In June, roughly 60,000 home-purchase agreements fell through, or 14.9 percent of homes that went under contract, according to Redfin. That’s the highest percentage since March and April 2020, when the housing market all but ground to a halt due to the pandemic. It compares with 12.7 percent a month earlier and 11.2 percent a year earlier.
“The slowdown in housing-market competition is giving homebuyers room to negotiate, which is one reason more of them are backing out of deals,” Redfin Deputy Chief Economist Taylor Marr said in a release. “Buyers are increasingly keeping rather than waiving inspection and appraisal contingencies. That gives them the flexibility to call the deal off if issues arise during the homebuying process.”
Rising mortgage rates are also behind some of the sale cancelations, Marr said.
“If rates were at 5 percent when you made an offer, but reached 5.8 percent by the time the deal was set to close, you may no longer be able to afford that home or you may no longer qualify for a loan,” he said.
The housing market has cooled in recent weeks as the Federal Reserve has boosted interest rates to quell inflation. That has given house hunters more freedom to seek concessions from sellers, but higher rates also make housing less affordable. Buyers did get a reprieve this past week, when the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate fell to 5.3 percent in the largest one-week drop since 2008.
“When mortgage rates shot up to almost 6 percent in June, we saw a number of buyers back out of deals,” Miami Redfin real estate agent said Lindsay Garcia said. “Some had to bow out because they could no longer get a loan due to the jump in rates. Buyers are also more skittish than usual due to economic uncertainty.”