Fort Worth Home Values
Texas
Fort Worth Market Snapshot
| Active 5,673 listings | New 1,605 30 days | Closed 1,097 30 days | Pending 120 30 days | Supply 5.3 months | Absorption 30.3% monthly | Over List 2.8% sold above | Under List 48.9% sold below | Concessions 59.1% % of solds | Avg Concession $8,006 seller paid |
Source: NTREIS MLS • Excludes leases • May 2026
Fort Worth Market Trends
Production Builds and Brick Ranches Compete for Buyers
Fort Worth's housing stock splits along a clear divide. The outer ring — south toward Crowley, north past Saginaw, west into Aledo — is dominated by D.R. Horton production builds: single-story, four-bedroom open-concept plans on 5,500-to-6,500-square-foot lots with granite, gas ranges, and vinyl plank throughout. Closer in, established neighborhoods like Meadowbrook, Ridglea Hills, and Arlington Heights hold mid-century brick ranches and 1950s bungalows on larger lots, many getting gut-renovated with modern kitchens and updated baths. The new construction volume here is unusual for a city this size — Fort Worth is building outward fast, and the older core is renovating to keep pace.
Fort Worth's price per square foot came in at roughly $178 on trailing three-month closings — essentially flat with the broader annual average — while the median sale price settled near $342,000. Based on MLS data for June 2026 closings in Fort Worth, sellers gave back about two and a half cents on the dollar at close, a slight improvement from the prior period's pace. Nearly two-thirds of closed transactions included seller concessions, with the average concession running just under $8,000. Homes that closed took a median of 34 days from list to contract, roughly four days faster than the trailing twelve-month pace, and year-over-year values remain fractionally negative.
Fort Worth's months of supply pulled back to roughly 5.3 from a six-month reading in the prior period, a shift that moves conditions away from the buyer-favoring threshold. Pending contracts climbed to more than 1,700 — a meaningful increase from prior readings — even as active listings held near 5,700 and more than 5,200 new listings entered the market. The acceleration in pending volume, combined with the days-on-market trend moving four days faster in recent closings, points toward a modest uptick in absorption that, if sustained, would continue compressing available supply.
Market Updates
Fort Worth's price per square foot came in at roughly $178 on trailing three-month closings — essentially flat with the broader annual average — while the median sale price settled near $342,000. Based on MLS data for June 2026 closings in Fort Worth, sellers gave back about two and a half cents on the dollar at close, a slight improvement from the prior period's pace. Nearly two-thirds of closed transactions included seller concessions, with the average concession running just under $8,000. Homes that closed took a median of 34 days from list to contract, roughly four days faster than the trailing twelve-month pace, and year-over-year values remain fractionally negative.
Fort Worth's months of supply pulled back to roughly 5.3 from a six-month reading in the prior period, a shift that moves conditions away from the buyer-favoring threshold. Pending contracts climbed to more than 1,700 — a meaningful increase from prior readings — even as active listings held near 5,700 and more than 5,200 new listings entered the market. The acceleration in pending volume, combined with the days-on-market trend moving four days faster in recent closings, points toward a modest uptick in absorption that, if sustained, would continue compressing available supply.
Fort Worth's price per square foot held at roughly $178 over the trailing three months — about $7 below the Tarrant County median of $185 — while sellers gave back just under three cents on the dollar at close. Nearly two in three sellers offered concessions on Fort Worth closings, a rate running several points above the county average and consistent with a market where buyers carry meaningful negotiating position. Homes that closed took roughly 41 days from list to contract — six days longer than the Tarrant County pace. Based on MLS data for May 2026 closings in Fort Worth, year-over-year values have moved less than a fraction of a percent.
Active inventory in Fort Worth stood at roughly 5,600 homes at the close of the period, supporting six months of supply — the conventional threshold between balanced and buyer-favoring conditions. Pending contracts remained under 900 while more than 5,000 new listings entered the market in the same window, keeping supply pressure elevated. The pace at which listings are moving has also trailed the county: Fort Worth's days-on-market trend runs about six days behind Tarrant County's, pointing toward continued demand softness in the near term.
Zip Codes in Fort Worth
75050
76006
76008
76012
76013
76020
76028
76036
76039
76040
76052
76053
76060
76102
76103
76104
76105
76106
76107
76108
76109
76110
76111
76112
76114
76115
76116
76117
76118
76119
76120
76123
76126
76131
76132
76133
76134
76135
76137
76140
76164
76177
76179
76244
76247
76248
76262
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Market data last updated Jun 1, 2026, 6:00 AM CDT · Editorial updated Jun 5, 2026, 3:10 AM CDT
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