked closely with 2024 for most of the year, reflecting the same underlying stability across seasons. The following double bar chart compares total detached single-family sales by month for the two years:

This bar graph compares the number of single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The two years remained remarkably neck-and-neck in monthly activity, with differences mostly modest in scale. 2024 showed noticeable strength in May, June, and November, while 2025 pulled ahead in January, October, and December. This pattern aligns with gradual mortgage rate easing throughout 2025, which likely encouraged some buyers to act earlier in the year or wait for improved affordability late in the year. The standout October performance in 2025 (1,686 sales, the year’s high point) echoed a strong fall trend seen in 2024, likely influenced by families finalizing moves after the school year start, pre-holiday motivation, and Portland’s relatively mild October weather facilitating showings and closings.

Overall, the close month-to-month alignment reinforces that 2025 was not a year of dramatic seasonal shifts or momentum changes—just incremental variations that netted the modest +1.25% increase in annual sales.

Sales Price

Monthly average sales prices in 2025 remained remarkably stable throughout the year, closely mirroring 2024’s patterns with only modest seasonal fluctuations and no significant directional trend. The following bar chart shows average close prices by month for 2025:

This bar graph shows the average sales price of single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for each month of 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Note: The y-axis starts at $600,000 to allow better examination of monthly differences.

The chart reveals a narrow range of monthly averages—from approximately $657,000 in November and December to $703,265 in June—a spread of about 7% from low to high. Prices peaked in late spring and early summer (April–August mostly $690k–$703k), then gradually softened through fall and winter. This seasonal arc is typical of the region, with stronger activity and higher-value closings during peak buyer season, followed by a quieter late-year period. The overall flatness across months reinforces the year’s broader price equilibrium.

The following line graph below compares monthly average sales prices for 2024 (blue) and 2025 (red), with a full y-axis scale starting near zero to show true proportional differences:

This line graph shows the average monthly sales prices of homes in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025. The lines are nearly identical.

When viewed on this full scale, the two years appear nearly identical across most months, with only minor divergences — primarily a stronger start in January and February 2025. This visual compression underscores the high degree of price stability year-over-year. Zooming in we have:

This line graph shows the average monthly sales prices of homes in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025. The y-axis starts at $580,000 to allow better viewing of minor variations between the two years for each month.
Note: The y-axis starts at $580,000 to allow better examination of monthly differences.

The above graph reveals the modest seasonal movements more clearly.

New Construction

New construction activity in 2025 declined noticeably from 2024 levels, with 1,858 new homes closing compared to 2,108 the prior year (-11.86%). As a share of total sales, new construction averaged 10.88% for the year, reflecting a reduced contribution from fresh inventory to overall market volume. The following double bar chart shows monthly total sales (primary bars) versus new construction closings (nested/secondary bars) in 2025:

This bar graph shows the number of single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for each month of 2025 with the number of new constructions sales embedded within as a different colored bar. The data is sourced from RMLS.

New construction share was highest early in the year (February 15.35%, January 13.05%, March 13.03%), then trended lower through spring and summer (June–August ~9–10%), reached a low in September (8.41%), and rebounded modestly in November and December (~11–12%). This pattern reflects typical builder closing cycles—more completions in Q1/Q2 — while total sales peaked later in the spring/summer buyer season, resulting in lower relative share during high-volume months. The annual decline contributed to older average inventory and reinforced resale dominance across the region.

While new construction declined regionally, the geographic distribution of new closings remained concentrated in the larger suburban counties. The following side-by-side double bar chart compares new construction sales volume by county in 2024 versus 2025:

This bar graph compares the number of new construction single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025 broken out by county. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Washington County continued to dominate new construction activity, accounting for 52.53% of regional new closings in 2025 (976 sales, down -8.87% from 2024). Clackamas followed at 26.16% (486 sales, -4.14%), and Multnomah contributed 14.10% (262 sales, -15.76%). Yamhill saw the sharpest relative drop (-42.86% to 120 sales, 6.46% share), while Columbia remained flat at 9 sales (0.48%) and Hood River posted a small gain (5 sales from 0, 0.27% share). The concentration in Washington and Clackamas—together nearly 79% of 2025 new closings—reflects their suburban growth areas and remaining builder pipelines, while smaller counties saw more volatility due to limited scale.

The table below shows new construction sales volume by dollar amount for 2025 compared with 2024.

County2024 $ Amount2025 $ Amount% Change% of Total 2025 $ Amount
Clackamas$431,392,884$423,842,357-1.75%3.63%
Columbia$5,398,000$4,704,700-12.84%0.04%
Hood River$0$3,081,2500.03%
Multnomah$190,014,459$142,381,946-25.07%1.22%
Washington$813,200,663$719,942,866-11.47%6.17%
Yamhill$107,849,192$65,484,912-39.28%0.56%
Sum$1,547,855,198$1,359,438,031-12.17%11.66%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The following double bar chart provides the above information at a glance:

This bar graph compares the dollar amount of new construction single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025 broken out by county. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Washington County dominated new construction dollar volume in 2025 ($719.9 million, 52.96% of regional total), followed by Clackamas ($423.8 million, 31.18%). Together these two counties accounted for over 84% of regional new-home value, reflecting their suburban growth areas and remaining builder pipelines. The regional decline in new construction dollar volume (~12.17% to $1.36 billion) slightly outpaced the count drop, indicating modest softening in average new-home pricing alongside reduced volume.

Clackamas County’s strong showing in new construction value was supported by vested projects in growth areas like Sandy. However, the ongoing sewer moratorium in Sandy (extended to June 2026) may limit future pipeline, potentially reducing Clackamas’s regional share in 2026–2027 as approved projects are completed. For full details on the moratorium’s history, impacts, and timeline, see my recent analysis.

Despite the measurable pullback in new construction closings and dollar volume, the segment remained a significant economic force in the Portland Region. Nearly $1.4 billion in new home value changed hands in 2025—a substantial contribution to local jobs, supply-chain activity, tax base support, and overall economic circulation. This underscores the ongoing importance of home building even in a year of reduced activity and resale dominance.

Cumulative Days on Market

Average cumulative days on market (CDOM) rose +11.09% year-over-year to 59.15 days in 2025, reflecting increased buyer selectivity in a market where mortgage rates, while easing modestly, remained elevated relative to historical norms. The following bar chart shows average CDOM by calendar month for 2025:

This bar graph shows the average cumulative days on market for single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for each month of 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The chart reveals the classic “V” pattern typical of the region: longest marketing times in winter months (January & December), a sharp drop through spring (March through May), a trough in late spring/early summer (June & July), then a gradual rise through fall/early winter (September through December). This seasonality aligns with expected patterns—stronger buyer activity and faster turnover during peak season, slower movement in winter due to holidays, weather, and reduced showings.

The bar chart below compares cumulative days on market for 2024 and 2025:

This bar graph compares the average days on market (CDOM) for single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

2025 CDOM was higher in nearly every month, with the increase most pronounced in winter (January +26 days, December +18 days) but evident across the board. The “V” shape persisted in both years, yet the overall elevation in 2025 underscores structural factors—persistent affordability hurdles and buyer caution—rather than seasonal-only shifts. Sellers contributed by holding firm to initial list prices, conceding only modestly more ground (SP/OLP ratio 97.24%, down -0.69%), which extended exposure periods without triggering widespread reductions.

The Core vs Luxury CDOM comparison further illustrates segment-specific dynamics within the year’s broader selectivity trend. The following bar chart shows average cumulative days on market by calendar month for 2025, segmented by core (< $1M) and luxury (≥ $1M):

This bar graph compares the average days on market (CDOM) for single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025 segmented by under $1M or $1M+. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Luxury CDOM remained consistently higher than core throughout the year, reflecting the longer marketing times typical of higher-price properties that attract fewer, more selective buyers. Annual averages were 83.47 days for luxury (-0.63% from 2024) versus 56.50 days for core (+13.02% from 2024), highlighting greater resilience in the luxury segment. The “V” seasonality persisted in both, with winter highs and summer lows, but luxury showed a flatter profile overall—less pronounced seasonal swings—while core experienced more noticeable lengthening during peak periods.

This divergence aligns with buyer behavior: core buyers, more rate-sensitive and facing affordability constraints, exercised greater caution and took longer to decide, contributing to the segment’s sharper CDOM rise. Luxury buyers—often with more equity or cash positions—remained decisive when the right property appeared, resulting in relatively stable marketing times despite a slower sales pace. The contrast reinforces that selectivity pressures in 2025 were more acute in the core market, while luxury benefited from targeted demand in premium submarkets.

Housing Supply

Months of supply (MOS)—the number of months it would take to absorb current active inventory at the prevailing sales pace, assuming no new listings enter the market—remained low throughout 2025, averaging approximately 2.9 months. This continued tightness supported price resilience and modest gains despite increased buyer selectivity and longer marketing times. The following bar chart shows MOS by calendar month for 2025:

This bar graph shows the months of housing supply for single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for each month of 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The chart illustrates clear seasonality: MOS peaked in January (3.36 months) as sales slowed and some listings lingered or re-entered the market post-holidays, dipped through spring (March 2.67, April 2.71), rose modestly during summer (June 3.08, July 3.22, August 3.15), and reached its lowest point in December (2.25 months). The December low reflects widespread year-end listing cancellations and withdrawals—a common pattern as sellers pause for holidays, tax considerations, or motivation loss—while January’s high results from many of those listings re-entering the market alongside new ones.

This seasonal wave aligns with expected regional patterns: stronger sales pace relative to inventory in peak buyer months (spring/summer) pulls MOS lower, while slower winter activity allows inventory to build relative to closings. The annual average of ~2.9 months stayed well below the traditional 4–6 month benchmark for a balanced market, maintaining a seller-leaning environment that helped anchor price stability even as CDOM lengthened.

The line graph below compares monthly months of supply for 2024 (blue line) and 2025 (red line), with a full y-axis scale to show true proportional differences:

This line graph shows the months of housing supply for homes in the Portland Region for 2024 and 2025.

Both years exhibited similar seasonal waves: higher MOS in winter (January peaks around 3.4–3.5 months), a dip through spring as sales pace accelerated, a modest rise in summer, and lows in late fall/early winter (December ~2.2–2.3 months in both years). The lines converged closely at the start (January) and end (December) of the year, with the most noticeable divergence occurring in spring and summer months, where 2024 showed lower (more constrained) MOS—often 0.5–0.8 months below 2025 levels—indicating relatively stronger absorption relative to inventory during peak buying season in 2024.

Overall, 2025 averaged modestly higher supply (2.92 months) compared to 2024 (2.66 months), remaining well below the traditional 4–6 month benchmark for a balanced market. This slight increase contributed to incremental affordability relief and helped support the year’s modest transaction volume growth, while the persistent tightness anchored price stability and limited broader volatility.

Miscellaneous Statistics & Standout Transactions

The 2025 Portland Region detached single-family market produced a range of notable extremes and interesting figures that highlight the diversity and breadth of activity across price points, sizes, features, and marketing times. The following standouts capture some of the year’s most remarkable data points.

Lowest close price: $90,000—a 1930s fixer cabin in Forest Grove (Washington County). The property offered original character but required extensive rehabilitation, including interior plumbing repairs and floor work. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Highest close price: $9.45 million—a lakefront estate in Lake Oswego (Clackamas County). The property featured approximately 280 feet of private Oswego Lake shoreline, panoramic views, a primary suite addition, pool, extensive entertaining spaces, six-car garage (pre-wired for expansion), and a boathouse. This transaction reflects sustained demand for premium waterfront properties in Clackamas County, consistent with the area’s historical strength at the upper end of the market. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Lowest PPSF: $49.84—an REO (bank-owned) fixer-upper in Clatskanie, OR 97016 (Columbia County). This 2-story home with basement offered good natural light and scenic surroundings but required significant vision and effort to restore to its potential. As one of the region’s most affordable major counties, Columbia continues to produce entry-level opportunities for buyers willing to undertake rehabilitation work. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Highest PPSF: $1,646.65 per square foot—a lakefront property on Oswego Lake in Clackamas County that is near the highest sale. The home sold for $8,500,000 and measured 5,162 square feet, featuring 4 bedrooms, 6 full bathrooms, 1 half bathroom, and a 0.26-acre lot. This transaction reflects strong demand for premium waterfront locations in the region, where location and views can drive exceptional value per square foot. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Longest CDOM: 1,923 days—a working vineyard estate in Yamhill County. The property first listed in March 2019 for $1.3 million, saw no price adjustment until March 2023, went pending in July 2024, and closed in August 2025 for $1.195 million. The extended marketing time reflects the challenges of selling a specialized vineyard property on a small-volume market, though the final discount was moderated by appreciation since the initial listing. This extreme duration highlights how niche or rural properties can face prolonged exposure in a selective environment. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Oldest home sold in 2025: Built in 1858—the former residence of Capt. George Jerome in Oregon City, OR (Clackamas County, Canemah historic neighborhood). This 3-bedroom home (main level living plus 3 upstairs bedrooms) sits adjacent to Willamette Falls, with a detached garage offering bonus room potential for hobbies or an ADU. The property represents a piece of Oregon’s early history, located in a neighborhood poised for future development tied to the falls area. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Largest lot sold in 2025: 90.9 acres—a property in North Plains, Oregon (Washington County). The 4,335-square-foot home sits on a mostly sloped and heavily forested lot, offering significant land area with limited immediate buildable potential. This sale reflects the region’s occasional demand for large rural or acreage parcels, often appealing to buyers seeking privacy, recreation, or long-term investment. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Largest home sold in 2025: 13,379 square feet—a sprawling estate in West Linn, Oregon (Clackamas County). The property sat on 20.18 acres adjacent to the Oregon Golf Club and included a shop building larger than the main residence itself. It sold for $6,500,000 after 299 days on market. This sale highlights demand for expansive, large-lot properties in the region’s suburban and semi-rural areas, where size and outbuildings add significant utility. An exterior photo of the property may be viewed here.

