Sales of new single-family homes in the United States totaled 627,000 units in June 2025 on a seasonally adjusted annual basis, marking a 6.6% decline compared to June 2024 when 671,000 units were sold. Compared with the previous month, sales increased slightly by 0.6% from May’s revised rate of 623,000, according to the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The number of new houses for sale at the end of June rose to 511,000 units, up 1.2% from May’s 505,000 and 8.5% above the June 2024 level of 471,000. This corresponds to a supply of 9.8 months at the current sales pace, an increase from 9.7 months in May and 8.4 months a year earlier.
The median sales price of new homes dropped to $401,800 in June, a 4.9% decrease from $422,700 in May and a 2.9% decline from $414,000 in June 2024. The average sales price was $501,000, down 2.0% from $511,500 the prior month but 1.1% higher than the $495,500 average in June last year.
Regionally, sales compared to June 2024 rose 9.0% in the Midwest to 85,000 units and declined in all other regions: the Northeast dropped 34.4% to 21,000 units, the South fell 4.4% to 390,000, and the West declined 14.4% to 131,000 units.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, houses priced between $300,000 and $499,999 made up 56% of all June sales, while only 14% of houses sold were priced under $300,000.