Markets  ›  Indiana

Indiana

Daily-refreshed real estate signals + Three-Opinion home-price methodology for Indiana. City-level + zip-level data; free to read.

Cities

Evansville, IN

$173K · +6.1%

Fort Wayne, IN

$224K · +1.5%

Indianapolis, IN

$252K · -0.2%

Recent signals

Strength 4 / 5

54 days

Noblesville homes taking 54 days to sell — +170.0% vs. a year ago

Homes are sitting materially longer than they were this time last year — the first hard sign of softening demand or over-priced inventory.

Strength 4 / 5

55 days

Indianapolis homes taking 55 days to sell — +103.7% vs. a year ago

Homes are sitting materially longer than they were this time last year — the first hard sign of softening demand or over-priced inventory.

Strength 4 / 5

13 listings

Boonville new listings +51.2% vs. 5-year average for this month

Sellers are putting materially more inventory on the market than is typical for this time of year — buyers should see more selection and less urgency on well-located homes.

Strength 4 / 5

$532K

Carmel avg sale price crossed $500K — now $532K

Crossing $500K is a narrative hinge — buyer shopping-by-price bands and seller list-price anchoring both reset when a market moves past a round number.

Strength 4 / 5

27 days

Carmel homes taking 27 days to sell — +50.0% vs. a year ago

Homes are sitting materially longer than they were this time last year — the first hard sign of softening demand or over-priced inventory.

Strength 4 / 5

14 listings

Newburgh new listings +70.7% vs. 5-year average for this month

Sellers are putting materially more inventory on the market than is typical for this time of year — buyers should see more selection and less urgency on well-located homes.

Strength 4 / 5

19 days

Noblesville homes taking 19 days to sell — +171.4% vs. a year ago

Homes are sitting materially longer than they were this time last year — the first hard sign of softening demand or over-priced inventory.

Strength 4 / 5

30 days

Fishers homes taking 30 days to sell — +87.5% vs. a year ago

Homes are sitting materially longer than they were this time last year — the first hard sign of softening demand or over-priced inventory.