Smallest home sold in 2025: 426 square feet—a cabin in Scappoose, Oregon (Columbia County) on 1.4 acres. This compact property offered a minimal footprint with potential for buyers seeking an affordable entry into detached ownership or a rural retreat. Photos of the cozy home are currently available online and may be viewed here.

Most bedrooms: 11—a former adult foster care home in Tigard, OR (Washington County). The 7-bathroom property included a large kitchen, laundry area, living and family rooms, formal and informal dining, a back living/dining area with wet bar and desk setup, recent updates (new roof, AC/furnace, water heater, LVP flooring, electrical panel, interior/exterior paint), furniture negotiable, detached garage for storage, private deck, and an adjacent city-owned lot for extra parking. It sold to another adult care company, reflecting continued demand for larger, adaptable homes suitable for group living or care facilities in the region. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Most bathrooms: 10—a 9,500-square-foot residence in Dundee, Oregon (Yamhill County), currently operating as the Franziska Haus bed and breakfast. The property included 10 bedrooms and was designed for guest accommodations, making it convenient for wine-tasting visitors in the area. It likely could be converted to a private residence with minimal interior changes. Photos of the home are currently available online and may be viewed here.

Multnomah County 2025 Stats

Multnomah County remained the Portland Region’s core and highest-volume market in 2025, accounting for 37.81% of all detached single-family sales with 6,459 transactions. The following table compares key metrics for the county in 2025 with 2024:

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$3.9 Billion$4.1 Billion+6.10%
Average Price$623,165$635,278+1.94%
Median Price$540,000$550,000+1.85%
Avg SP/OLP98.41%98.15%-0.27%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$313.41$316.80+1.08%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.260.28+8.69%
Avg Age (Yrs)65.7768.84+4.68%
Avg CDOM46.8649.14+4.87%
Avg Total SF2,0852,108+1.08%
Total # of Sales6,2066,459+4.08%
# of New Constr.311262-15.76%
# of REOs5154+5.88%
# of Short Sales916+77.78%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The table below summarizes key metrics for Multnomah County detached single-family residential sales in Q1 2026 compared with Q1 2025.

Multnomah showed modest growth in transaction volume (+4.08% to 6,459 sales) and dollar volume (+6.10% to $4.1 billion), outpacing the regional increase in both metrics. Median and average close prices rose +1.85% to $550,000 and +1.94% to $635,278 respectively, while average PPSF gained +1.08% to $316.80. The PPSF gains occurred despite a modest home size increase (+1.08% to 2,108 SF), suggesting underlying value support through compositional factors (larger average lot size) and location premiums in the county’s urban/suburban mix. Average cumulative days on market lengthened +4.87% to 49.14 days—a milder increase than the regional +11.09%—indicating relatively stronger demand and quicker turnover compared to surrounding counties. New construction fell -15.76% to 262 closings, contributing to an older average age (+4.68% to 68.84 years) and further emphasizing resale dominance.

The scatter plots below visualize individual sale prices against date of sale in Multnomah County for 2025. The first shows the full range, while the second focuses on the $0–$2M range:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Multnomah County during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Multnomah County during 2025, with a focus on sales at or below $2 million. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The full-range plot includes occasional high-end outliers up to nearly $6M, while the zoomed view reveals a dense “wall” of transactions below approximately $1M, accounting for roughly 91% of the county’s sales count. Density thins noticeably above that level, underscoring Multnomah’s role as the primary driver of core and mid-range volume while luxury sales remained comparatively sparse and scattered throughout the year. This distribution aligns with the county’s urban/suburban character and older inventory base.

Washington County 2025 Stats

Washington County, the region’s second-largest market by volume, represented 29.54% of all detached single-family sales in 2025 with 5,046 transactions. The following table compares key metrics for the county in 2025 with 2024:

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$3.54 Billion$3.45 Billion-2.38%
Average Price$695,447$684,155-1.62%
Median Price$635,000$626,699-1.31%
Avg SP/OLP98.34%97.02%-1.34%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$324.23$317.20-2.17%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.470.42-10.34%
Avg Age (Yrs)30.1932.24+6.78%
Avg CDOM51.5761.89+20.03%
Avg Total SF2,2212,245+1.09%
Total # of Sales5,0855,046-0.77%
# of New Constr.1,071976-8.87%
# of REOs1517+13.33%
# of Short Sales87-12.50%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Washington posted a near-flat sales count (-0.77% to 5,046) but saw dollar volume soften -2.38% to $3.45 billion, reflecting modest price erosion and compositional shifts. Median price declined -1.31% to $626,699, average price -1.62% to $684,155, and average PPSF -2.17% to $317.20. These declines occurred despite a slight increase in average home size (+1.09% to 2,245 SF) and were driven primarily by smaller average lot sizes (-10.34% to 0.42 acres) and reduced new construction (-8.87% to 976 closings), which limited higher-priced fresh inventory. Average cumulative days on market surged +20.03% to 61.89 days—the sharpest increase among major counties—signaling greater buyer selectivity and slower absorption in this suburban-heavy market. SP/OLP ratio fell -1.34% to 97.02%, indicating increased concessions.

The scatter plots below visualize individual sale prices against date of sale in Washington County for 2025. The first shows the full range, while the second focuses on the $0–$2M range:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Washington County during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Washington County during 2025, with a focus on sales at or below $2 million. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The full-range plot includes occasional high-end outliers up to $4M, while the zoomed view reveals a dense “wall” of transactions below approximately $1M, thinning noticeably above that level. This pattern underscores Washington’s core market strength in volume while highlighting softer momentum in the luxury segment, consistent with localized pressures in tech-heavy submarkets like Hillsboro. For a detailed look at how Intel layoffs have impacted inventory, pricing, and absorption in Hillsboro during 2024–2025, see my recent analysis.

Clackamas County 2025 Stats

Clackamas County, the region’s third-largest market by volume, represented 23.33% of all detached single-family sales in 2025 with 3,986 transactions. The following table compares key metrics for the county in 2025 with 2024:

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$3.08 Billion$3.16 Billion+2.72%
Average Price$782,331$793,962+1.49%
Median Price$649,950$658,750+1.35%
Avg SP/OLP97.12%96.49%-0.65%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$333.10$336.43+1.00%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.040.94-9.29%
Avg Age (Yrs)37.4038.27+2.33%
Avg CDOM62.5164.41+3.04%
Avg Total SF2,3812,394+0.55%
Total # of Sales3,9383,986+1.22%
# of New Constr.507486-4.14%
# of REOs2826-7.14%
# of Short Sales510+100.00%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Clackamas delivered modest but genuine growth in 2025. Sales count rose +1.22% to 3,986, dollar volume increased +2.72% to $3.16 billion, median price advanced +1.35% to $658,750, average price gained +1.49% to $793,962, and average PPSF edged +1.00% to $336.43. These gains occurred despite a reduction in average lot size (-9.29% to 0.94 acres) and only modest home size increase (+0.55% to 2,394 SF), suggesting underlying value support through location, quality, or compositional factors rather than broad size-driven appreciation. Average cumulative days on market lengthened only +3.04% to 64.41 days—a relatively mild increase compared to regional +11.09% or Washington +20.03%—indicating stronger relative demand and quicker turnover in this diverse county. New construction declined modestly -4.14% to 486 closings, the smallest drop among major counties.

Clackamas’s performance was bolstered by its mix of rural/exurban areas and premium enclaves, particularly Lake Oswego and West Linn, which contribute to the county’s outsized share of regional luxury activity. In 2025, Clackamas accounted for approximately 42.1% of the Portland Region’s luxury dollar volume (≥ $1M), totaling $1.04 billion out of the regional $2.47 billion—the largest share among counties. This contrasts with the core market (< $1M), which comprised only ~67% of Clackamas’s own dollar volume, the smallest core dollar volume share among major counties with significant activity.

The scatter plots below visualize individual sale prices against date of sale in Clackamas County for 2025. The first shows the full range, while the second focuses on the $0–$2M range:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Clackamas County during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Clackamas County during 2025, with a focus on sales at or below $2 million. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The full-range plot includes occasional high-end outliers up to nearly $10M, while the zoomed view reveals a dense “wall” of transactions below approximately $1.3M–$1.5M throughout the year, with density thinning noticeably above that level. This pattern highlights Clackamas’s strong core volume alongside its leading role in regional luxury value, driven by premium lakefront and waterfront properties.

Yamhill County 2025 Stats

Yamhill County, a smaller but growing market in the region (5.64% of total sales), saw 964 detached single-family sales in 2025. The following table compares key metrics for the county in 2025 with 2024:

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$603 Million$574 Million-4.88%
Average Price$578,576$595,444+2.92%
Median Price$500,000$515,000+3.00%
Avg SP/OLP97.06%96.49%-0.59%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$302.08$312.04+3.30%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.661.90+14.23%
Avg Age (Yrs)32.5735.51+9.03%
Avg CDOM67.2676.14+13.19%
Avg Total SF1,9491,972+1.21%
Total # of Sales1,043964-7.57%
# of New Constr.210120-42.86%
# of REOs64-33.33%
# of Short Sales13+200.00%
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Yamhill experienced a sharp decline in transaction volume (-7.57% to 964 sales) and dollar volume (-4.88% to $574 million), driven primarily by a steep drop in new construction (-42.86% to 120 closings). This reduction in fresh supply limited higher-priced inventory and contributed to the overall pullback. Despite these headwinds, price metrics showed resilience: median price rose +3.00% to $515,000, average price +2.92% to $595,444, and average PPSF +3.30% to $312.04. These gains occurred amid only modest home size increase (+1.21% to 1,972 SF) and were largely supported by a significant rise in average lot size (+14.23% to 1.90 acres), suggesting buyers prioritized additional land or rural parcels that added value. Average cumulative days on market lengthened +13.19% to 76.14 days, reflecting increased selectivity, while SP/OLP ratio fell -0.59% to 96.49%, indicating modestly greater concessions.

The scatter plot below visualizes individual sale prices against date of sale in Yamhill County for 2025:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Yamhill County during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The scatter shows a dense concentration of transactions below approximately $1M throughout the year, with sparser, more scattered points above that level. This pattern reflects Yamhill’s more rural and affordable character, where core and mid-range volume dominates while luxury sales remain limited. The absence of strong seasonal clustering in the price cloud supports the county’s price resilience despite the volume decline, bolstered by larger lot sizes and selective demand for wine-country or rural properties.

Columbia County 2025 Stats

Columbia County, the region’s smallest major market by volume, represented 2.85% of all detached single-family sales in 2025 with 487 transactions. The following table compares key metrics for the county in 2025 with 2024:

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$226 Million$244 Million+8.00%
Average Price$484,795$501,012+3.35%
Median Price$458,000$477,125+4.18%
Avg SP/OLP95.93%96.08%+0.16%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$272.01$281.23+3.39%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.942.25+16.33%
Avg Age (Yrs)49.1247.25-3.82%
Avg CDOM71.2481.81+14.84%
Avg Total SF1,8851,933+2.51%
Total # of Sales466487+4.51%
# of New Constr.990.00%
# of REOs119-18.18%
# of Short Sales01N/A
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Columbia County delivered solid performance in 2025, with sales count rising +4.51% to 487 and dollar volume advancing +8.00% to $244 million — growth that outpaced the increase in transactions. Median price gained +4.18% to $477,125, average price +3.35% to $501,012, and average PPSF +3.39% to $281.23. These improvements occurred alongside larger average home size (+2.51% to 1,933 SF) and a substantial increase in average lot size (+16.33% to 2.25 acres), indicating compositional factors — more spacious properties and land parcels — supported genuine value appreciation. Average cumulative days on market lengthened +14.84% to 81.81 days, reflecting increased selectivity consistent with regional trends. New construction remained flat at 9 closings, and SP/OLP ratio improved slightly +0.16% to 96.08%.

