S&P CoreLogic: US Housing Prices Post Slowest Growth in 2 Years

Pandemic boomtowns now lag as Midwest and Northeast markets lead—a shift toward fundamentals over speculation, the report noted.
S&P CoreLogic: US Housing Prices Post Slowest Growth in 2 Years
Rows of homes in the Sunset District in San Francisco. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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Another key Wall Street economic benchmark indicates that U.S. home prices slowed faster than expected during the critical spring selling season, marking the slowest yearly growth in nearly two years.

The monthly S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller Index released on June 24 revealed that U.S. home prices increased by 2.7 percent year over year in April 2025, showing a slight decline from the previous reading in March. The S&P Dow Jones Indices calculates the average single-family home prices across the United States, based on changes in prices over the past three months.
Wesley Brown
Wesley Brown
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Wesley Brown is a long-time business and public policy reporter based in Arkansas. He has written for many print and digital publications across the country.