Housing’s Regional Reversal Is a Supply Story

This blog explains how housing supply, not migration alone, is driving the regional shift in today’s real estate market.

During the height of the pandemic housing boom, the story seemed straightforward. Homes in the Sunbelt were flying off the shelf. Domestic migration poured into Florida, Texas, and the Carolinas. Inventory disappeared almost overnight as buyers chased space, affordability, and lifestyle changes.

Meanwhile, much of the Northeast and Midwest was written off as stagnant. Slower population growth, colder climates, and older housing stock led many to assume these markets would continue to lag.

Today, that narrative has flipped.

In parts of the Sunbelt, days on market have extended, and inventory has climbed. At the same time, several Northeast and Midwest markets are facing tight supply and surprisingly resilient home price growth.

So what changed? The short answer is not migration. It’s supply.

The Sunbelt Responded to the Boom

In 2020 and 2021, record-low interest rates combined with extraordinary domestic migration created intense demand in Sunbelt markets. Builders responded as you would expect in pro-growth states with fewer regulatory barriers: they built.

Texas, Florida, and other high-growth markets saw significant new construction activity. Developers moved quickly to meet what appeared to be durable demand driven by relocation, remote work, and relative affordability.

Then conditions shifted.

By 2022, interest rates rose sharply. Affordability tightened. Demand cooled. Migration flows remained positive in many Sunbelt markets, but the pace slowed meaningfully from pandemic highs. Supply, however, had already expanded.

As new inventory continued to hit the market while demand normalized, balance returned. Days on market lengthened. Price growth moderated. In some metros, inventory began to accumulate. This is not necessarily a sign of structural weakness. It is the natural outcome of an aggressive building response meeting a slower demand environment.

The Sunbelt did not collapse. It adjusted.

The Northeast and Midwest Never Ramped Up

Now consider the opposite dynamic. Many Northeast and Midwest markets did not experience a comparable surge in new construction during the pandemic. Builders in places like parts of upstate New York, Ohio, and Pennsylvania did not dramatically expand supply.

When rates rose and demand cooled nationally, these markets were not carrying excess inventory. They simply had less to sell. In supply-constrained environments, even modest demand can keep inventory tight and pricing relatively stable. Without a wave of new homes entering the market, there is no supply overhang to absorb.

This helps explain why some colder, slower-growing markets are showing stronger relative resilience than high-growth Sunbelt metros.

The difference is not popularity. It is housing stock.

Migration Has Normalized, Not Reversed

Domestic migration has not stopped. Many Sunbelt markets remain net-positive migration destinations. Texas and Florida still offer relative affordability and economic opportunity compared to higher-cost coastal states.

But the pandemic surge was extraordinary. What we are seeing now is normalization.

When migration slows from exceptional to merely positive, and that slowdown coincides with elevated building activity, conditions soften. Meanwhile, markets that never expanded supply significantly never face the same inventory pressure.

Again, the throughline is supply.

Builders Still Hold an Advantage

Despite moderation in some markets, the new home sector remains a relatively bright spot. Builders are currently focused on selling existing inventory before breaking ground on additional homes, reflected in slowing permits and starts. But they retain a meaningful competitive advantage: flexibility.

Unlike individual homeowners, builders can offer mortgage rate buydowns and other financial incentives to attract buyers. In a higher-rate environment, that pricing power and incentive flexibility provide an edge over the existing home market.

What This Means for Investors

For investors, the lesson is straightforward. Regional performance is increasingly driven by supply dynamics, not broad migration headlines.

Markets that built aggressively are working through that inventory. Markets that constrained supply are showing resilience. The next phase of the cycle will reward local analysis over national narratives.

It is no longer sufficient to categorize markets as “hot Sunbelt” or “slow Northeast.” The more important questions are: How much was built? How quickly is inventory being absorbed? And how constrained is future supply?

In this environment, understanding the balance between construction and demand may be more valuable than tracking migration trends alone. The markets that surged first are normalizing. The markets that never expanded supply are holding firm.

If today’s housing divide is fundamentally a supply story, then thoughtful development becomes part of the opportunity. Dominion Financial’s Ground-Up Construction financing is structured to help experienced investors add inventory in markets where demand continues to outpace supply.

INVESTOR TAKEAWAYS

 Many Midwest and Northeast markets never experienced the same surge in new construction that occurred in parts of the Sunbelt during the pandemic housing boom. Because supply remained constrained, these regions now have tighter inventory, which has helped support home prices and market stability even as national demand has cooled.

During the pandemic boom, builders rapidly increased new construction in states like Texas and Florida to meet strong migration-driven demand. When interest rates rose and demand slowed, the additional housing supply began to accumulate, leading to longer days on market and more balanced pricing in some Sunbelt metros.

Housing supply plays a major role in determining price growth and market stability. When new construction significantly outpaces demand, inventory rises and price growth tends to slow. In markets with limited new development, even moderate buyer demand can keep supply tight and prices resilient.

Migration to many Sunbelt markets remains positive, but the pace has slowed compared to the extraordinary relocation trends seen during the pandemic. As migration normalizes and new housing supply increases, housing markets in these regions are adjusting to more balanced conditions.

 Investors should focus less on national headlines and more on local supply conditions. Key indicators include how much new construction occurred, current inventory levels, absorption rates, and future building constraints. Markets with limited new supply and steady demand may offer more resilient investment opportunities.

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