The scatter plot below visualizes individual sale prices against date of sale in Columbia County for 2025:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Columbia County during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The scatter shows an extremely dense concentration of transactions below approximately $600,000 throughout the year, with thin activity above that level; $1M+ sales are rare outliers. This tight clustering reinforces Columbia’s position as the most affordable county in the region, where the core market (< $1M) overwhelmingly dominated (98.56% of sales count, 96.57% of dollar volume) and luxury activity remained negligible (only 7 sales, ~3.43% of county dollar volume).

Hood River County 2025 Stats

Hood River County, the region’s smallest market by volume, represented 0.83% of all detached single-family sales in 2025 with 141 transactions. Due to its low base numbers, the county is prone to large percentage swings. The following table compares key metrics for the county in 2025 with 2024:

Category20242025% Change
Total $ Volume$105.7 Million$121.9 Million+15.27%
Average Price$789,004$864,341+9.55%
Median Price$720,500$735,000+2.01%
Avg SP/OLP96.08%94.00%-2.17%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$424.03$417.15-1.62%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.242.47+98.78%
Avg Age (Yrs)42.0743.70+3.89%
Avg CDOM52.8276.21+44.29%
Avg Total SF1,9902,136+7.30%
Total # of Sales134141+5.22%
# of New Constr.05N/A
# of REOs00N/A
# of Short Sales00N/A
2024 & 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Hood River posted solid growth on a small base: sales count rose +5.22% to 141, and dollar volume advanced +15.27% to $121.9 million. Median price gained +2.01% to $735,000, average price increased +9.55% to $864,341, and average PPSF softened -1.62% to $417.15. These results were driven by compositional factors—larger average home size (+7.30% to 2,136 SF) and a substantial increase in average lot size (+98.78% to 2.47 acres)—which added value and supported the dollar volume jump despite only modest sales growth. Average cumulative days on market lengthened significantly +44.29% to 76.21 days, amplified by the small base and reflecting increased selectivity. New construction emerged modestly (5 closings from 0), while SP/OLP ratio fell -2.17% to 94.00%, indicating greater discounts.

The scatter plot below visualizes individual sale prices against date of sale in Hood River County for 2025:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Hood River County during 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The scatter shows a relatively tight mid-range cluster ($500k–$1.5M) for much of the year, with several high-end outliers ($2M–$3.5M+) appearing more frequently in the latter months. The fitted trendline reflects an upward shift in the second half of 2025, driven by these late-year luxury sales. This pattern aligns with the segment’s strong performance (luxury sales count +60% to 32, dollar volume +68.15% to $47.3M) on a small base, contributing significantly to the county’s overall growth. Hood River’s scenic Gorge location, wine-country appeal, and tourism/second-home demand help explain the selective strength at the upper end despite limited overall volume.

Closing Thoughts

The 2025 Portland Region detached single-family home market delivered a year of continued equilibrium—modest gains in volume and prices persisted within a balanced, non-volatile environment. While cumulative days on market lengthened and new construction retreated, the overall picture remained one of stability three years after the rapid mortgage rate rise. Supply stayed tight, buyer selectivity increased modestly, and prices held firm with slight upward movement, reflecting a market that has settled into a sustainable new normal.

This stability played out against a backdrop of remarkable diversity across the six-county region. From urban core neighborhoods in Multnomah to suburban growth corridors in Washington and Clackamas, rural and wine-country areas in Yamhill, affordable exurban pockets in Columbia, and scenic Gorge communities in Hood River, the market offered a wide spectrum of options. Affordability remained a challenge for many, yet detached ownership was still attainable at the lower end—the year’s lowest sale closed at $90,000. Homes were found for those willing to be patient, search diligently, and consider rehabilitation or rural locations. Meanwhile, the 17,083 transactions represented substantial movement: long-time owners parting with properties held for decades, families relocating for schools, jobs, or lifestyle, and first-time buyers achieving detached homeownership. Each closing reflected real human transitions and progress in a selective but functional market.

Sources & Further Reading

All data presented in this annual review is sourced directly from RMLS and has been subjected to my rigorous cleaning and validation process to ensure reliability for detached single-family residential analysis in the six-county Portland Region. The trends, comparisons, and commentary are the result of original appraisal expertise and independent analysis—not aggregated from secondary sources or news summaries.

Coda

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The Portland Region Q4 2025 Detached Homes Market Update

Q4 2025 Portland Region detached homes update: median price $582k (flat), average $664k (+0.06%), sales volume +3.19%, CDOM rises to 68 days (+16%). County trends, core vs luxury split, appraisal insights, and more.

St. Johns Bridge in Portland shrouded in morning fog, with evergreen trees and misty atmosphere—iconic view of North Portland.
St. Johns Bridge in the fog—Portland’s northern gateway to neighborhoods full of character and classic detached homes.
Via Canva Pro

As the first month of 2026 draws to a close, it’s a natural time to look back at how the Portland Region’s single-family detached home market performed in Q4 2025 (October through December). The data reveals a market that has largely maintained stability despite the ongoing influence of higher interest rates that took hold in 2022 and beyond.

Sellers continue to hold firm, often marketing properties for longer periods to connect with the right buyer and minimize concessions on price. At the same time, buyers have gained slightly more leverage in negotiations, reflecting greater selectivity amid elevated borrowing costs. Core and luxury segments exhibited some distinct patterns in response to these dynamics, yet overall the market appears to have settled into a balanced equilibrium—neither surging nor retreating sharply.

Table of Contents

Data Housekeeping

The Portland Region in this update comprises the six Oregon counties of Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill. These counties form a contiguous housing ecosystem centered on Portland—Multnomah as the core home county, with the others tightly integrated through commuting patterns, economic ties, and shared market dynamics (e.g., Yamhill’s strong connection via Highway 99W and wine-country adjacency). Beyond Yamhill, the MLS system changes, further distinguishing this six-county area from broader geographic aggregations. For a detailed overview—including county profiles, population data, key value influencers, and why this definition differs from the official seven-county Portland–Vancouver–Hillsboro MSA—see my dedicated page: The Portland Region – Six-County Market Area Overview.

Colored map of the six counties comprising the Portland Region: Clackamas, Columbia, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill.
The six-county Portland Region
Via SunCatcherStudio

All data is sourced from RMLS and reflects open-market detached single-family residential sales (excluding condos, attached homes, manufactured homes on leased land, and multifamily). SNL (“Sold Not Listed”) entries—off-market transactions entered retroactively—have been excluded to preserve consistency with true market activity.

All figures have undergone my standard cleaning process to address common RMLS accuracy challenges, including misclassifications (e.g., condos listed as detached), square footage/price typos, incomplete fields, status/date mismatches, and non-representative entries. For a detailed overview of these issues, their impact on market analysis, and how I mitigate them through automated flagging, cross-verification, and manual review, see my dedicated page: RMLS Data Accuracy Challenges.

Portland Region 2025 Q4 Overview

The Q4 2025 detached single-family home market in the six-county Portland Region showed signs of continued stabilization. After several quarters of adjustment to elevated interest rates, the data reflects a market that has found a tentative balance—neither accelerating nor declining sharply. Volume edged higher year-over-year, while price metrics remained essentially flat, and days on market continued to lengthen, pointing to buyer selectivity and seller patience.

Overall Regional Trends

The table below summarizes key metrics for detached single-family residential sales in the Portland Region (Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill counties) for Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$2.73 Billion$2.82 Billion+3.25%
Average Price$663,713$664,118+0.06%
Median Price$582,000$582,0000.00%
Avg SP/OLP96.75%95.72%-1.07%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$318.77$314.63-1.30%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.630.62-0.64%
Avg Age (Yrs)46.2047.17+2.10%
Avg CDOM58.8468.45+16.32%
Avg Total SF2,1542,193+1.83%
Total # of Sales4,1124,243+3.19%
# of New Constr.483463-4.14%
# of REOs 1842+133.33%
# of Short Sales78+14.29%
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Key Observations From the Aggregate Data

  • Sales count rose modestly (+3.19%), driving the overall volume increase (+3.25%), while both average and median prices were virtually unchanged.
  • The slight decline in average PPSF (-1.30%) appears largely compositional: average square footage increased +1.83%, and larger homes typically carry lower PPSF unless offset by luxury or new-construction premiums.
  • Average cumulative days on market increased significantly (+16.32% to 68.45 days), consistent with buyers remaining selective under higher borrowing costs and sellers holding firm rather than conceding aggressively (reflected in the modest drop in SP/OLP ratio to 95.72%).
  • New construction volume retreated further (-4.14%), though the year-over-year drop was less severe than in Q3 2025.
  • Distressed activity (REOs + short sales) ticked up to approximately 1.18% of total sales (from 0.61% in Q4 2024), but remains negligible in the broader market context.

Bottom-line Summary

If the Portland Region housing market were a ship, Q4 2025 would be described as “steady as she goes.” The vessel is neither listing sharply nor picking up speed; it is maintaining course through persistent headwinds from higher interest rates. Sellers are exercising patience by allowing longer marketing periods, buyers are exercising discretion by negotiating more effectively, and price levels are holding firm despite the extended exposure time. This equilibrium suggests a market that has largely absorbed the rate shock of 2022–2023 and is now operating in a more normalized, balanced state—albeit one where momentum is subdued and selectivity is elevated.

Core Market (< $1M)

The core market—detached single-family homes closing under $1 million—accounts for the overwhelming majority of transactions in the region (91.35% of sales count and 80.55% of dollar volume in Q4 2025). This segment largely drives the overall picture of stability described earlier, with year-over-year changes that are muted but revealing of ongoing buyer caution.

The table below shows core-market metrics for Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryCore (< $1M) Q4 2024Core (< $1M) Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$2.2 Billion$2.3 Billion+3.31%
Avg Price$585,561$585,609+0.01%
Median Price$565,000$562,250-0.49%
Avg SP/OLP97.09%96.03%-1.09%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$311.12$306.72-1.41%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.450.44-1.08%
Avg Age (Yrs)47.0147.51+1.06%
Avg CDOM54.2965.25+20.20%
Avg Total SF1,9922,033+2.08%
# of Sales3,7523,876+3.30%
# of New Constr.432425-1.62%
% of $ Volume80.50%80.55%+0.06%
% of Market91.25%91.35%+0.12%
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The core segment saw a healthy increase in transaction volume (+3.30% in sales count), which translated directly to the modest dollar-volume growth (+3.31%). Price levels, however, remained essentially flat—average price up a negligible 0.01%, median price down slightly (-0.49%). This stability at the median level aligns with the broader regional pattern and suggests that the typical buyer in this price band is still finding properties within reach despite elevated rates.

The most noticeable movement appears in market tempo. Average cumulative days on market climbed +20.20% to 65.25 days, a sharper rise than the regional average as a whole. Buyers in this price-sensitive segment are clearly taking more time to commit, inspecting more options, and negotiating more effectively—the modest decline in the SP/OLP ratio (97.09% → 96.03%) reflects that added leverage. Sellers, meanwhile, appear willing to wait rather than drop asking prices aggressively.

The slight drop in average PPSF (-1.41%) is again largely explained by compositional factors: homes closing in Q4 2025 were, on average, 41 square feet larger (+2.08%). Larger floor plans naturally dilute PPSF unless premium finishes or locations offset the effect, which does not appear to be the case here on a broad scale.

New construction in the core market held up reasonably well, with only a -1.62% drop in count year-over-year. This modest retreat contrasts with sharper declines seen in prior quarters and suggests builders are still finding demand for entry-to-mid-level new homes, even as overall supply pressures ease slightly.

Overall, the core market continues to reflect the realities of affordability-conscious buyers navigating higher borrowing costs: more transactions at stable prices, but with extended decision time and a bit more negotiating power on the buyer side.

Luxury Market (≥ $1M)

The luxury segment—detached single-family homes closing at or above $1 million—remains a smaller but influential portion of the regional market, representing 8.65% of sales count and 19.45% of total dollar volume in Q4 2025. While the core market drives the headline numbers on volume and stability, the luxury segment often reveals early signals of shifting buyer sentiment and supply constraints.

The table below shows luxury-market metrics for Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryLuxury (≥ $1M) Q4 2024Luxury (≥ $1M) Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$532 Million$548 Million+2.98%
Avg Price$1,478,221$1,493,272+1.02%
Median Price$1,259,167$1,277,000+1.42%
Avg SP/OLP93.22%92.43%-0.85%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$398.51$398.18-0.08%
Avg Lot Size (ac)2.482.51+1.18%
Avg Age (Yrs)37.7943.61+15.40%
Avg CDOM106.33102.18-3.90%
Avg Total SF3,8393,881+1.07%
# of Sales360367+1.94%
# of New Constr.5138-25.49%
% of $ Volume19.50%19.45%-0.26%
% of Market8.75%8.65%-1.20%
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The luxury segment posted modest gains in both transaction count (+1.94%) and dollar volume (+2.98%), which translated to small but positive price movement: average price up +1.02% and median price up +1.42%. This slight upward pressure contrasts with the flat pricing seen in the core market and contributed an additional ~$15.9 million in total seller proceeds compared with Q4 2024 in this segment.

