Edmonton’s condo prices dropped nearly 6% in December 2025, while single-family homes remained stable. The reason townhouses and apartments are lingering on the market across this Albe...
In Austin, Single-Family Homes Are Selling Fast — But Condos Are a Different Story




Not all Austin real estate is moving at the same pace. Buyers shopping for a traditional single-family home in a strong school district will find real competition. But those eyeing a condo — whether a downtown high-rise or a small complex on the east side — have more time, more leverage, and more options than they might expect.
Austin’s housing market has split into two distinct segments, and understanding which one you’re in could save you thousands.
The Condo Reset Is Real
Condo prices across Austin have pulled back to pre-COVID levels, and the trend isn’t limited to a single neighborhood. Kathy Sokolic, co-founder of Mueller Residential Group at Compass, says the correction is nearly citywide. “Our condo market is really resetting,” she says. “Condo pricing is back pre-COVID, which is very interesting.”
That’s a significant decline from the peak years of 2020 through 2022, when Austin home values surged 38% year over year before correcting. Condos took a harder hit than most other property types and are moving slowly, even in prime locations like downtown high-rises.
For buyers, this creates an opportunity. If a condo fits your lifestyle and budget, you’re shopping in a buyer’s market within a buyer’s market. Sellers are more motivated, prices are softer, and there’s room to negotiate.
Single-Family Homes: Still in Demand
Traditional detached homes are holding their ground. Demand remains strong, especially in areas with well-regarded schools and easy access to downtown Austin. These homes didn’t correct as sharply during the post-COVID adjustment, and they aren’t sitting the way condos are.
Sokolic notes that single-family detached homes “are still in really high demand almost anywhere throughout the city.” Sellers with a well-maintained home in the right zip code are in a much stronger position than condo sellers right now.
What’s Moving
Single-family homes near top-rated schools continue to attract steady demand. Families relocating to Austin prioritize school districts, and inventory in those areas moves faster than the broader market.
New construction in surrounding communities – Round Rock, Cedar Park, Leander, Elgin, and Kyle – is also selling. Builders are aggressively offering appliance packages, window blinds, upgrade credits, rate buydowns, and flex cash. For buyers who can handle a commute, the value is hard to beat.
Older homes with solid structure but cosmetic needs represent another opportunity. Sokolic recommends buying a home with good bones, updating it over time, and letting appreciation work in your favor. It’s not a flip – it’s a long-term play.
What’s Sitting
Condos without strong differentiators are lingering. Units that are small, dated, or in buildings with high HOA fees aren’t moving – even with price cuts.
Homes that need major repairs where sellers won’t negotiate are also stalling. Buyers today are cautious. If a home has obvious issues and the seller isn’t offering meaningful concessions, buyers walk. Sokolic’s team recently passed on a home where the seller offered only $3,000 toward repairs that clearly required more. They didn’t bother making an offer.
Homes with cast-iron plumbing face a specific challenge. Many of Austin’s central neighborhoods were built in the 1950s through the 1970s, when cast-iron pipes were standard. Those pipes corrode over time, and replacing them with PVC is expensive. “A lot of buyers get freaked out by that,” Sokolic says, “because it’s a big cost.” When sellers won’t offer concessions to address the issue, deals fall apart.
Reading the Market Right
In the condo market, take your time. Compare multiple units, negotiate hard on price, and ask about HOA fees and any upcoming assessments before committing. With condos sitting on the market longer, sellers are more open to deals.
For single-family homes in high-demand areas, be ready to move faster. These aren’t flying off the market the way they did in 2021, but well-priced homes in good school districts still attract real interest. Come in with a clean offer and reasonable repair requests.
If you’re open to the suburbs, talk to builders directly. The incentives they’re offering right now are genuinely significant.
If you’re selling a single-family home, price it correctly from the start. Overpriced listings are sitting. If you’re selling a condo, understand that you’re competing in a crowded, slow-moving segment. Pricing aggressively and offering concessions upfront will help you stand out.
Looking Ahead
Austin’s market isn’t uniform right now. Condos are soft and negotiable. Single-family homes in the right locations are holding strong. The gap between these two segments may narrow as condo prices stabilize and attract buyers priced out of single-family options – but for now, the divide is wide enough that buyers and sellers need to approach each segment with a different strategy entirely.
About the Expert: Kathy Sokolic is Co-Founder and Realtor at Mueller Residential Group, focused on Central Texas residential real estate with particular concentration in Austin’s Mueller neighborhood, a planned urban community on the city’s east side. Her practice covers multiple property types, including single-family homes, townhomes, and condos across the Austin market.
This article is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or investment advice. The views and opinions expressed herein reflect those of the individuals quoted and do not represent an endorsement of any company, product, or service mentioned. Readers should conduct their own due diligence and consult qualified professionals before making any investment decisions.
This article was sourced from a live expert interview.
Every month we conduct hundreds of interviews with
active market practitioners - thousands to date.
Similar Articles
Explore similar articles from Our Team of Experts.




After three weeks without offers, a seller in Denver dropped the price of a three-bedroom home from $800,000 to $775,000 and added a $5,000 closing cost credit — the property sold within f...


Conventional wisdom suggests that luxury oceanfront condos would be struggling to sell right now, with higher interest rates and economic uncertainty limiting buyers’ ability to pay premiu...


Sergio Sciortino, a broker associate with Keller Williams Village Square Realty who has worked in Bergen County for over 25 years, says the buyer mix at open houses and in transactions has r...


Apartment rents are falling across much of the country for the first time in years. After a long stretch of rising prices and limited supply, renters now have more choices and leverage than ...

