El Paso sits where Texas, New Mexico, and Mexico meet — a sun-baked border city framed by the Franklin Mountains, shaped by military roots, and grounded in a culture that’s distinctly its own. The Sun City has long punched above its weight on affordability, offering urban amenities at prices that most Texas metros can’t touch.
El Paso’s March market held firm where others softened — prices rose while much of the country saw them fall. But a surge of new listings and slower sales gave buyers more options and more time than they’ve had in years. Sellers still have leverage, but the window for sloppy pricing is narrowing.
More sellers entered the El Paso market last month than almost anywhere else in the country — new listings jumped 21.9% year-over-year, compared to just 0.7% nationally. Yet total active listings barely budged, finishing March down 0.4% from a year ago, as buyer demand absorbed much of the new supply. If you’re shopping now, your choices are meaningfully wider than they were twelve months ago — even if the overall pool hasn’t exploded.
While the national median listing price fell 2.1% year-over-year, El Paso’s climbed to $301,475 — a 3.6% increase from March of last year. Only 10.5% of El Paso listings carried a price cut, down from a year ago and well below the national rate of 16.3%. Sellers held their ground on asking prices last month — but that confidence only holds if the listing price is realistic from day one.
Buyers had more time to decide last month — the typical El Paso home sat on the market for 58 days, up 12.7% year-over-year. That’s a faster slowdown than the national pace, where days on market rose just 7.5% over the same period. If you’re selling today, a sharp price from the start matters more than it did a year ago — buyers are no longer rushing.
El Paso’s March data showed a market that’s resilient but quietly shifting. Prices grew against a national backdrop of softening, and demand absorbed a wave of new supply — both signs of underlying strength. But homes took longer to sell, and buyers had more options than El Paso has offered in recent memory. Sellers: price it right and the market still rewards you. Buyers: you have more breathing room now — and a median price point well below the national average to work with.
This market report has been generated with AI tools, with input from Realtor.com Economic Data Manager Sabrina Speianu
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