Market tempo improved somewhat for luxury properties. Average cumulative days on market fell -3.90% to 102.2 days—the only segment to see a reduction in exposure time. This suggests that well-positioned high-end homes are still finding motivated buyers relatively efficiently, even as the broader market lengthens. The SP/OLP ratio continued to soften slightly (93.22% → 92.43%), indicating that sellers in this price band are conceding a bit more ground to close deals.

The most striking shift occurred in new construction. The number of new luxury homes closing dropped sharply (-25.5%), from 51 to 38. This retreat is significantly steeper than the core segment’s mild -1.62% decline and continues a multi-quarter trend of reduced high-end speculative building. Builders appear to be pulling back from the upper end, possibly due to financing costs, buyer selectivity, or uncertainty around future demand.

Another notable change is the jump in average age of sold properties (+15.40% to 43.61 years). A key driver here is the sharp retreat in new construction (-25.49%, from 51 to 38 closings). New homes typically enter and close with near-zero age, pulling the average down when they represent a meaningful share of sales. With far fewer new builds closing this quarter, the sales mix shifted toward existing (and generally older) properties, naturally increasing the average age of transactions. PPSF remained virtually flat (-0.08%), and average square footage edged up modestly (+1.07%), indicating that luxury buyers are not trading down on size or quality but are closing on a different mix of inventory.

From an appraisal perspective, the luxury market’s relative resilience on pricing and CDOM improvement provides a useful contrast for comp selection and market-condition adjustments. However, the sharp drop in new construction supply at this price point may begin to influence highest-and-best-use considerations and functional obsolescence assessments for older luxury improvements in the coming quarters.

Sales Volume

A treemap visualizing the distribution of detached single-family home sales by county in Q4 2025 clearly illustrates the market’s geographic concentration.

This treemap graph illustrates the sales volume of single-family homes in the Portland Region Q4 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The “Big Three” counties—Multnomah, Washington, and Clackamas—account for over 90% of total transactions and dollar volume, underscoring their role as the dominant drivers of regional activity. Multnomah leads in sheer number of sales (37.99% of the total), followed closely by Washington (30.12%) and Clackamas (22.63%). The remaining three counties (Yamhill, Columbia, and Hood River) together represent less than 10% of sales, highlighting the highly urban/suburban focus of the Portland Region’s detached home market.

The bar chart below compares monthly sales volume across the three months of Q4 for 2024 and 2025.

This bar graph compares the number of single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for Q4 2024 and Q4 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Monthly sales patterns show a mixed picture compared with last year. October 2025 posted a noticeable increase (1,686 vs. 1,579), helping drive the overall quarterly gain in transaction volume. November softened relative to 2024 (1,255 vs. 1,338), reflecting typical holiday slowdown effects, while December rebounded (1,302 vs. 1,195), closing the quarter on a stronger note. The net result is a modest year-over-year increase in total sales (4,243 vs. 4,112), consistent with the regional stabilization theme.

Sales Price

The bar chart below compares monthly average sales prices across the three months of Q4 for 2024 and 2025.

This bar graph compares the average sales price of single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for Q4 2024 and Q4 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Note: The y-axis starts at $630,000 to allow better examination of monthly differences.

Average sales prices showed only minor month-to-month variation compared with the prior year. October 2025 posted a modest increase over October 2024 ($674,243 vs. $666,189), while November softened ($657,867 vs. $674,704). December then rebounded slightly ($657,031 vs. $648,133). These movements align with the overall quarterly stability, where the average price ended virtually unchanged (+0.06% for the full quarter) despite the shifting monthly pattern. The lack of significant upward or downward momentum reinforces the sense of equilibrium reached in the market after several years of rate-driven adjustment.

New Construction

The bar graph below shows monthly total detached single-family sales in Q4 2025, with new construction volume nested within each bar to illustrate the portion of sales that were newly built.

This bar graph compares the sales volume of new construction and total sales in the Portland Region for Q4 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

New construction remained a relatively small but visible share of overall activity in Q4 2025, averaging 10.91% of total sales for the quarter. Monthly percentages ranged from 9.25% in October to 12.37% in December, reflecting some seasonal pickup toward year-end. The absolute count of new homes closing (463) was down modestly from Q4 2024 (483, -4.14%), continuing the multi-quarter retreat in new supply observed earlier in the year. This reduction has contributed to the gradual tightening of inventory in certain segments and price bands, particularly at the luxury end where the drop was more pronounced.

A county-level breakout of new construction sales volume in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024 reveals significant variation across the region. The bar graph below shows the number of new construction closings by county, with side-by-side bars for 2024 and 2025.

This bar graph compares the number of new construction single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for Q4 2024 and Q4 2025 broken out by county. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Washington County continued to lead in absolute new construction volume (223 closings in 2025, 48.16% of the regional total), though it experienced the largest absolute drop (-47 units, -17.41%). Clackamas posted the strongest percentage gain (+13.33%) and now represents nearly 30% of all new closings. Multnomah showed solid growth (+22.22%), while Yamhill, Columbia, and Hood River remained small contributors, with Hood River moving from zero to four closings.

The overall regional decline in new construction (-4.14%) masks these internal shifts. The concentration in Washington and Clackamas reflects ongoing builder focus on suburban growth corridors, while the limited activity in outer counties highlights the challenges of scaling new supply in lower-volume, more rural submarkets.

Clackamas County’s recent gain in new construction share (now 29.37% of regional total) may prove short-lived. The ongoing sewer moratorium in Sandy, Oregon—one of the county’s primary growth areas—has already begun to constrain the new-home pipeline. Sandy historically averaged 27% new construction annually for its total sales count over a 28-year period, significantly exceeding available sewer capacity. With the remaining approved projects expected to close by late 2026 or early 2027, Clackamas’s contribution to regional new supply is likely to shrink in the coming quarters. For a full analysis of this shift and its implications for local market dynamics, see my recent deep dive: Sandy Oregon’s Sewer Moratorium.

The dollar value of new construction closings provides additional context on builder activity and investment scale. The table below shows new construction sales volume by dollar amount for Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

County2024 $ Amount2025 $ Amount% Change% of Total 2025 $ Amount
Clackamas$100,484,661$124,588,363+23.99%4.42%
Columbia$1,169,000$2,200,700+88.25%0.08%
Hood River$0$2,511,2500.09%
Multnomah$30,948,989$33,205,496+7.29%1.18%
Washington$204,616,369$155,310,537-24.10%5.51%
Yamhill$19,903,315$16,491,838-17.14%0.59%
Sum$357,122,334$334,308,184-6.39%11.86%
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

The following double bar chart provides the above information at a glance.

This bar graph compares the dollar amount of new construction single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for Q4 2024 and Q4 2025 broken out by county. The data is sourced from RMLS.

While the count of new construction closings fell modestly (-4.14%), the dollar volume declined more noticeably (-6.39% regionally), reflecting a shift toward relatively lower-priced new homes or fewer ultra-high-end builds. Washington County again dominated in absolute dollars ($155.3M, 5.51% of the total regional value) but saw the largest year-over-year drop (-$49.3M, -24.10%). Clackamas posted the strongest dollar gain (+$24.1M, +23.99%), taking a larger slice of the shrinking pie. These patterns highlight ongoing builder caution in higher-cost segments and continued focus on suburban growth corridors.

Cumulative Days on Market

The bar chart below compares average cumulative days on market (CDOM) across the three months of Q4 for 2024 and 2025.

This bar graph compares the average days on market (CDOM) for single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for Q4 2024 and Q4 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Average cumulative days on market rose across every month in Q4 2025 compared with the prior year, with increases ranging from 13.74% in November to 19.83% in October. The quarterly average CDOM climbed +16.32% overall (58.84 → 68.45 days), reflecting sustained buyer selectivity amid elevated interest rates. Sellers have responded by allowing longer marketing periods rather than making aggressive price concessions, contributing to the market’s current equilibrium. This extended exposure time is a key signal for appraisers when assessing comparable freshness and applying market-condition adjustments in valuations.

The bar chart below breaks out average CDOM by market segment for the three months of Q4 2025, comparing core (< $1M) and luxury (≥ $1M) properties.

This bar graph compares the average days on market (CDOM) for single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for Q4 2024 and Q4 2025 segmented by under $1M or $1M+. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Core-market CDOM rose steadily from 61 days in October to 73 days in December, reflecting the price-sensitive nature of the segment and buyers taking more time to commit. Luxury-market CDOM showed a similar upward trend but from a much higher baseline, increasing from 83 days in October to 130 days in December. The persistent and larger gap between the two segments indicates that luxury buyers remain more selective and willing to wait for properties that precisely match their criteria, even as overall market tempo has slowed, and also the difficulties in finding a buyer than can afford homes in this segment.

Miscellaneous Statistics & Standout Transactions

Real estate data overlay on a light gray background, with a small clay house on the bottom right. The central white rectangle displays six key statistics: lowest price, highest price, longest CDOM, oldest home, highest PPSF, and lowest PPSF. The data is sourced from RMLS.

A few notable extremes and outliers from Q4 2025 illustrate the wide range of value drivers across the six-county region.

Lowest close price: $90,000—a 1930s fixer cabin in Forest Grove (Washington County). The property offered original character but required extensive rehabilitation, including interior plumbing repairs and floor work. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Highest close price: $9,000,000—a lakefront estate in Lake Oswego (Clackamas County). The custom-built residence featured premium waterfront amenities, including a private dock, boathouse, and expansive outdoor entertaining spaces. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Longest CDOM: 1,190 days—a $1.9M listing in Multnomah County (Alphabet District) that closed at $1.35M. The 2017-remodeled oversized bungalow included modern updates and a separate ADU, yet required multiple price reductions before finding a buyer. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Oldest home sold: Built in 1881—located in Oregon City (Clackamas County). This restored Italianate two-story featured high ceilings, new hardwood floors, and a complete modern kitchen, blending historic character with contemporary systems. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Highest PPSF: $1,459—a small home on 82 acres in Multnomah County. The elevated price per square foot was driven primarily by the large acreage and historic outbuildings rather than the modest improvements. Photos of this property are currently available online.

Lowest PPSF: $123—an REO (bank-owned) sale in Clatskanie (Columbia County). The 2-story home with basement needed significant restoration, with the low per-square-foot price reflecting condition challenges and rural location. Photos of this property are currently available online.

These outliers demonstrate that detached single-family home ownership in the Portland Region can begin around $100,000 for buyers who are patient, flexible, and prepared to address condition or location factors. They stand in contrast to the region’s severely strained affordability, as measured by the Portland Appraisal Blog Affordability Index (PABAI), which stood at 79.2 for Q4 2025. For the full methodology and discussion, see the dedicated page: Portland Appraisal Blog Affordability Index – PABAI. A comprehensive review of 2025 affordability trends is forthcoming.

With the regional aggregate trends, segment splits, monthly patterns, and notable outliers now in view, the remainder of this update turns to a county-level breakdown. The following sections present year-over-year comparisons for each of the six counties in the Portland Region—Multnomah, Washington, Clackamas, Yamhill, Columbia, and Hood River—ordered by Q4 2025 sales volume descending. Each county snapshot includes key metrics, commentary on local drivers, and any segment-specific observations that help explain broader regional patterns.

Multnomah County Q4 2025 Stats

Multnomah County, the urban core of the Portland Region, led in detached single-family home transaction volume for Q4 2025 with 1,612 sales—representing 37.99% of the regional total and a 5.29% increase from Q4 2024. Despite the high count, average and median prices remained below regional figures, reflecting the county’s mix of older homes, smaller lots, and more modest price bands in established neighborhoods.

The table below summarizes key metrics for Multnomah County detached single-family residential sales in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$928 Million$986 Million+6.26%
Average Price$606,203$611,760+0.92%
Median Price$530,000$533,750+0.71%
Avg SP/OLP97.06%96.63%-0.45%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$310.39$311.32+0.30%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.270.30+11.38%
Avg Age (Yrs)66.0466.30+0.38%
Avg CDOM51.9954.48+4.79%
Avg Total SF2,0592,068+0.46%
# of Sales1,5311,612+5.29%
# of New Constr.5466+22.22%
# of REOs719+171.43%
# of Short Sales34+33.33%
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Multnomah County’s market tempo remained the fastest in the region, with average cumulative days on market at 54.48 days—well below the regional average of 68.45 days. This shorter exposure time reflects sustained urban demand in walkable neighborhoods such as the Alphabet District, Pearl, and inner-eastside areas, where proximity to amenities and transit continues to draw buyers despite elevated rates. The modest rise in CDOM (+4.79%) was less pronounced than the regional increase (+16.32%), indicating relatively stronger buyer interest and quicker decision-making in the core.

