Sorry, Marble: Home Buyers Still Prefer This Kitchen Countertop Material

 
 

Thanks to AI, you no longer have to restrict your online house hunt to a zip code.

You can ask for all the other things that matter to you. And that’s exactly what home buyers did when Zillow introduced its AI-powered natural language search last year. After analyzing more than 250 billion search queries, the company found that people prioritized looking at places with a garage, backyard, fireplaces, and walk-in closets first and foremost. But there was a surprising term that cracked the top 10 in 2023: granite countertops. Not milky white Carrara marble. Not super-durable quartz. Granite. 

While granite has been a popular choice for decades, the construction boom of the early 2000s brought on a new kind of mania. You couldn’t watch an episode of House Hunters without hearing the words granite countertops. But like most design trends, the coarse-grained, igneous rock reached the point of being overdone…or so we thought. DeVol’s creative director, Helen Parker, called it last February when she predicted that granite—specifically, black granite—was bound to bounce back. “Black granite was a staple in the 1990s, and it still has a certain understated luxury, especially when honed,” she told Domino. 

It’s true that when we think of granite countertops, we tend to picture a sandy-colored surface with flecks of black, the kind you’d most likely find in a Tuscan-inspired McMansion. But as Parker points out, there is a world of other granite varieties and finishes out there to explore—ones that sellers could easily put on their home’s résumé without feeling like they’ve sold out. Here are a few slabs we’d happily have in any current (or future!) home.

Read more at Domino.com

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Just Listed: A Conveniently Located Home with Tasteful Upgrades and Thoughtful Design Choices!

 
 
 

Step inside this lovingly upgraded 3 bed, 2 bath home and prepare to be charmed!

You will adore all the tasteful updates and upgrades this home has to offer. As you walk in the front door, immediately to the left is a large flex room that can be utilized as a 2nd living room, office, or play room - the options are up to you! The main living space with fireplace opens up into the fully updated kitchen making it the perfect space to gather and entertain. The kitchen has been fully updated with beautiful granite countertops, new backsplash, new cook top, and sink. The flooring throughout the home has also been newly upgraded. You will find fresh new carpet in the bedrooms and vinyl wood flooring throughout the main living spaces. The newly renovated hall bathroom wows with thoughtful and modern design choices. The private primary bedroom with en suite bathroom is spacious and boasts a walk in closet as well as a 2nd closet offering ample storage. Some of the other perks include a sprawling backyard with a large workshop outfitted with electricity. The 2 car garage has an in ground storm shelter offering peace of mind during Oklahoma storm season. Do NOT miss your chance to make this property your own - schedule a tour today.

Listed by Melissa Chamberlain for West + Main Homes. Please contact Melissa for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

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405-760-6496
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Signs Point to More Inventory this Spring

 
 

The U.S. real estate housing market signals have been gradually building for a couple of months.

Home sellers are starting to ease back into the market, new listings are finally exceeding the levels of a year ago. As a result, we’re starting to see slightly more available supply of homes on the market. This is an expansion of the market from incredibly restricted levels last year. It’s a positive development. 

The longer we stay with mortgage rates higher, the more inventory will build closer to where it used to be. Each year we’ll have 5 million more people who don’t have crazy low rates that they want to hold onto forever. Mortgage rates are higher than they were a year ago. Higher than they were a month ago. Higher mortgage rates means more inventory. 

If mortgage rates fall into the 5s this spring, you should expect the available inventory to decline as demand picks up rapidly. But as of now, rates are holding in the upper 6s and inventory is building slowly. 

It is important to keep in mind that home sales are climbing with inventory. As supply comes to the market, that’s lifting one of the restrictions that kept the home sales so low last year. The number of homes for sale and the number that are being sold are both climbing into 2024 over last year.

Inventory ticked up

There are just over 505,000 single family homes on the market across the U.S. That’s a 1.2% increase over last week and nearly 7% more than last year at this time. Inventory ticked up this week. This week the supply of active inventory gained over 6000 homes. That would have been a big week any time last year.

These are the signals that point to growing inventory of homes on the market all spring. Even if inventory ticks down next week, it looks like that will be a smaller move down than last year, so the year-over-year percentage gain will continue to widen. 

Slightly more sellers

Inventory is building now because we have slightly more sellers each week. The market had about 49,000 new listings this week. 9,000 of those are already in contract. Leaving 40,000 New listings to add to the market which is about a 5% increase versus last year. 

It sure looks now like we’ll have more sellers each week all year long than we did in 2023.

The other side of the equation to keep watch is the purchase side. I’ve called this a supply constrained market. So as the inventory shortage eases just a bit, we should also see more transactions happening. And sure enough, that’s what we’re seeing. There continues to be more new contracts each week than last year at this same time. The pace of home sales is growing. It’s not a boom. but the market is growing.

Price cuts stable

Let’s move on to the price signals. Remember that in 2023, even though we had very few home sales, home prices inched up a bit nationwide. We’re looking at similar dynamics for 2024.

