
Influential national magazine Forbes has declared the Grand Center neighborhood, conveniently close to St. Louis homes for sale, to be "

Just saw this headline from Redfin:
Homebuyers Are Canceling Deals at the Highest Rate on Record
Before we spiral, let's slowww down and step back.
Redfin's economists point to two forces at play:
1. Housing is still expensive.
2. There's simply more to choose from - about 10% more homes for sale than this time last year.
When buyers have options, they're more willing to walk away if a home feels overpriced, needs work, or doesn't quite match what they want.
This isn't the market for "Let's list high and see what happens."
It's the market for knowing the buyers.
You can still get the price you want. You just need the right market intelligence and pri...

Google searches for "homes for sale" are up 10% - the highest level in 4 months.
When buyers start looking again, there is one type of home they'll always see as a good investment:
A well-built home in a high-demand location.
Why?
Two words:
resale demand.
A simple floorplan, spaces that can adapt to different needs over time, a usable outdoor space.
A home that doesn't feel like a project from day one.
Buyers want flexibility, solid construction, and a price point that feels attainable.
When a home checks those boxes, it attracts the widest pool of buyers.

House hunting is thrilling, but it can also be daunting when dreams meet reality. Browse our St. Louis properties for sale with a solid grasp of what's essential and where adaptability can reveal opportunities you might otherwise overlook.
Before you start looking at houses, take some time to figure out what you need versus what you'd like to have. Your needs connect to how you live, what you do, and what'll work for you in the long run. Wants are often about looks or making things easier.
Things that count as needs are:

Do you know what interest rates were one year ago?
Take a guess.
Close…
7.26%
Now?
The average 30-year fixed is near the lowest level in almost three years.
The average buyer today is paying about $330 less per month on the same home.
But here's the mistake everyone makes when rates drop…
Waiting to see if they'll go any lower before they buy.
Here's the problem:
Nobody can predict where rates are going.
In fact, mortgage rates actually rose in early 2025 after the Fed cut rates three times in 2024 - the opposite of what everyone expected.
Waiting for the "perfect" rate often means missing real opportunities.
In the coming weeks, all eyes are on rates.
As always, I'll keep you updated.
I know...