Price metrics showed slight upward movement: average price +0.92% to $611,760 and median price +0.71% to $533,750. The SP/OLP ratio softened marginally (97.06% → 96.63%), suggesting buyers retained some negotiating leverage even in a high-volume market. Average PPSF edged up +0.30%, despite the small increase in average square footage (+0.46%). The PPSF increase was likely due to the lot size increase (+11.38%), though the county’s older housing stock (average age 66.30 years) continues to temper broader price gains.

New construction activity increased +22.22% (66 closings), rebounding from a sharp -48% year-over-year drop in Q3 2025. Despite the gain, new builds remained a small share (4.1% of county sales), underscoring persistent infill constraints and builder focus on suburban corridors elsewhere. Distressed sales ticked up (REOs +171.43%, short sales +33.33%), though absolute numbers stayed low and did not materially influence the overall market.

A scatter plot of all Multnomah County sales in Q4 2025 (close price vs. date of sale) shows no strong upward or downward trend across the quarter.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Multnomah County during Q4 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The distribution clusters primarily in the $400k–$800k range with CDOM generally under 100 days, consistent with the county’s efficient urban tempo. A modest number of sales appear above $1.5M, with one notable outlier closing above $3.5M, reflecting continued activity at the upper end despite the broader market’s stability.

From an appraisal perspective, Multnomah County’s combination of high transaction volume, shorter CDOM, and modest price growth provides a stable benchmark for comp selection in urban submarkets. The limited new supply and aging inventory require careful adjustments for condition, functional obsolescence, and location premiums, while the scatter of higher-end sales suggests selective but persistent demand above $1.5M.

Washington County Q4 2025 Stats

Washington County ranked second in detached single-family home transaction volume for Q4 2025 with 1,278 sales (30.12% of the regional total), up +7.58% from Q4 2024. The county experienced noticeable price softening alongside longer market times, reflecting a shift in buyer behavior and supply dynamics in this suburban growth corridor.

The table below summarizes key metrics for Washington County detached single-family residential sales in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$818 Million$842 Million+2.92%
Average Price$688,426$658,641-4.33%
Median Price$625,000$605,000-3.20%
Avg SP/OLP97.13%95.50%-1.68%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$322.16$307.84-4.45%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.360.41+14.24%
Avg Age (Yrs)29.2732.39+10.67%
Avg CDOM59.6374.24+24.49%
Avg Total SF2,2132,241+1.26%
# of Sales1,1881,278+7.58%
# of New Constr.270223-17.41%
# of REOs27+250.00%
# of Short Sales30-100.00%
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Transaction volume grew solidly (+7.58%), driving a modest increase in total dollar volume (+2.92%). However, both average and median prices declined noticeably (-4.33% and -3.20%, respectively), and average PPSF fell -4.45%. This softening appears partially compositional: new construction retreated sharply (-17.41%, 270 → 223 closings), removing a number of higher-priced new builds from the sales mix. The remaining closings skewed toward older homes (average age +10.67% to 32.39 years) and larger lots (+14.24%), which typically carry lower PPSF in this market.

The weakening in average and median prices can be partially explained by the impact of job loss in Hillsboro. External obsolescence tied to Intel’s 2024–2025 workforce reductions has contributed to declining resale prices and buyer confidence in certain segments. For a detailed analysis of resale trends, condominium/attached impacts, and appraisal implications in Hillsboro, see my recent deep dive: External Obsolescence in Hillsboro — Residential Market Response to Intel’s 2024–2025 Workforce Reductions.

Market tempo slowed significantly, with average cumulative days on market rising +24.49% to 74.24 days—among the longest in the region and well above the prior year’s level. This extension, combined with a softer SP/OLP ratio (97.13% → 95.50%), indicates buyers were more selective and willing to wait, particularly in a county heavily influenced by tech employment centers like Hillsboro.

Distressed activity remained low in absolute terms but showed directional movement (REOs +250.00% to 7, short sales -100.00% to 0), consistent with broader regional patterns where condition-related sales are still rare but present.

A scatter plot of all Washington County sales in Q4 2025 shows no strong upward or downward trend overall.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Washington County during Q4 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The vast majority of transactions cluster between the high $400,000s and just under $1 million, reflecting the county’s primary move-up and family-oriented price band. Activity thins noticeably above $1 million, with only a handful of points in the $1.5M+ range and just three sales exceeding $2 million, underscoring limited buyer participation at the true upper end of the market.

From an appraisal perspective, Washington County’s volume growth amid price softening and extended CDOM highlights the importance of segment-specific adjustments when selecting comparables. The retreat in new construction and shift toward older/larger existing homes may affect functional obsolescence assessments and market-condition time adjustments, particularly in submarkets sensitive to employment stability.

Clackamas County Q4 2025 Stats

Clackamas County ranked third in detached single-family home transaction volume for Q4 2025 with 960 sales (22.63% of the regional total), down slightly -1.13% from Q4 2024. Despite the modest volume decline, the county showed resilience in pricing, with both average and median prices posting gains amid longer market times.

The table below summarizes key metrics for Clackamas County detached single-family residential sales in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$752 Million$754 Million+0.25%
Average Price$774,067$784,904+1.40%
Median Price$625,583$650,000+3.90%
Avg SP/OLP96.02%94.95%-1.11%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$333.13$331.95-0.35%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.080.84-22.65%
Avg Age (Yrs)37.8137.53-0.73%
Avg CDOM66.0878.50+18.80%
Avg Total SF2,3532,402+2.06%
# of Sales971960-1.13%
# of New Constr.120136+13.33%
# of REOs313+333.33%
# of Short Sales01
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Clackamas County bucked the regional trend of price stability or softening, with average price up +1.40% to $784,904 and median price up +3.90% to $650,000—the highest median among the six counties. This upward movement occurred despite a slight decline in sales count and a modest drop in PPSF (-0.35%), supported by a small increase in average square footage (+2.06%). The notable reduction in average lot size (-22.65%) appears driven by a compositional shift toward smaller-lot sales in premium and growth-oriented submarkets (e.g., Lake Oswego, West Linn, Happy Valley, Wilsonville), where demand remained strong and prices held firm or increased. New construction gains (+13.33%, 120 → 136 closings) were concentrated in these same corridors (Happy Valley, Wilsonville, Canby, Sandy), adding higher-priced units on compact lots and helping offset softness in more rural areas with larger parcels.

Market tempo slowed, with average cumulative days on market rising +18.80% to 78.50 days—above the regional average. This extension, paired with a softer SP/OLP ratio (96.02% → 94.95%), indicates buyers exercised greater selectivity, though price gains suggest demand held firm in desirable submarkets.

A scatter plot of all Clackamas County sales in Q4 2025 shows no major upward or downward trend overall.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Clackamas County during Q4 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The bulk of transactions cluster between roughly $400k and $1M, with activity thinning considerably above $1 million. Clackamas stands out regionally for its active high-end market, with 30 sales at or above $2M (including the county’s top sale of $9M in Lake Oswego)—far more than any other county. When slicing away these extreme outliers above $2M (leaving 930 data points), the distribution remains flat with no clear directional pattern, consistent with balanced mid-market performance.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Clackamas County during Q4 2025, restricted to sales $2M or less. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

Lake Oswego ZIP codes 97034 and 97035 rank #1 and #3 among areas with appreciable sales volume in the Portland Region, underscoring their role in anchoring the county’s price resilience.

Map of the two Lake Oswego ZIP codes showing the #1 and #3 most expensive ZIPs for detached single-family homes in the Portland Region with significant sales volume.
ZIP code map of 97034 & 97035, ranking #1 and #3 is average sales price for ZIP codes with appreciable volume.
Map via Oregonmetro.gov

From an appraisal perspective, Clackamas County’s price gains amid longer CDOM and reduced lot sizes highlight the need for careful location and size adjustments in comp selection.

Yamhill County Q4 2025 Stats

Yamhill County ranked fourth in detached single-family home transaction volume for Q4 2025 with 236 sales (5.56% of the regional total), down -9.58% from Q4 2024. The county showed modest price gains despite the volume decline, reflecting a shift toward larger-lot and higher-value closings.

The table below summarizes key metrics for Yamhill County detached single-family residential sales in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$145 Million$139 Million-4.18%
Average Price$555,905$589,101+5.97%
Median Price$509,900$515,000+1.00%
Avg SP/OLP96.59%95.01%-1.63%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$305.05$312.27+2.37%
Avg Lot Size (ac)1.492.05+37.40%
Avg Age (Yrs)36.7535.60-3.13%
Avg CDOM61.0279.34+30.03%
Avg Total SF1,8661,956+4.81%
# of Sales261236-9.58%
# of New Constr.3730-18.92%
# of REOs21-50.00%
# of Short Sales13+200.00%

Yamhill County saw a decline in sales count (-9.58%) and total dollar volume (-4.18%), but average price rose +5.97% to $589,101 and median price increased +1.00% to $515,000. This upward movement in pricing was largely compositional: average lot size increased significantly (+37.40% to 2.05 acres) and average square footage rose +4.81%, shifting the sales mix toward larger properties that typically command higher prices in this rural/suburban county. Average PPSF edged up +2.37%, consistent with the larger parcels and slightly newer homes (average age down -3.13% to 35.60 years).

Market tempo slowed considerably, with average cumulative days on market rising +30.03% to 79.34 days—one of the longer exposures in the region. The softer SP/OLP ratio (96.59% → 95.01%) suggests buyers were more selective and willing to negotiate, particularly in a lower-volume county with limited new supply.

New construction continued to retreat (-18.92%, 37 → 30 closings), with Lafayette capturing the majority (21 of 30 county-wide new homes), likely reflecting the final phase of a small subdivision in this growing but still small community.

A scatter plot of all Yamhill County sales in Q4 2025 shows no strong upward or downward trend overall.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Yamhill County during Q4 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The vast majority of transactions cluster between $400,000 and $700,000 (approximately 61% of sales fall in the $400k–$599k bands), reflecting the county’s primary mid-market focus. Activity thins considerably above $800,000, with only a handful of sales reaching $1 million and just one exceeding $2 million, underscoring limited buyer participation at the upper end.

From an appraisal perspective, Yamhill County’s modest price gains amid declining volume and extended CDOM highlight the importance of size and location adjustments in comp selection. The shift toward larger lots and the retreat in new construction may affect supply considerations and functional obsolescence assessments in this more rural county, while the mid-market concentration provides a stable base for typical valuations.

Columbia County Q4 2025 Stats

Columbia County ranked fifth in detached single-family home transaction volume for Q4 2025 with 111 sales (2.62% of the regional total), down -9.02% from Q4 2024. The county showed modest price gains despite the volume decline, reflecting a shift toward larger homes in this more rural area.

The table below summarizes key metrics for Columbia County detached single-family residential sales in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$59.7 Million$56.1 Million-5.99%
Average Price$489,143$505,417+3.33%
Median Price$457,650$480,000+4.88%
Avg SP/OLP95.69%94.58%-1.16%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$268.23$260.02-3.06%
Avg Lot Size (ac)2.372.16-9.00%
Avg Age (Yrs)49.3249.14-0.37%
Avg CDOM74.8083.37+11.45%
Avg Total SF1,9272,140+11.02%
# of Sales122111-9.02%
# of New Constr.24+100.00%
# of REOs42-50.00%
# of Short Sales00
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Columbia County’s sales activity is overwhelmingly concentrated along the Columbia River corridor (e.g., St. Helens, Scappoose, Rainier, Columbia City, Deer Island, and Clatskanie), with approximately 97 of the 111 sales occurring in these river-adjacent areas. This geographic focus aptly reflects the county’s name and population distribution.

Map of all single-family detached home sales during Q4 2025 in Columbia County. Pins cluster in the near the Columbia River.

Average price rose +3.33% to $505,417 and median price increased +4.88% to $480,000 despite a decline in sales count and total dollar volume (-5.99%). This upward movement in pricing was largely compositional: average square footage increased +11.02%, shifting the sales mix toward larger homes that command higher prices in this rural county. Average PPSF fell -3.06%, consistent with the larger floor plans and slightly smaller lots (-9.00%), while average age remained stable (49.14 years).

Market tempo slowed, with average cumulative days on market rising +11.45% to 83.37 days—one of the longer exposures in the region. The softer SP/OLP ratio (95.69% → 94.58%) suggests buyers were more selective, particularly in a lower-volume county with limited new supply.

New construction remained minimal but doubled (2 → 4 closings), a small absolute increase that did not materially impact the overall market. Distressed activity stayed low (REOs -50.00% to 2, short sales 0).

