The latest data from the New Hampshire Association of Realtors shows a large year-over-year bounce in homes on the market statewide, but those same homes are spending longer on the market.
NHAR reported that 1,855 single-family homes hit the market in April, a 19.4 percent jump over April 2025.
The association also said total inventory on the market hit 1,979, an 18.5 percent increase on the same basis.
That translated to 1.9 months of supply, up from 1.7 months a year prior.
At the same time, the total number of days a home spent on the market in April crept up slightly, from 35 days to 36 over the same period.
“The worry going into April was that history would repeat itself,” Realtor.com Chief Economist Danielle Hale said in a statement accompanying the listing portal’s April report of data from across the country. “Last spring, tariff-driven uncertainty and recession fears hit in early April, sidelining sellers and buyers and setting up a cruel summer marked by parties too far apart to transact. This year, different triggers like the Iran conflict, spiking gas prices, surging mortgage rates have threatened the same outcome. The hope was that sellers would continue coming to market at the strong March pace, and that buyers would keep engaging despite the volatility.”
The Warren Group, publisher of The Registry Review, said the number of closed single-family home sales fell year-on-year in April, from 641 to 532. The median single-family sale price rose from $490,000 to $528,500.
