Data Report

Quarterly Market Report: Richmond Real Estate Q2 2026

May 22, 2026

The Richmond real estate market enters Q2 2026 as one of the tighter markets on the East Coast — low inventory, rising prices, and competitive conditions define the landscape. Here’s the quarterly data breakdown.

Price Summary

The Richmond metro median sales price reached approximately $434,925 for single-family homes through January 2026 — a 2.3% year-over-year increase. February data showed acceleration with prices up 5.3% year-over-year. Forecasts project 3% to 5% appreciation through 2026. The West End and Short Pump command premiums. Chesterfield County (adding residents faster than any Virginia locality) provides family options at a median around $407,000. New Kent County — the fastest-growing county in Virginia — has seen its median climb to approximately $435,000.

Inventory Data

Inventory sits at just 1.2 months of supply for single-family homes — significantly below balanced-market thresholds. If no new listings hit the market, current inventory would sell out in approximately five weeks. The tight supply reflects geographic constraints, lower turnover rates, and the lock-in effect of homeowners holding sub-4% rates.

Days on Market

Homes in Richmond receive 3 offers on average and sell in around 30 days. Properties sell for 100% of asking price, indicating strong seller advantage. Well-priced homes in strong school districts attract competitive activity within the first two weeks.

Mortgage Rate Impact

At 6.3% on a $435,000 home with 20% down, the monthly principal and interest payment runs approximately $2,155 — manageable relative to Richmond’s median income and more favorable than D.C. or Northern Virginia equivalents.

Submarket Performance

The Fan District and Museum District maintain premium urban positioning. Church Hill continues its renaissance. Scott’s Addition has matured into an established neighborhood. Short Pump leads suburban demand with Henrico County school quality. Midlothian and Chesterfield provide active new-construction markets. Mechanicsville and Hanover balance rural character with accessibility.

Q2 Outlook

State-capital employment stability, the metro’s value proposition relative to D.C. and Northern Virginia, and tight inventory maintain competitive conditions. The market rewards prepared buyers who act decisively and sellers who price strategically.

For more market data, explore our May market update and real estate stats.

Filed under: Data Report