A scatter plot of all Columbia County sales in Q4 2025 shows no major upward or downward trend overall.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Columbia County during Q4 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The bulk of transactions cluster between roughly $300k and $600k (approximately 72% of sales fall in the $300k–$599k bands), reflecting the county’s primary mid-market, rural focus. Activity thins considerably above $700k, with only a small number of sales reaching $800k–$900k and one sale above $1 million, underscoring limited buyer participation at the upper end of the market.

From an appraisal perspective, Columbia County’s modest price gains amid declining volume and extended CDOM highlight the influence of property size and location in rural submarkets. The shift toward larger homes and limited new construction require careful adjustments for the contributory value of additional square footage and condition when selecting comparables.

Hood River County Q4 2025 Stats

Hood River County ranked sixth in detached single-family home transaction volume for Q4 2025 with 46 sales (1.08% of the regional total), up +17.95% from Q4 2024. The county posted strong gains in both volume and pricing, reflecting robust demand in this scenic, smaller market.

The table below summarizes key metrics for Hood River County detached single-family residential sales in Q4 2025 compared with Q4 2024.

CategoryQ4 2024Q4 2025% Change
Total $ Volume$26.9 Million$41.3 Million+53.86%
Average Price$688,544$898,167+30.44%
Median Price$685,000$729,125+6.44%
Avg SP/OLP95.42%92.49%-3.08%
Avg PPSF (TSF)$436.47$402.20-7.85%
Avg Lot Size (ac)0.322.43+649.39%
Avg Age (Yrs)45.7943.57-4.87%
Avg CDOM59.3395.39+60.77%
Avg Total SF1,7472,250+28.83%
# of Sales3946+17.95%
# of New Constr.04
# of REOs00
# of Short Sales00
Q4 2024 & Q4 2025
Data: RMLS | PortlandAppraisalBlog.com

Hood River County saw notable growth in sales count (+17.95%) and total dollar volume (+53.86%), with average price rising +30.44% to $898,167 and median price up +6.44% to $729,125—the highest median in the region. This strong upward pressure was largely compositional: average lot size increased dramatically (+649.39% to 2.43 acres) and average square footage rose +28.83%, shifting the sales mix toward larger properties that command premium prices in this scenic, rural county. Average PPSF declined -7.85%, consistent with the much larger lots and floor plans.

Market tempo slowed significantly, with average cumulative days on market rising +60.77% to 95.39 days—one of the longest exposures in the region. The softer SP/OLP ratio (95.42% → 92.49%) suggests buyers exercised greater selectivity, even as price gains indicate sustained demand for desirable properties.

New construction emerged from zero in Q4 2024 to 4 closings in Q4 2025, a small but positive increase in this low-volume county. Distressed activity remained nonexistent (REOs and short sales zero both quarters).

A scatter plot of all Hood River County sales in Q4 2025 shows no strong upward or downward trend overall.

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Hood River County during Q4 2025. Each dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis and price on the y-axis. The data is sourced from RMLS.

The bulk of transactions cluster in the $500k–$1M range, with decent activity above $1M and three sales exceeding $2M—impressive for a county with only 46 total closings. The lowest sale was $360,000, reflecting limited low-end inventory in this scenic market.

Sales are heavily concentrated in and around Hood River city (including many properties with Hood River addresses but outside official city limits), underscoring the area’s role as the county’s primary population and housing hub.

Map of all single-family detached home sales during Q4 2025 in Hood River County. Pins cluster in the City of Hood River proper.

From an appraisal perspective, Hood River County’s sharp price and volume gains amid longer CDOM and much larger lots highlight the influence of property size and scenic/rural appeal in this smaller market. The emergence of new construction and extended exposure time require careful adjustments for condition, location premiums, and lot size when selecting comparables.

Closing Thoughts

The Portland Region’s detached single-family home market in Q4 2025 displayed clear signs of stabilization after several quarters of adjustment to higher interest rates. Transaction volume edged higher (+3.19%), prices held essentially flat at the median ($582,000) and showed only marginal movement at the average (+0.06%), and days on market continued to lengthen (+16.32% to 68.45 days), reflecting sustained buyer selectivity and seller patience. The core market (< $1M) drove most of the activity while showing more pronounced tempo slowdowns, while the luxury segment (≥ $1M) exhibited relative resilience in pricing and shorter exposure in some cases, though with sharper retreats in new construction supply.

County-level patterns varied, with the urban core (Multnomah) maintaining the fastest tempo and high volume, suburban Washington and Clackamas showing mixed softening and resilience respectively, and the outer counties (Yamhill, Columbia, Hood River) demonstrating more pronounced compositional shifts and longer marketing times. Overall, the market has reached a balanced equilibrium—neither surging nor retreating sharply—yet the extended exposure times and segment-specific supply constraints remain key signals for appraisers, lenders, and realtors navigating valuations and decisions in the coming quarters.

What trends do you expect to see in Q1 2026? I’d love to hear your thoughts—feel free to reply here or reach out directly.

Sources & Further Reading

All data presented in this quarterly update is sourced directly from RMLS and has been subjected to my rigorous cleaning and validation process to ensure reliability for detached single-family residential analysis in the six-county Portland Region. The trends, comparisons, and commentary are the result of original appraisal expertise and independent analysis—not aggregated from secondary sources or news summaries.

Coda

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Appraisal Deep Dive: Portland’s Starter Home Market (Q3 2025) — What $469k Really Buys

Q3 2025 RMLS data shows the Portland Region’s detached starter homes (5th–35th percentile) average $469k and are dominated by mid-century builds on larger lots—with new construction offering modern features but far less space. Appraisal and buyer insights below.

Yellow 20th-century bungalow in the Portland area typical of starter homes.
A classic early-20th-century bungalow in the Portland area—the type of modest, well-loved home that dominates today’s starter-tier inventory.
Via Canva Pro

Earlier this month, Redfin highlighted Portland as one of the stronger markets nationally for starter-home activity, defining starter homes as sales in the 5th–35th percentile by price. We adopt the same percentile convention here for consistency.

Redfin’s reported median of approximately $420,000 for Portland starter homes includes all property types (condos, townhomes, and single-family). Focusing solely on detached single-family residences—a popular choice across the region, including for many urban buyers seeking yard space and privacy over attached ownership—Q3 2025 RMLS data for the 5th–35th percentile tier shows an average close price of $469,000.

Few would be surprised that new construction plays a limited role in true entry-level pricing—after all, building costs remain elevated. Yet the data shows builders are still delivering a modest but meaningful number of brand-new homes into this tier (about 4.2% of starter sales, compared to 9.1% across the full market). This demonstrates that, through efficient design, infill strategies, and lot divisions, new product can compete in the lower price bands.

Local buyers want to know: how much home does a starter budget actually buy? This analysis examines square footage, lot size, build era, and location differences across counties—revealing a market dominated by mid-century homes with a modest but noteworthy presence of brand-new construction.

How Much Home a Starter Budget Buys by County

The table below summarizes Q3 2025 closed sales for detached single-family homes in the 5th–35th percentile across the core Portland Region counties (Hood River row excluded due to only two qualifying sales).

CountyAvg Close PriceAvg Yr BuiltAvg Total SFAvg Acres# of Sales
Clackamas$474,73819651,5530.279256
Columbia$457,10819831,7740.61758
Mult.$459,90919511,5910.163666
Wash.$488,95419761,4950.154323
Yamhill$453,52219811,5320.197113
Grand Total$468,59519631,5650.2031,418
Data: RMLS | Portland Appraisal Blog

Multnomah County drives nearly half the volume, delivering the oldest average build year (1951). Washington County posts the highest average prices and hosts the most new construction. Outer counties like Columbia and Yamhill provide newer homes on larger parcels, though with far fewer transactions.

Surprisingly, across the region, starter homes are very similar in average price. The standard numerical metrics which are easy to see in RMLS, (e.g. total square footage, lot size, year built, etc.), are not the primary determinant of value. As we shall see, what matters more is quality, condition, and overall site & functional utility. Buyers in the starter home tier make conscious trade-offs between older homes with larger lots and newer homes with little to no functional backyard.

Of all the standard numeric metrics, total square footage shows one of the stronger relationships with price in the starter tier—though the influence is still modest.

Scatter plot of Close Price versus Total Square Footage. The graph shows a slight tilt, indicate a noticeable though modest correlation between the two variables.
Close Price vs. Total Square Feet for Starter-Tier Detached Homes ≤ 0.5 Acres (Q3 2025 RMLS data – 1,380 observations).
Note: The Y-axis begins at $350,000 to allow for better viewing of the dataset.

Larger homes tend to sell for higher prices, though with considerable variation—most sales fall between 1,200 and 2,000 square feet. The very slight tilt to the right indicates a weak but present relationship between starter home size and close price. The coefficient of determination (R2) for this graph is 0.1253, meaning total square footage explains only about 12.5% of the variation in price. Since total square footage is often one of the primary determinants of value in the broader housing market, this is a big clue that the size of the home isn’t the primary factor for buyers looking to enter the starter home market.

The Historical Supply Pattern: Lot Size and Build Era

Portland’s entry-level inventory bears the clear imprint of the post-war building boom.

Scatter plot of Lot Size versus Year Build. The graph shows lot sizes rising up to the 1960s, where it begins steadily declining into the modern era, indicating the high cost of land and increasing lot splits.
Lot Size vs. Year Built for Starter-Tier Detached Homes ≤ 0.5 Acres (Q3 2025 RMLS data – 1,380 observations).

A polynomial trendline highlights the peak lot sizes during the 1940s–1950s post-war era, followed by a steady decline that began in the early 1960s and accelerated in recent decades. The pattern reflects an era when generous lots were standard, followed by shrinking parcels as land values rose, urban growth boundaries took effect, and lot divisions became common. Buyers choosing older starter homes today typically gain significantly more outdoor space than those selecting new construction.

New Construction: A Modest but Noteworthy Presence

While new homes account for only 4.2% of starter-tier sales, their ability to reach this price range in a high-cost building environment remains impressive.

SegmentAvg Close PriceAvg Total SFAvg Acres# of Sales
Existing$467,9961,5690.2071,359
New$482,3871,4790.10759
Grand Total$468,5951,5650.2031,418
Data: RMLS | Portland Appraisal Blog

New homes sell for only about 3% more than existing ones despite brand-new condition, but deliver less interior space and roughly half the land.

Buying a new home in the starter tier is akin to buying a new car on a tight budget: you gain the benefits of fresh systems, modern design, and warranty peace of mind, but often in a smaller package with fewer amenities compared to a well-maintained used model from a higher trim line.

CountyAvg Close PriceAvg Yr BuiltAvg Total SFAvg Acres# of Sales
Clackamas$489,80320251,6060.1548
Columbia$420,00020251,4580.1302
Mult.$450,82020251,0980.08818
Wash.$509,36620251,6990.07925
Yamhill$475,57820251,5400.2166
Grand Total$482,38720251,4790.10759
Data: RMLS | Portland Appraisal Blog

For buyers, this creates a clear choice: a brand-new home with modern efficiency but typically on a very small lot—often with minimal or no usable yard space, especially in Multnomah and Washington counties where most new construction occurs—or an existing mid-century home that generally offers significantly more land and outdoor space, albeit with the potential challenges of older systems and layouts. This trade-off is particularly relevant for growing families or those prioritizing play areas, gardens, or privacy.

Appraisal Insights and Challenges

One of the most revealing patterns appears when plotting close price against build year.

Scatter plot of Close Price versus Year Built. The graph shows virtually no correlation between the two variables, indicating start homes are driven by factors other than the year built.
Close Price vs. Year Built for Starter-Tier Detached Homes ≤ 0.5 Acres (Q3 2025 RMLS data – 1,380 observations).
Note: The Y-axis begins at $350,000 to allow for better viewing of the dataset.

The remarkably consistent price band across decades illustrates that chronological age has little direct influence on value in the Portland Region’s entry-level segment.

In this tier, actual age correlates weakly with sales price because buyers weigh multiple factors:

  • Functional obsolescence in mid-century stock (outdated floor plans, smaller kitchens/bathrooms, less efficient systems) is often mitigated by updates and strong location appeal.
  • Effective age and condition drive far more of the value than the original build date.
  • Lot size and site utility frequently favor older homes; the smaller parcels common in new construction require substantial negative adjustments that offset much of the credit for new condition.
  • Comparable selection remains within county, where abundant mid-century comps in Multnomah, Clackamas, and Washington provide solid support — but thinner volume in outer counties demands careful bracketing.
  • When appraising a new-construction home in this tier—where truly similar recent sales are still limited and down approximately 25% year-over-year in Q3 2025 (with Multnomah County off 48%)—appraisers typically rely on other relatively recent builds (often within 10 years) and apply appropriate adjustments for differences in site characteristics, size, and location.

