Connecticut Weekly Inventory Pulse — Week Ending June 19, 2026
Statewide active listings edged higher by 62 this week to 5,188, showing modest growth in supply amid mixed county trends. New Haven County bucked the pattern with a meaningful decline in inventory, while several other areas continued to build stock.
At a Glance
- Active listings (statewide): 5,188 (+62 vs prior week)
- New listings: 1,683 (solid flow of fresh properties entering the market)
- Under agreement: 3,262 (buyers remain active on pending deals)
- Median list price: $499,000 (stable pricing signal across the state)
- Avg. days on market: 51.2 (properties moving at a moderate pace)
Full charts for every county, price range, and top town movers: view the complete report on ctreal.estate
County Highlights
Fairfield County continues to lead in volume with 1,532 active listings (+34 week-over-week) and the highest median price at $799,900. Hartford County saw the largest increase (+50) to 851 active, with a more affordable median of $435,500. Litchfield remained flat at 485 active but carries a higher median price of $639,000 and the longest average days on market (71.4).
New Haven County stood out with a notable reduction (-36) to 1,188 active listings and the lowest median price among major counties at $429,900. Tolland also tightened (-12 to 174 active), while smaller increases appeared in Middlesex (+10), Windham (+12), and New London (+4). Overall, inventory pressure remains highest in the more expensive southwestern counties.
What Stood Out
- Price distribution remains weighted toward entry-level homes, with 2,397 active listings under $500K compared to just 119 above $5M statewide.
- Town-level movement was active: Milford dropped 20 active listings (now 107), Wallingford -11, and New Haven -9, while Danbury (+13) and Stamford (+12) added notable supply.
- Days on market stayed reasonable in most counties (47–56 range) except Litchfield’s 71.4, signaling that well-priced properties in core markets continue to attract attention.
Why This Matters
For buyers, the modest statewide increase in inventory offers slightly more choice this week, especially in New Haven County where listings declined but affordability remains strongest. Those targeting Fairfield should expect competition and higher price points, while Tolland and Windham continue to show tighter but more affordable pockets.
Sellers benefit from steady buyer demand reflected in 3,262 properties under agreement. In counties with rising inventory like Hartford and Fairfield, pricing competitively and preparing for showings remains key to avoiding longer market times. Relocators looking for balance may find good opportunities in towns showing inventory drops like Milford and Wallingford.
Bottom line: Inventory is inching up overall but with meaningful local variation — buyers have breathing room in select areas while sellers in high-inventory counties need sharp pricing.
Aggregate connectMLS data — Week Ending June 19, 2026. Not a live MLS search. Read the full report with charts →