Land Prices Up 77% Since The Pandemic And Inventory Never Came Back, New Realtor® Report
| Region | 2019 Q1 Price/Acre | 2026 Q1 Price/Acre | Change |
| Midwest | $38,757 | $73,448 | +89.5 % |
| Northeast | $23,584 | $47,511 | +101.5 % |
| South | $34,130 | $63,110 | +84.9 % |
| West | $41,173 | $54,423 | +32.2 % |
The Northeast's persistent price appreciation reflects structural constraints. Much of the region is already densely developed, and remaining undeveloped land is often subject to restrictive zoning, historic preservation laws, and environmental regulations. The pandemic-era construction boom consumed a significant share of what was available, and because that land was permanently transformed into housing, the supply base has contracted in ways that are difficult to reverse.
Western markets have taken a different path. The region experienced the steepest pullback in new residential construction activity, with single-family building permits declining faster than in any other region in 2025. Several Western states have also seen housing inventories return to or exceed pre-pandemic levels, reducing urgency among builders for land acquisition. Combined with the region's already-high starting price point, Western land prices have cooled accordingly - falling 5.9% year over year in 2026 Q1.
Raw Land Has Appreciated the Most
Realtor® classifies land listings by development status: raw land (no development), partially developed lots (some clearing or utilities in place), and build-ready lots (marketed as immediately suitable to build on). Raw land has seen the steepest price gains since the pandemic, rising 86.5% per acre since 2019 Q1, compared to 53.3% for build-ready listings.
| Type | Listings for Sale | Median Price/Acre | Median Acres |
| Build-Ready | 154,100 | $126,071 | 1.00 |
| Partially Developed | 189,038 | $53,530 | 1.34 |
| Raw Land | 86,637 | $22,682 | 2.25 |
Raw land's outperformance reflects both its lower starting price point and its nature as a more speculative asset class. Unlike build-ready lots, which are ultimately capped in value by what a completed home can sell for, raw land's pricing is driven more by expectations, geography, and demand for development potential. In the current environment of softening construction activity, raw land has also led the recent pullback, declining 2.4% year over year compared to -1.1% for build-ready and +0.8% for partially developed listings.
Markets Most Impacted Since the Pandemic
Among metros with at least 500 land listings in first quarter of 2026, the Hilton Head Island-Bluffton-Port Royal, SC area has seen the steepest inventory decline compared to 2019 Q1 (-72.1%), followed by Morristown, TN (-65.7%) and Wilmington, NC (-61.2%). Notably, all ten of the hardest-hit markets are located in the eastern half of the country, where raw land is scarcer and listing stocks have not been able to be refreshed.
For price appreciation, Port St. Lucie, FL leads all markets with a 314.0% gain in price per acre since 2019 Q1, followed by Fargo, ND-MN (+311.1%) and Spearfish, SD (+286.7%). Philadelphia and Kansas City, both nationally recognized for relative affordability and strong in-migration, also rank among the top ten, with price-per-acre gains of 285.4% and 260.8%, respectively.
Land Prices Have Softened in the Past Year
Overall land prices per acre fell 0.5% from 2025 Q1 to 2026 Q1 as demand softened. The primary driver is the slowdown in new residential construction activity, which finished 2025 below 2024 levels as builders faced increased cost pressures and weak homebuyer demand. Regionally, the South (+1.3%), Northeast (+0.9%), and Midwest (+0.2%) posted modest gains, while the West declined sharply (-5.9%).
Methodology
Listing data consist of for-sale land on Realtor® from June 2016 through March 2026. Year-over-year land price comparisons are made from the first quarter of 2026 against the first quarter of 2025, and all current statistics are as of the first quarter of 2026. Land listings are classified by development status using listing description keywords as well as price and size categorizations. Each listing is analyzed for words and phrases in the property description that indicate development status, with listings that lack clear signals falling back to a price-per-acre comparison against similar properties in the same county and acreage range, using percentile rank cutoffs to sort into categories. Metro-level data requires a minimum of 500 land listings to be included in rankings.
About Realtor®
Realtor® pioneered online real estate and has been at the forefront for over 25 years, connecting buyers, sellers, and renters with trusted insights, professional guidance, and powerful tools to help them find their perfect home. Recognized as the No. 1 site trusted by real estate professionals, Realtor® is a valued partner, delivering consumer connections and a robust suite of marketing tools to support business growth. Realtor® is operated by News Corp [Nasdaq: NWS, NWSA] [ASX: NWS, NWSLV] subsidiary Move, Inc.
Media Contact: Mallory Micetich, [email protected]
SOURCE Realtor
Legal Disclaimer:
MENAFN provides the
information “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept
any responsibility or liability for the accuracy, content, images,
videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information
contained in this article. If you have any complaints or copyright
issues related to this article, kindly contact the provider above.

Comments
No comment