After posting record sales volume in 2021, North Side home sales set a new mark during the first quarter of 2022, aided by a strong rebound in the Near North market.
28-Apr-22 – Homeowners in rapidly appreciating neighborhoods such as Lincoln Square, Near North, and North Center must think their million-dollar residences are made of gold bricks. The quarterly Chicago North Side Market Report tracks resale home sales in nine neighborhoods – and six of the booming areas now showcase median detached single-family home prices of $1 million or more. The Gold Coast/Near North market led the pack in the first quarter of 2022 with a median home price of $2.375 million. Lincoln Park was second with $1.59 million, followed by Lake View with $1.4 million. North Center was fourth in median home price at $1.35 million, followed by Lincoln Square at $1,016,875 and Uptown at $1,085,500. The report also studied Edgewater ($975,000), Rogers Park ($630,000), and West Ridge ($425,000). After posting record sales volume in 2021, North Side home sales set a new mark during the first quarter of 2022, aided by a strong rebound in the Near North market. A total of 2,492 units sold across the North Side, up 7.6 percent from the same period last year. Those results were achieved even as the overall inventory of homes for sale shrank by 37.1 percent from its level 12 months earlier. At the same time, the median home sales price in the nine community areas that make up the North Side rose only 1.8 percent for the quarter to $384,250, while the average time that those homes took to find buyers was unchanged at 102 days, according to the report prepared by Mary Jo Nathan of the Charese Team at Compass Roscoe Village, based at 2044 West Roscoe Street. North Side market strong The North Side results were somewhat stronger than those of the broader city market. First quarter sales in Chicago as a whole rose 5.5 percent to 6,587 units, and the median sales price fell 1.2 percent to $325,000.
The quarterly increase in sales volume was achieved even though only two of the nine community areas – Lincoln Square and Near North – reported higher total sales for the period. The 44.8 percent increase in Near North sales, representing a gain of 213 transactions, more than compensated for the small decreases seen in most other areas. Single-family homes accounted for just 9.2 percent of all North Side home sales during the quarter but those million-dollar digs were in high demand. Sales rose 10.1 percent to 229 homes, and the median sales price of $1.2 million represented a 14.6 percent increase over the same quarter last year.
Other areas recording higher sales volume were:
Single-family sales volume fell most sharply in North Center, where they were down 32.6 percent to only 31 units, a result due in good part to the lack of listings. There were only eleven unsold homes on the market in hot North Center at the end of the quarter, barely a one-month supply. The median sales price for single-family properties rose in seven areas, led by gains of 103 percent in Near North, 40.8 percent in Rogers Park, and 23.6 percent in North Center. Lake View and Lincoln Park recorded resale price declines of 7.4 percent and 10.9 percent respectively. Condo market recovering The attached-home segment of the North Side market also faced headwinds from declining inventory, but they were not as severe. While single-family homes on the market on March 31 represented no more than a 1.7-month supply, there was nearly a three-month supply of attached homes available.
Attached sales volume declined in five community areas, again reflecting a lack of inventory. For example, sales fell 3.4 percent in Lake View while inventory dropped 40 percent, and sales in North Center were down 12 percent although inventory declined 53.7 percent. Only Lincoln Square, up 11 percent, and Uptown, up 0.5 percent, joined Near North as sales volume gainers. Median sales prices for attached homes showed mixed results, gaining in five areas and falling in four. Gainers, in addition to Near North, were:
Median price declines were:
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