
Greater Boston Luxury Listings on the Rise
Numbers of new listings at the very high end of the Greater Boston home-sale market are on the rise, even as sales totals lagged in the market’s traditional downtown-area core in the first quarter.
Numbers of new listings at the very high end of the Greater Boston home-sale market are on the rise, even as sales totals lagged in the market’s traditional downtown-area core in the first quarter.
Red hot for years, has the Boston luxury condo market finally lost its sizzle? It looks like it – and developers’ ability to offer cash back at closing could be keeping prices from coming down.
Nantucket voters shot down proposals to strictly limit short-term rentals on the island by wide margins at this weekend’s Town Meeting according to local media reports.
Desperate buyers waiving home inspections and going way over asking. A steadily shrinking pool of homes available for sale. Yes, the tidal wave of homebuying unleashed by the pandemic in the suburbs of big urban markets across the country has reached bucolic, quirky and cultured Western Massachusetts.
The residential real estate market’s strong start last year ultimately became a preamble to dramatic increases in single-family sales and prices, and incredibly low inventory nearly throughout the commonwealth.
The number of towns with a median single-family home sale price of $1 million nearly quadrupled over the past eight years. And it is yet another sign as well that housing affordability in our state is going from bad to worse.
Home flippers, investors and just plain everyday buyers across Boston and its many suburbs must have missed the memo.
Sales at the brand-new Pier 4 luxury complex aren’t letting up but already Boston real estate brokerage Advisors Living has landed the contract to exclusively market and sell a new luxury development, this time in the South End.
When I worked in Southern California, it was common for luxury agents and their clients to use the services of a feng shui expert to assist in staging a listing or to help them locate the best property to purchase.
Ryan Glass sold real estate part time for more than six years before jumping in full-time, but since then, his career has taken off.