Price reductions continue to decline with the new inventory after the first of the year. Some 32.2% of the homes on the market have had a price reduction. That’s right in the middle of the normal range. This implies slight home price strength in general for the next few months. If rates fall from here into the 5s, watch demand pick up and we’ll immediately see fewer sellers need to cut their prices. 

Median price just under $420,000

The median price of single-family homes is just a hair under $420,000. Home prices ticked up almost half a percent this week. And the median price of single-family homes right now is 3% higher than last year at this time. In this market where supply and demand is pretty balanced, home prices are not going to skyrocket of course and there is no sign of prices dropping either. As inventory grows, and sales rates grow, home prices are reliably ticking up each week as well. That trend hasn’t changed. 

The median price of the newly listed homes is $389,900. That corrected back down from last week’s big jump.

We should be grateful that the market is expanding with more supply and more sales for more people than in 2023. 

Read more at HousingWire.com

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Just Listed: A Fully-Updated 1950's Ranch Oasis in The Village, OKC!

 
 
 

This 1950's ranch style home has it all!

3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, 2 living areas, inside laundry and 2 car garage located in the coveted neighborhood of The Village. Tastefully updated with vinyl planked flooring, interior and exterior paint, front porch pergola, lighting, and hardware. The open kitchen provides an 8ft butcher block prep island, quartz counters, tile backsplash, cabinets, gas range, microwave, disposal and dishwasher. The dining room leads you to a 12x18 covered back porch perfect for summer days or for your pets to play. Both bathrooms have been refreshed with vanities, bathtub, walk in tile shower, toilets, mirrors and lighting. Laundry area is tucked at the back of the primary bath for convenience. Appreciate new siding on the garage, additional parking in back and guttering on the exterior. The home is located just east of Lake Hefner and Hefner Parkway. Minutes from shopping & restaurants and only 15 minutes from downtown Oklahoma City.

Listed by Lynne Hamilton for West + Main Homes. Please contact Lynne for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

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As Featured in West + Main Home Magazine: Classic Victorian Made Modern

 

Esther + Thomas Leytush, clients of West + Main Agent Elizabeth Fischer

When we were buying our house, we chose this one in part because of the many projects it needed, knowing it would be amazing to put in the work to bring it back to beautiful life.
— Esther + Thomas Leytush

 “This house is 136 years old and there were numerous changes that were just tacked on, especially in the kitchen - for example it had 2 doors out into the backyard but no windows, a cramped and dark main kitchen area, and two L-corners that broke flow. The original kitchen was really a small kitchen spread over a large footprint. As for inspiration, we have a shared love of the Dark Academia aesthetic and it was a clear fit for this Queen Anne Victorian house - we wanted a modern Victorian feeling.”

“The nature of our project was that our design meant ripping out the entire kitchen as well as breaking and rebuilding walls, fixing structural issues, redoing electric and plumbing layouts, re-leveling and laying a new floor, putting in all new drywall over all new framing and insulation, putting in French doors and a window, and only at the very end putting in new kitchen cabinets and appliances. We spent just under $25k, of which $14k covered contractors and $11k covered materials and appliances. We were able to come in so low on materials and appliances because of choices like buying all our cabinets and countertops from Ikea and putting them together ourselves, as our research showed that Ikea cabinetry is excellent quality and lasts well over their 25-year warranty. We also made choices like buying engineered hardwood planks for flooring and making our own wood accents thanks to Thomas’s love of carpentry projects.”

Before:

“For the main aspects of the kitchen, we stuck with Home Depot and Ikea and have been happy with that, but also spent time hunting for cool brackets and other details from antique stores and salvage centers. I was also shocked and thrilled to discover that we could purchase newly made rosettes and molding from Tabor Millworks https://www.tabormill.com/ that were the same design as the original molding in the house.”

“The final result was much more beautiful and character-full even than we had hoped. We did not realize we would encounter multiple points where our contractors or us would notice details or questions we had missed in our plans, and because our costs were able to stay low we were able to make choices to create cleaner lines, grander openings, better lighting, and much more. In the end, we felt like we could have gone with an even smaller kitchen, even though the footprint of the new kitchen is actually smaller than the original that we had demoed.”

“For Thomas, since we matched the new archway with the rest of the house, it has become so much more inviting to just flow from one room to the next and into the backyard. For Esther, my favorite things are the wood accents that Thomas built - the beautiful large wood shelf with gorgeous Victorian-like routed edges that now hold the majority of our plants, the wood windowsill, the little wood shelves he built to make use of the dead space next to one of the cabinets which now stores all the cutting boards and cookbooks. We also love the bright light in the space, the way the dark green colors of the cabinets create a sense of elegance, and the way it feels so easy to cook in it because the flow is top notch - plenty of counter space, good organization with big drawers instead of standard lower cabinets, a big sink, etc.”

 

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