10 Things to Know If You're Buying, Selling, or Renovating a DFW Home This Year
Lately, we've been getting the same questions on repeat: What's actually going on with the market? Is it a good time to buy? Should I sell? Is now a smart time to renovate, or should I wait?
The honest answer is: it depends on you. The DFW market isn't the white-hot, name-your-price seller's market it was two years ago — and it isn't a crash either. It's something more interesting. It's a market that, for the first time in a while, actually rewards thoughtfulness. Buyers, sellers, and homeowners thinking about renovating all have real opportunities — but only if they're informed about what's happening and realistic about how to move within it.
At 6th Ave Homes, we work with people on every side of this — first-time buyers, longtime homeowners thinking about a remodel, families ready to upsize, downsizers, investors, and everyone in between. We see the patterns up close, and we know that the people who do well right now are the ones who lead with strategy, not anxiety.
If you're trying to figure out your next move in Fort Worth, Mansfield, Aledo, or anywhere across DFW, here are ten things worth knowing before you do anything else. Let's dive in.
Inventory Is Up — and That's a Real Win for Buyers
For the first time in years, there are actually homes to choose from. Inventory across DFW has climbed meaningfully, which means the panic-buying environment of 2021 and 2022 is mostly behind us.
What that translates to in practice: you can tour multiple homes without one selling out from under you in 12 hours. You can sleep on a decision instead of writing an offer in the parking lot. You can get an inspection without waiving it just to compete. You can request repairs. You can negotiate.
That's not a small thing. The cost of time to think in real estate is invisible until you've lost it. Buyers right now have the luxury of being thoughtful — and the homes you'll find tend to be of better fit because you have actual options.
If you've been on the sidelines because everything you tried to buy in 2022 turned into a bidding war, this is a different market. Take advantage of it.
Sellers Can't Just Name Their Price Anymore
Pricing has leveled off. Not crashed — leveled off. That distinction matters.
For sellers, it means the days of slapping any number on a listing and watching it get bid up are over. Homes that are overpriced for what they offer are sitting. Homes that are priced honestly, presented well, and prepared with intention are still moving — sometimes quickly.
What this market rewards is strategy, not optimism. Pricing too high to "leave room to negotiate" is one of the fastest ways to kill momentum on a listing right now. Buyers are paying close attention to days on market, and a listing that's been sitting picks up the smell of stale almost overnight.
The flip side: a well-priced, well-prepped home in a desirable neighborhood is still a star. We've seen homes generate strong interest, multiple offers, and clean closes — when the seller and the agent treated the listing like the strategic project it is.
If you're thinking about selling, the conversation has to start with honest pricing and honest prep work — not wishful thinking. The right Guide will tell you the truth.
Buyers Now Have Real Leverage — Use It
Because homes are sitting a little longer, buyers can do things that haven't been on the table in years: ask for repairs after inspection, request closing cost concessions, negotiate on price, ask for a temporary rate buydown from the seller.
Closing cost contributions and rate buydowns are especially worth paying attention to. A motivated seller who's already had a home sit on the market for 60 days is often willing to put real money toward a buyer's rate buydown — which can functionally drop your effective interest rate by a full point or more for the first year or two of the loan. That's significant.
The takeaway isn't to lowball every offer or assume sellers will roll over. It's to understand that you have room. Your offer is a conversation, not a Hail Mary. A good Guide will help you read each situation — how long has the home been listed, what's the seller's motivation, what's reasonable to ask for — and craft an offer that gets you the best outcome without blowing up the deal.
Don't Wait for Interest Rates to Drop
Interest rates are still hovering in the elevated range, and because of new tariffs and inflation pressures, they're expected to stay there for a while. That reality has a lot of buyers stuck in the I'll wait until rates come down loop.
Here's the problem with waiting: when rates drop, prices usually rise. Lower rates create pent-up demand, demand creates competition, and competition pushes prices back up. The buyers who held out for the perfect rate often end up paying more for the same house — sometimes much more — once the market shifts.
There's a saying in our industry we believe in deeply: Marry the house, date the rate.
The house is the long-term commitment. If it fits your life, your neighborhood, and your budget at today's rate, you can refinance when rates eventually shift. But you can't go back in time and buy at today's prices. The home you wanted in 2021 isn't available at 2021 prices anymore — and the home you want today probably won't be available at today's prices in three years either.
If the math works for your monthly budget now, the rate is a problem you can solve later. The right house at the right time almost never comes back around.
If You're Locked Into a Low Rate, Your Best Move Might Be to Stay and Renovate
A huge segment of homeowners across DFW are sitting on mortgage rates in the 2s and 3s. Trading that in for a 6%+ rate on a new home is, for many, financially painful — and totally unnecessary if your real itch is I want my home to feel different.
Renovation demand is still strong for exactly this reason. Homeowners are looking at their houses and asking: what would it take to love this place again? Sometimes the answer is a kitchen remodel. Sometimes it's a primary suite addition. Sometimes it's reconfiguring an awkward layout, finishing a basement, or adding the outdoor space you never built. Sometimes it's all of it.
