New York leads all states with a $216 billion annual gain, while Florida and California posted the biggest declines
The U.S. housing market is worth a record $55.1 trillion, up $20 trillion since 2020. Housing gained $862 billion in the past year.
Seven states saw their housing markets lose value over the past year, with the biggest drops in Florida (-$109 billion), California (-$106 billion) and Texas (-$32 billion). About one-quarter of the gains nationwide came from New York, which added $216 billion.
Nine metro areas top $1 trillion in housing wealth. Collectively, they hold nearly one-third of all housing wealth, but smaller housing markets played an outsize role in the past year’s gains.
SEATTLE, Sept. 8, 2025 /PRNewswire/ — America’s homes are now worth a record $55.1 trillion, a massive $20 trillion jump since the eve of the pandemic, according to a new Zillow® analysis. But growth has slowed in the past year as high costs cooled buyer demand, with U.S. housing gaining a modest $862 billion.
Seven states saw their housing markets lose value over the past year, with the biggest drops in Florida (-$109 billion), California (-$106 billion) and Texas (-$32 billion). About one-quarter of the gains nationwide came from New York, which added $216 billion.
For most households, a home is their biggest financial asset, meaning even modest changes in value can ripple through family budgets and the broader economy. This year’s shifts show how the geography of home value gains is rotating away from pandemic boomtowns, as well as the role new construction is playing in shaping long-term housing wealth.
“Even as buyers struggled with rising costs, U.S. housing wealth kept climbing,” said Orphe Divounguy, senior economist at Zillow. “New construction opened the door for many first-time homeowners, creating trillions in wealth that didn’t exist five years ago. Home value gains are a windfall for longtime homeowners, but they also highlight how housing deficits that sent prices soaring left behind many aspiring first-time buyers. The bottom line is that we need more homes to solve our chronic affordability crisis.”
Housing gains move north as Sun Belt loses steam The housing market is shifting. Pandemic boomtowns in the South and Mountain West are cooling, passing the baton to states in the Northeast and Midwest. One likely factor is that the Sun Belt’s affordability edge has eroded through massive home value gains and rising insurance costs.
Since early 2020, the largest total value gains have been in California ($3.4 trillion), Florida ($1.6 trillion), New York ($1.5 trillion) and Texas ($1.2 trillion). But three of those four lost ground in the past year. Florida’s housing market fell by $109 billion, and California’s by $106 billion.
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New York, on the other hand, was part of the Northeast revival, gaining $216 billion over the past year. That is the biggest increase of any state, and it accounts for one-quarter of the national growth. Neighbor New Jersey was not far behind, gaining $101 billion, followed by Illinois ($89 billion) and Pennsylvania ($73 billion).
The role of new construction New construction has added $2.5 trillion in housing value since early 2020 — about 12.5% of the nation’s total gain. Not only has this created space for new households to form, it also represents a massive amount of new wealth-building potential.
Utah (23%), Texas (22%), Idaho (22%) and Florida (20%) saw the biggest share of housing market gains come from new construction over this period. These are states that experienced booming demand during the pandemic from households seeking more space and relative affordability.
Building more homes is the key to unlocking affordability. Sun Belt states like Texas and Florida have been the most prolific home-building states over the past few years, and have recently seen affordability gains and buyer-friendly markets as a result. These additional homes helped the market rebalance more quickly and made it a bit easier for buyers to find a foothold.
The $1 trillion club There are nine metro areas with housing markets worth more than $1 trillion, and collectively, they hold nearly one-third of the nation’s housing wealth (31.9%). They are New York ($4.6 trillion), Los Angeles ($3.9 trillion), San Francisco ($1.9 trillion), Boston ($1.3 trillion), Washington, D.C. ($1.3 trillion), Miami ($1.2 trillion), Chicago ($1.2 trillion), Seattle ($1.1 trillion) and San Diego ($1 trillion).
