
Las Vegas Housing Market: 2026 Summer Prices Steady, a World Away From 2021’s Fever Pitch
After record-shattering peaks five years ago, today’s Las Vegas real estate market shows slower movement and surprising stability.
All property coverage from Las Vegas.

After record-shattering peaks five years ago, today’s Las Vegas real estate market shows slower movement and surprising stability.

Henderson’s Seven Hills and North Las Vegas see mortgage payments dropping below average rents as heat and high demand reshape affordability.

Renewed investor activity is ramping up competition for homes from Summerlin to Sunrise Manor, driving prices higher as out-of-state money pours in.

As the city's rental market tightens, thousands of Las Vegas renters face hard choices at lease renewal time.

New rental home neighborhoods offer amenities and flexibility, but how do the numbers compare to owning?

An ultra-tight market is squeezing renters across the Valley, with vacancy rates stuck below 4% and bidding wars breaking out in coveted neighborhoods.

With median home prices and rents both climbing, Las Vegas residents are turning to rent-vesting—here’s how it stacks up for the Strip City in mid-2026.

Rising rents and shifting home prices mean buyers can pay less than renters in key Clark County neighborhoods.

Savvy bidders are snapping up homes across Summerlin and Henderson—here’s how to play (and win) the auction game in Las Vegas’ competitive market.

Starter homes in select Las Vegas suburbs are seeing heavy first-buyer activity, with grant programs and cooling auction competition making key neighborhoods more accessible.

Historic neighborhoods east of the Strip, led by Huntridge and South Maryland Parkway, are luring a new wave of buyers priced out of Summerlin and Henderson.

Rising rents outpace home payments in several valley neighborhoods—flipping the traditional buy-vs-rent equation.

Recent shifts in home prices and rising rents flip the script in neighborhoods like Centennial Hills and Green Valley.

With soaring home prices and swelling mortgage rates, Las Vegas renters crunch the numbers and question the long-standing wisdom that buying always beats leasing.

Would-be renters face ultra-tight conditions from Summerlin to Henderson as affordable options dwindle and prices inch upward.

Home hunters squeezed by prices on the Strip are taking a cue from the rent-vesting playbook—renting locally but buying investment properties in more affordable corners of Nevada.

A growing number of Las Vegas suburbs offer better value for buyers than renters, with mortgage payments lower than monthly rents in areas like Summerlin and Henderson.

New properties along Blue Diamond Road and in Summerlin promise luxury and flexibility, as rising mortgage rates keep many would-be buyers on the sidelines.
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