The same pattern holds when looking at the data from a price-per-square-foot lens, but with a slight twist:

Scatter plot of PPSF (TSF) versus Year Built. The graph shows virtually no correlation between the two variables, but with a twist. There is a clear compression of PPSF for homes starting in the 1950s up to the modern era. This indicates a homogenization of the market following WWII. The only exception are completely brand new homes, where the PPSF widens again. This indicates new homes form a distinct submarket where location and site utility play a large role.
PPSF (TSF) vs. Year Built for Starter-Tier Detached Homes ≤ 0.5 Acres (Q3 2025 RMLS data – 1,380 observations).

From the 1950s onward, PPSF becomes progressively more compressed—older homes exhibit wide spreads driven by dramatic differences in condition, updates, historic appeal, and location premiums, while mid-era and late-20th-century stock tightens as market expectations and remodeling homogenize perceived value.

Brand-new 2025 homes, however, break this decades-long compression pattern. Their PPSF spreads out again, reflecting greater influence from location-driven land costs and builder-specific choices (e.g., finishes, lot configuration) rather than the uniformity imposed by age and updates on existing stock. In effect, today’s entry-level new construction reintroduces variation that mirrors pre-1950 homes—but for different reasons: land value dominance and strategic specs to hit price points, rather than condition swings. This underscores why new-construction starter homes often form their own submarket. Appraisers valuing them face a narrower but distinct comp pool.

These dynamics show that the starter home market is not uniform and the appraiser needs to carefully delineate the competitive market segment to avoid having to make large adjustments between disparate properties. One technique appraisers often employ is to use similar, but older sales when recent data is thin and make an appropriate market conditions adjustment.

Conclusion

The Portland Region’s Q3 2025 starter-home segment continues to rely predominantly on mid-century inventory on lots larger than anything new we’re building today—a pattern unlikely to shift dramatically in 2026 absent major changes in new supply. (Although the City of Portland is certainly trying to incentivize new projects with SDC waivers.) The modest foothold of new construction shows builders adapting through infill and efficient design, but at the clear cost of site size and outdoor space.

For buyers, the choice boils down to priorities: modern and low-maintenance on a small lot, or more space and yard with the realities of an older home. For appraisers, lenders, and agents, recognizing how effective age, site utility, location, and condition outweigh chronological age remains key to accurate valuation in this segment.

Sources & Further Reading

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Thanks for reading—I hope you found a useful insight or an unexpected nugget along the way. If you enjoyed the post, please consider subscribing for future updates.

CODA

Are you an agent in Portland who wonders why appraisers always do “x”?

A homeowner with questions about appraiser methodology?

If so, feel free to reach out—I enjoy connecting with market participants across Portland and the surrounding counties, and am always happy to help where I can.

And if you’re in need of appraisal services in Portland or anywhere in the Portland Region, we’d be glad to assist.

The Portland Region Q3 2025 Market Update


The year 2025 is rapidly yielding to 2026. In the blink of an eye, we’ll be more than halfway through this decade and sliding toward the 2030s! With that in mind, let’s examine how the single-family detached home market performed in Q3 2025 (July through September). The data reveals a market split in two—one stable, one shifting—lending itself to a Dickensian interpretation of A Tale of Two Markets.

DATA HOUSEKEEPING

Let’s define the Portland Region as the following six counties: Columbia, Clackamas, Hood River, Multnomah, Washington, and Yamhill. These counties are either contiguous with Multnomah (Portland’s home county) or closely tied to its housing ecosystem.

Image of Portland Region counties.

All data in this post reflects open-market sales—properties listed in RMLS, the primary multiple listing service for the Portland Region. The dataset was cleaned using custom tools developed by the blog author to correct misclassifications and remove non-representative entries (e.g., land or condo sales mistakenly listed as single-family).

Importantly, SNL (“Sold Not Listed”) entries—off-market transactions later entered into RMLS—have been excluded to maintain consistency and transparency.

Before diving into the Q3 2025 market data, here’s a quick overview of the major sections covered in this post. Each county-level breakdown is linked below for easy navigation, along with the regional summary that sets the stage:

📚 TABLE OF CONTENTS

Portland Region 2025 Q3 Overview

Vintage-style book cover for “A Tale of Two Markets: Portland, Oregon.” The design features ornate borders and sepia tones, with a central illustration of a large Victorian home in the foreground and a distant city skyline backed by Mount Hood. The composition visually contrasts suburban charm with urban density, reflecting the dual nature of Portland’s housing market. The bottom reads “A Market Study.”

PORTLAND REGION SFR MARKET – AGGREGATE OVERVIEW

The Portland Region’s single-family detached market in Q3 2025 showed signs of quiet resilience. While headlines focused on interest rates and builder pullbacks, the overall market held steady across most metrics:

📊 Key Highlights

  • Total Sales Volume: Up slightly from $3.21B to $3.24B (+1.08%)—a modest gain that reflects stable demand despite macro headwinds.
  • Average Price: Rose 0.54% to $692,778, while median price held flat at $600,000—suggesting price discipline and a balanced mix of sales.
  • SP/OLP Ratio: Dropped from 97.77% to 96.94%—buyers negotiated slightly more, but sellers still held firm.
  • DOM (Days on Market): Increased 13.25% to nearly 52 days—buyers are taking longer to commit, especially in higher price tiers.
  • Average PPSF: Virtually unchanged at $322—indicating stable valuation per square foot across the region.
  • Lot Size & Age: Average lot size grew slightly (+1.61%), while average age of homes increased by 3.43%—a subtle shift toward older inventory.
  • New Construction: Fell 25%—a sharp decline that reflects builder caution and financing constraints.
  • Distressed Sales: REOs ticked up slightly (+3.45%), while short sales declined—still a negligible share of the market.

🧭 Appraisal Insight

Despite longer exposure times and a notable drop in new construction, the Portland Region’s single-family market in Q3 2025 continues to behave like a stabilized asset class. Pricing remains anchored to fundamentals—location, size, and condition—rather than speculation or distress.

The flat median price and steady price-per-square-foot suggest that buyers and sellers are still operating within a shared valuation framework. In other words, the market hasn’t lost its pricing logic.

While exposure time isn’t generally a selection criterion for appraisers, it’s a signal—one that reflects buyer confidence, seller patience, and the pace of negotiation. In a market like this, it’s not volatility that drives value shifts—it’s nuance.

🏘️ A Tale of Two Markets: Core vs. Luxury in Q3 2025

Beneath the surface of Portland’s stabilized housing market lies a quiet divergence, one that’s been building over the past year. The aggregate metrics may suggest balance, but when you split the market by price tier, a more nuanced story emerges.

🏠 Core Market (< $1M)

Table comparing the Portland Region region "Core" market, defined as homes under $1 million. The table shows single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

The core market, which accounts for nearly 90% of all sales, remained remarkably steady in Q3 2025. Median price nudged up slightly, and average price dipped by a fraction, suggesting a high volume of mid-range transactions with tight pricing discipline. Buyers in this segment are cautious but active, and sellers are adjusting expectations without capitulating.

  • SP/OLP Ratio: Down just 0.75%—still strong at 97.24%
  • DOM: Up from ~43 to ~49 days—slower pace, but not sluggish
  • New Construction: Down 25%—a notable retreat, especially in Washington and Clackamas counties

The core market is behaving like a durable middle class—resilient, price-aware, and responsive to financing conditions.

🏠 Luxury Market (≥ $1M)

Before diving into the luxury segment, a quick note on definitions: For this analysis, we’re defining “luxury” as any sale at or above $1 million. It’s a useful threshold for tracking market behavior, but it’s not a perfect proxy for architectural prestige or lifestyle appeal.

Some acreage properties cross the $1 million mark based on land value alone, even if the homes themselves wouldn’t be considered luxurious in terms of design or finish. And it’s true, $1 million doesn’t hold the same purchasing power it once did. Today, it might afford a modest home in a sought-after area or a larger property with dated features in a more remote location.

This segmentation allows us to observe buyer psychology, pricing trends, and listing exposure time across different tiers. It’s a tool for analysis, not a judgment of quality or taste.

Table comparing the Portland Region region "Luxury" market, defined as homes at or above $1 million. The table shows single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

The luxury segment tells a different story. While total sales volume rose a little more than 5%, average price dipped slightly and exposure time jumped from ~69 to ~77 days. Buyers at the top end are more deliberate, and sellers are conceding more ground.

  • SP/OLP Ratio: Dropped 1.56% to 94.37%—a wider negotiation gap
  • PPSF: Down nearly 0.9%—suggesting softer valuation per square foot
  • New Construction: Fell 20%—from 45 to 36 units. Builders are pulling back, and luxury inventory is increasingly composed of legacy stock.
  • Lot Size & Age: Slightly smaller lots and older homes—less new inventory, more carryover from prior cycles

The luxury market remains active but is undergoing a period of careful assessment. Buyers are selective, and sellers are adjusting their strategies. This segment is characterized by patience, not panic.

Let’s dive into the Portland Region with some visuals before we examine each county individually.

SALES VOLUME

The following is a treemap of sales volume in the Portland Region for Q3 2025. Each block represents a county, scaled by its share of total transactions—not dollar volume:

This treemap graph illustrates the sales volume of single-family homes in the Portland Region Q3 2025. It shows that Multnomah has the highest sales volume at 1,768, followed by Washington at 1,349, Clackamas at 1,153, Yamhill at 248, and Columbia at 128.

In Q3 2025, the Portland Region’s housing activity was overwhelmingly concentrated in three counties: Multnomah, Washington, and Clackamas. Together, they accounted for over 91% of all single-family home sales, forming the backbone of the regional market.

  • Multnomah: Led in transaction count, driven by dense housing stock and steady turnover
  • Washington: Showed strong suburban demand and a mix of core and upper-tier activity
  • Clackamas: Balanced volume with price diversity, including notable luxury sales

The remaining counties—Yamhill, Columbia, and Hood River—played supporting roles, with smaller volumes and more rural dynamics.

This bar chart compares monthly single-family sales across Q3 2024 and Q3 2025. While July and August saw slight year-over-year declines, September posted a modest rebound, rising from 1,339 to 1,450 sales.:

This bar graph compares the number of single-family detached residential sales in the Portland Region for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025. It shows that in July, Q3 2024 had 1,682 sales, while Q3 2025 had 1,635. In August, Q3 2024 had 1,636 sales, and Q3 2025 had 1,597. In September, Q3 2024 had 1,339 sales, and Q3 2025 had 1,450. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Note: The y-axis starts at 1,000 to allow better examination of monthly differences.

SALES PRICE

This bar chart compares monthly average sales prices for single-family homes in the Portland Region across Q3 2024 and Q3 2025. The story it tells is one of stability with subtle movement:

This bar graph compares the average sales price of single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025. In July, the average sales price was $688K in 2024 and $690K in 2025. In August, it was $688K in 2024 and $699K in 2025. In September, it was $691K in 2024 and $689K in 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.
Note: The y-axis starts at $660,000 to allow better examination of monthly differences.
  • July: $688K → $690K
  • August: $688K → $699K
  • September: $691K → $689K

While monthly average prices nudged up and down across the quarter, the net result is a tiny bump of just 0.54% year-over-year. That’s not volatility—it’s equilibrium.

NEW CONSTRUCTION

This chart shows how new construction sales fit into the broader single-family market across Q3 2025. While total monthly sales hovered between 1,450 and 1,635 units, new construction consistently made up a small fraction of that activity:

This bar graph compares the sales volume of new construction and total sales in the Portland Region for Q3 2025. In July, new construction sales were 145, and total sales were 1,635. In August, new construction sales were 159, and total sales were 1,597. In September, new construction sales were 122, and total sales were 1,450. The data is sourced from RMLS.
  • July: 145 new builds out of 1,635 total sales (~8.9%)
  • August: 159 out of 1,597 (~10%)
  • September: 122 out of 1,450 (~8.4%)

New construction represented roughly 9% of all single-family sales in Q3 2025. That’s a modest but meaningful slice—enough to influence comps and buyer expectations, but not dominant. Most buyers were engaging with resale inventory, and most appraisals will reflect that reality.

This chart compares new construction sales across the individual counties in Q3 2024 vs. Q3 2025. The trend is clear: new builds are down almost everywhere:

Bar chart comparing  of single-family homes in the Portland region by County for Q3 2025, highlighting real estate trends, sourced from RMLS data.
  • Washington County: Down from 280 to 245 sales—still the leader, but pulling back
  • Clackamas County: Dropped from 127 to 114—modest decline, but still active
  • Multnomah County: Fell sharply from 91 to 47—nearly a 50% reduction
  • Yamhill County: Down from 67 to just 18—builder activity nearly stalled
  • Columbia County: Slipped from 3 to 2 sales—still minimal, but not absent
  • Hood River County: Zero new construction sales in Q3 2025 (same as last year)

Builder retreat is widespread, but not absolute. Even Columbia managed a couple of closings. The broader trend, however, is clear: new construction is shrinking, and resale inventory is doing the heavy lifting.