However, the past year’s results show their dominance may be slipping. Excluding New York, which gained the most value of any metro area by a wide margin ($260 billion), the other nine $1 trillion markets combined lost $18 billion. This suggests more of the recent gains in housing market wealth are coming from smaller markets as remote work and affordability hurdles continue to reshape where Americans live.
10 Most Valuable Metro Areas
Metro Area
Total Market Value (Billions)
Total Market Value Growth, July 2024–June 2025 (Billions)
New York, NY
$4,624
$260
Los Angeles, CA
$3,864
-$15
San Francisco, CA
$1,850
-$52
Boston, MA
$1,322
-$3
Washington, DC
$1,296
$24
Miami, FL
$1,233
-$25
Chicago, IL
$1,219
$62
Seattle, WA
$1,113
$13
San Diego, CA
$1,031
-$22
San Jose, CA
$995
-$10
Â
State
Total Market Value (Billions)
Share of National Total Value
Total Market Value Growth, February 2020– June 2025 (Billions)
Total Market Value Growth, July 2024– June 2025 (Billions)
United States
$55,103
100Â %
$20,048
$862
California
$10,813
19.6Â %
$3,400
-$106
New York
$4,296
7.8Â %
$1,466
$216
Florida
$3,715
6.7Â %
$1,605
-$109
Texas
$3,323
6.0Â %
$1,241
-$32
New Jersey
$1,981
3.6Â %
$819
$101
Massachusetts
$1,856
3.4Â %
$652
$46
Washington
$1,799
3.3Â %
$599
$27
Pennsylvania
$1,693
3.1Â %
$610
$73
Illinois
$1,525
2.8Â %
$544
$89
North Carolina
$1,518
2.8Â %
$673
$21
Virginia
$1,503
2.7Â %
$523
$46
Georgia
$1,358
2.5Â %
$560
-$1
Colorado
$1,333
2.4Â %
$464
$7
Arizona
$1,246
2.3Â %
$504
-$1
Ohio
$1,228
2.2Â %
$465
$49
Michigan
$1,179
2.1Â %
$429
$48
Maryland
$1,016
1.8Â %
$344
$29
Tennessee
$957
1.7Â %
$423
$5
Wisconsin
$821
1.5Â %
$305
$39
Minnesota
$797
1.4Â %
$238
$26
Oregon
$777
1.4Â %
$228
$3
South Carolina
$734
1.3Â %
$331
$13
Connecticut
$708
1.3Â %
$296
$43
Indiana
$705
1.3Â %
$260
$17
Missouri
$700
1.3Â %
$258
$20
Utah
$657
1.2Â %
$276
$26
Nevada
$528
1.0Â %
$205
$13
Alabama
$509
0.9Â %
$201
$6
Hawaii
$470
0.9Â %
$157
-$1
Kentucky
$446
0.8Â %
$163
$20
Louisiana
$430
0.8Â %
$102
$7
Idaho
$392
0.7Â %
$175
$10
Oklahoma
$337
0.6Â %
$123
$5
Iowa
$323
0.6Â %
$109
$9
Maine
$322
0.6Â %
$142
$5
Kansas
$299
0.5Â %
$108
$7
New Hampshire
$299
0.5Â %
$128
$11
Arkansas
$278
0.5Â %
$117
$8
New Mexico
$275
0.5Â %
$101
$9
Montana
$244
0.4Â %
$105
$0.2
Rhode Island
$234
0.4Â %
$101
$11
Mississippi
$227
0.4Â %
$74
$5
Nebraska
$220
0.4Â %
$80
$9
Delaware
$170
0.3Â %
$68
$5
Vermont
$143
0.3Â %
$63
$4
District of Columbia
$143
0.3Â %
$18
-$2
West Virginia
$136
0.2Â %
$46
$4
Wyoming
$119
0.2Â %
$51
$7
South Dakota
$118
0.2Â %
$44
$3
Alaska
$113
0.2Â %
$30
$6
North Dakota
$90
0.2Â %
$25
$6
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