The math here often makes a lot of sense. The cost of a thoughtful renovation, even a substantial one, can be dramatically less than the cost of selling, paying agent fees on both sides, paying closing costs, paying moving expenses, and assuming a much higher interest rate on a new home. And you end up with a house that fits you better than the one you would have moved to.
If staying put with a smart remodel is on the table for you, it should be. It's one of the most underrated moves in this market.
Tariffs Are Driving Up Material Costs — Plan Around It
Here's the reality for anyone considering a renovation, addition, or new build right now: new tariffs are driving up the cost of materials. Steel, lumber, electrical components, certain finish materials — the prices have moved, and they're moving in different ways at different times depending on where the materials originate.
This doesn't mean don't renovate. It means plan smarter. The construction projects that succeed in this environment are the ones with realistic budgets, transparent pricing structures, and contractors who communicate clearly when material prices shift mid-project.
What goes wrong is when homeowners get a fixed bid that looks attractive on day one, only to find out three months in that the contractor is cutting corners on materials to hit the number — or that "change orders" are stacking up because the original bid didn't reflect real costs. By the end, the project has either gone way over budget anyway or come in lower-quality than promised.
The smart move in a market like this is to plan with a clear-eyed view of where material costs are headed and to work with a team that gives you real-time visibility into what you're paying for. Which leads us to the next point.
Why Cost-Plus Pricing Beats Fixed-Bid in This Climate
When a contractor gives you a flat, fixed bid in a volatile material market, one of two things has to happen: either they padded the bid to insulate themselves against price changes (so you're overpaying), or they're going to lose money — and try to make it back somewhere you won't notice.
A cost-plus model works differently. You see exactly what the materials cost. You see what the subcontractors charge. You see the contractor's transparent markup on top. There are no hidden margins, no padded line items, and no incentive for the contractor to cut corners on quality to protect a number they quoted three months ago.
This is the model 6th Ave Homes uses on every construction project, and it's especially powerful in a market like this one. When tariffs shift or material prices move, you see it in real time, and we can pivot together — substituting materials, rephasing the project, or adjusting the scope to keep things on track. You stay in control of your budget because you have actual visibility into it.
It's a more honest, flexible way to approach a renovation or build. And it builds the kind of trust that makes a multi-month construction project feel like a partnership instead of a battle.
Don't Make a Real Estate Decision in a Vacuum
Real estate doesn't happen in isolation — it touches your finances, your family, your work, and your life. The biggest mistakes we see come from people trying to make a real estate decision while ignoring everything around it.
Selling makes a different kind of sense at 35 with two kids than it does at 60 with grown children. Renovating makes sense if you plan to be in the home another decade — and a different kind of sense if you're prepping it to sell next year. Buying as a single person looks different from buying as a growing family. The "right" move depends entirely on the season of life you're in.
Before you commit to a direction, sit with three honest questions: What do I actually want my life to look like in three to five years? What can I genuinely afford each month — not just qualify for? What's the cost of not moving, both in dollars and in quality of life?
The clearer you are about your season of life, the better every other decision becomes. Real estate is a tool. The question is: a tool for what?
This Market Rewards People Who Are Informed and Ready
The other side of every "wait and see" mindset is the simple fact that the people who win in this market are the ones who are prepared.
That looks different depending on your situation. For buyers, it means getting pre-approved (not just pre-qualified), understanding what you can comfortably afford, and being ready to move when the right house shows up. Homes don't sit forever. The good ones still move quickly when they're priced well.
For sellers, it means doing the prep work before you list — handling small repairs, decluttering, refreshing paint, staging well, getting professional photography, pricing strategically. The seller who shows up to listing day with a polished home wins. The seller who lists first and figures it out later loses momentum and money.
For homeowners considering a renovation, it means starting the conversation early. The good design and construction teams book out months in advance. By the time you've decided you're ready to start, you've often already lost a season.
The market is full of opportunity for the people who do the work upfront. The ones who make moves casually or reactively are the ones who get burned. Be the prepared person.
Work With a Team That Sees the Whole Picture
The single biggest thing that's changed about real estate in the last few years is how much it overlaps with construction, design, lending, and life planning. A good agent in 2026 isn't just opening doors — they're helping you understand whether to buy or stay, whether to renovate or move, whether to refinance or hold, whether to invest in the home you have or chase a better one.
That's exactly why 6th Ave Homes was built the way it was. Our Guides don't work in a vacuum. They sit alongside our in-house construction team, our designers, and our lenders, so when you bring us a question, you get the whole picture — not just one piece of it.
Wondering whether your kitchen remodel will actually pay off when you eventually sell? Our team has built and sold enough homes to give you a real answer. Wondering whether to buy a house that needs work? Our designers and construction crew can walk it with you and tell you what it would actually cost to make it the home you want. Wondering if a rate buydown is the right play on a particular offer? Our lenders run the math.
That's the One Stop Shop model. Not just convenience — clarity. The kind of clarity that's hard to come by when you're trying to piece advice together from five different professionals who've never spoken to each other.
The market this year rewards people who are informed, realistic, and ready to make moves that match their season of life. Whether that means buying, selling, renovating, or simply figuring out the next right step, the best decision you can make is to surround yourself with a team that sees the whole picture — and tells you the truth.
When you're ready to talk it through, we're here.
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