CUMULATIVE DAYS ON MARKET

This chart tracks average Cumulative Days on Market (CDOM) for single-family homes in the Portland Region across July, August, and September—comparing Q3 2024 to Q3 2025. The trend is subtle but consistent, homes are taking slightly longer to sell:

This bar graph compares the average days on market (CDOM) for single-family detached residential homes in the Portland Region for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025. In July, the average CDOM was 40 in 2024 and 45 in 2025. In August, it was 46 in 2024 and 55 in 2025. In September, it was 53 in 2024 and 56 in 2025. The data is sourced from RMLS.
  • July: 40 → 45 days
  • August: 46 → 55 days
  • September: 53 → 56 days

The sales cycle is stretching, but not stalling. A 5–6 day increase per month suggests buyers are more deliberate, and sellers are adjusting expectations. This isn’t a freeze—it’s a pause. For appraisers, longer CDOM doesn’t disqualify comps, but it does signal a shift in market tempo worth noting in commentary.

MISC STATS

Before concluding our overview of the Portland Region as a whole, let’s look at some miscellaneous stats:

Real estate data overlay on a white brick wall background. The central white rectangle displays five key statistics: highest price per square foot ($1,646.65), lowest PPSF ($89.78), oldest home (145 years old), largest home (13,379 sq. ft.), and smallest home (426 sq. ft.). The background has a rustic, weathered texture, and the source “PortlandAppraisalBlog.com” appears in the bottom right corner.

The crown for highest price per square foot in the Portland Region during Q3 2025—at $1,646.65/SF—belongs to a lakefront property on Oswego Lake. The home sold for $8,500,000, spans 5,162 sq. ft., and includes four bedrooms, six full bathrooms, and one half bath on a 0.26-acre lot. Photos of the property are currently available online and may be viewed here.

The lowest price per square foot was a fixer in Willamina, Oregon (Yamhill County). This 119-year-old home measures 2,005 sq. ft. on a 0.12-acre lot. Photos of the property are currently available online and may be viewed here.

The oldest home to sell in Q3 2025 was a 145-year-old residence in Portland’s Homestead neighborhood. It features three bedrooms, one-and-a-half bathrooms, and is 1,608 sq. ft. Photos of the property are currently available online and may be viewed here.

The largest home sold during Q3 2025 was a sprawling 13,379 sq. ft. estate in West Linn, Oregon, set on 20.18 acres beside the Oregon Golf Club. The home itself was massive—but even more impressive, it came with a shop building that was larger than the house. The property sold for $6,500,000 after 299 days on market. An exterior photo of the property may be viewed here.

The smallest home to sell was a 426 sq. ft. cabin in Scappoose, Oregon, nestled on 1.4 acres. Photos of the cozy property are currently available online and may be viewed here.

Let’s wrap up this post with a quick look at the six individual counties that make up the Portland Region. We’ll examine them in order of largest to smallest number of sales.

Multnomah County Q3 2025 Stats

Multnomah County contains most of the City of Portland. (Very tiny portions of the City of Portland are located in Clackamas and Washington counties.) The following table summarizes important metrics for Multnomah County:

Table comparing the Multnomah County single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

Multnomah County posted 1,768 single-family sales in Q3 2025, up slightly from 1,719 the year prior. Total sales volume rose to $1.13 billion, a 3.9% increase year-over-year. The average sales price nudged up to $637K, while the median price settled at $555K. Key trends:

  • CDOM increased from 40 to 45 days, signaling a slightly slower sales rhythm.
  • Average lot sizes shrank, down 7.2%, reflecting tighter urban parcels.
  • New construction dropped sharply, from 91 to just 47 sales—a 48% decline.

The core market (< $1M) remained dominant, accounting for 91% of sales and 81% of dollar volume. Prices were flat, with the average holding at $564K, and CDOM rising from 37 to 42 days.

The luxury market (≥ $1M) grew in volume, with 159 sales (up 14%) and $218 million in total sales (up 13%). Despite the growth, the average price dipped slightly to $1.37 million, down about $100,000 from the prior year. CDOM edged up to 79 days, roughly two days longer than in Q3 2024.

Luxury homes also came with significantly larger lots. In Q3 2025, the average lot size for luxury properties was about 0.75 acres, compared to 0.23 acres for homes in the core market segment.

Washington County Q3 2025 Stats

Washington County contains many properties with a Portland address that are outside official city limits and are under county control. The following table summarizes important metrics for Washington County:

Table comparing the Washington County single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

Washington County recorded 1,349 single-family sales in Q3 2025, down slightly from 1,395 the year prior. Total sales volume fell 6.3% to $924 million, and the average price declined to $685K, down about $22K from Q3 2024.

  • CDOM jumped from 43 to 54 days—a notable slowdown in buyer urgency.
  • Average lot size shrank by over 34%, reflecting denser development patterns.
  • New construction dipped from 280 to 245 sales, but still represents a major share of activity.

Despite the dip in volume, Washington County remains a hub for new builds. The following map highlights active clusters:

Map of Washington County highlighting locations of new construction sales in Q3 2025. Geographic markers indicate distribution across urban and suburban areas, with emphasis on development clusters. The visual supports analysis of spatial trends in housing activity. Source: PortlandAppraisalBlog.com..

In the core market (< $1M), Q3 2025 saw 1,254 sales, down slightly from 1,270 in Q3 2024. Total sales volume fell to $797 million, down from $819 million the year prior. The average price slipped to $636K, about $9K lower than Q3 2024. CDOM rose from 43 to 54 days, and average lot size tightened from 0.26 to 0.23 acres.

The luxury market (≥ $1M) contracted more sharply. Q3 2025 recorded 95 sales, down from 125 in Q3 2024, with total volume falling to $127 million, compared to $167 million last year—a 24% drop. The average price held steady at $1.33M, but CDOM rose significantly, from 47 to 61 days. Lot sizes also dropped, from 3.5 acres to 2.1 acres, suggesting fewer estate-style properties and more high-end infill.

Clackamas County Q3 2025 Stats

Clackamas County, while comprised of some urban cities, has many rural portions and houses on acreage lots. Commercial and hobby farming is common throughout the county. The following table summarizes important metrics for Clackamas County:

Table comparing the Clackamas County single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

Clackamas County posted 1,153 single-family sales in Q3 2025, up from 1,096 in Q3 2024. Total sales volume rose 8% to $949 million, and the average price increased to $823K, up about $22K year-over-year.

  • CDOM rose from 50 to 55 days, indicating a modest slowdown in buyer urgency.
  • Average total square footage increased by 2.6%, suggesting a slight shift toward larger homes.
  • New construction declined, with 114 sales, down about 10% from the 127 recorded in Q3 2024.

In the core market (< $1M), Q3 2025 saw 954 sales, up from 919 in Q3 2024. Total volume rose to $613 million, compared to $578 million the year prior. The average price increased 2.2% to $642K, and CDOM rose from 46 to 51 days.

The luxury market (≥ $1M) also expanded. Q3 2025 recorded 199 sales, up from 177 in Q3 2024, with total volume reaching $336 million, up from $300 million. The average price dipped slightly to $1.69M, and CDOM held steady at around 72 days.

Yamhill County Q3 2025 Stats

Yamhill County is known for its wineries and other agricultural products. The following table summarizes important metrics for Yamhill County:

Table comparing the Yamhill County single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

Yamhill County recorded 248 single-family sales in Q3 2025, down from 298 in Q3 2024. Total sales volume fell 15% to $151 million, though the average price rose slightly to $607K, up about $10K year-over-year.

  • CDOM held steady, dipping slightly from 68 to 66.5 days.
  • Average PPSF increased by 1.7%, reaching $311/SF.
  • New construction dropped sharply, with just 18 sales, down from 67 last year.

In the core market (< $1M), Q3 2025 saw 226 sales, down from 279 in Q3 2024. Total volume fell to $120 million, compared to $151 million the year prior. The average price declined to $530K, a 2% dip from Q3 2024, and median price dropped from $510K to $481K.

The luxury market (≥ $1M) grew modestly in volume but softened in pricing. Q3 2025 recorded 22 sales, up from 19 in Q3 2024, with total volume rising to $30.7 million, up from $27.5 million. However, the average price fell to $1.40M, down from $1.45M the year prior—a 3.5% decline. The median price rose slightly, from $1.23M to $1.24M, but CDOM surged from 111 to 182 days, suggesting longer marketing times and slower absorption for high-end listings.

The following is a visual snapshot of the Yamhill market:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Yamhill County during Q3 2025. Each yellow dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis (ranging from late June to early October) and price on the y-axis (ranging from $0 to $2.5 million). Most sales cluster below $800K, with a few high-end outliers exceeding $2 million, illustrating the county’s modest price band and emerging luxury tier.

Each yellow dot represents a closed sale. While most transactions clustered below the $800K mark, a few high-end sales pushed past $2 million, underscoring the county’s growing luxury presence—even as overall volume declined.

Columbia County Q3 2025 Stats

While this county is 688 square miles it only has a population of approximately 54,000 people. The county is known for timber and wood products. The following table summarizes important metrics for Columbia County:

Table comparing the Columbia County single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

Columbia County recorded 128 single-family sales in Q3 2025, up from 114 in Q3 2024. Total sales volume rose 10.8% to $63 million, even as the average price dipped slightly to $492K, down about $7K year-over-year.

  • Average PPSF jumped 10.6%, reaching $293/SF—a notable gain for a rural market.
  • CDOM held steady, rising just one day to 63.
  • New construction remained minimal, with just 2 sales, down from 3 last year.

In the core market (< $1M), Q3 2025 saw 127 sales, up from 114 in Q3 2024. Total volume rose to $61.9 million, up from $56.9 million. The average price declined to $487K, a 2.3% dip, and median price slipped from $474K to $470K.

The luxury market (≥ $1M) made a rare appearance. Q3 2025 included one sale at $1.13 million, marking a shift from zero luxury closings in Q3 2024. The home sold at 94% of its original list price, with a lot size over 4 acres and 3,297 sq. ft. of living area.

The following is a visual snapshot of the Columbia market:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Columbia County during Q3 2025. Each yellow dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis (from late June to early October) and price on the y-axis (ranging from $0 to $1.2 million). Most sales cluster below $600K, with a single outlier crossing the $1 million mark—highlighting Columbia’s modest price band and rare luxury activity.

Each yellow dot represents a closed sale. Most transactions clustered below the $600K mark, with a single outlier crossing the $1 million threshold—Columbia’s lone luxury sale for the quarter.

Hood River County Q3 2025 Stats

Hood River is the second smallest county in Oregon by area at 533 square miles. The population is estimated to be about 24,000 people. This county is known for its fruit products and outdoor recreational activities.

Table comparing the Hood River County single-family detached home market data for Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, including total sales volume, average and median prices, price per square foot, average lot size, age, days on market, total square footage, number of sales, and new construction/REO stats, with percentage changes.

Hood River County recorded 36 single-family sales in Q3 2025, up a single sale from Q3 2024. Total sales volume rose 24% to $31.2 million, driven by a surge in high-end activity. The average price jumped to $867K, up 20.6% year-over-year.

  • Average PPSF rose 7.2%, reaching $426/SF.
  • CDOM increased from 47 to 59 days, reflecting slower absorption.
  • Average home size expanded by 16%, now over 2,140 sq. ft. on average.

In the core market (< $1M), Q3 2025 saw 25 sales, down from 32 in Q3 2024. Total volume fell to $17.2 million, compared to $20.9 million the year prior. The average price rose to $689K, a 5.4% increase, while median price dipped slightly from $685K to $675K.

The luxury market (≥ $1M) surged. Q3 2025 recorded 11 sales, up from just 3 in Q3 2024, with total volume tripling to $14 million, up from $4.23 million. Despite the volume spike, the average price declined to $1.27M, down from $1.42M last year. Median price also fell, from $1.36M to $1.13M, and CDOM ballooned from 20 to 74 days, suggesting slower turnover despite increased activity.

The following is a visual snapshot of the Hood River market:

Scatter plot showing individual home sales in Hood River County during Q3 2025. Each purple dot represents a closed sale, plotted by date on the x-axis (from late June to early October) and price on the y-axis (ranging from $0 to $2.5 million). Most sales fall below $1.5 million, with a single outlier near $2 million in mid-July—highlighting the county’s expanding but volatile luxury tier.

Each purple dot represents a closed sale. Most transactions clustered below $1.5 million, with a single outlier near $2 million in mid-July—highlighting the county’s expanding but volatile luxury tier.

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That completes our look at the Portland Region Q3 2025 single-family market!

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Question: Do you think Q4 2025 will follow the same trajectory, or will it outperform Q4 2024?

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