Dallas-Fort Worth homeowners are hanging onto their houses longer than at any time since the early 2000s, tightening an already lean supply of listings across the metro. Sellers who closed in late 2025 had lived in their homes for about 7.7 years on average, a far cry from the roughly two-year turnover common around 2000. That longer stay is part of a broader national shift in how often Americans move and when they decide to sell.
A year-end report from ATTOM found that homeowners who sold in the fourth quarter of 2025 had owned their homes for about 8.55 years on average nationwide, compared with roughly 7.7 years for Dallas-Fort Worth sellers. The report also notes that institutional investors made up a notable slice of local sales and that all-cash purchases remained unusually common, a combination that helps explain why buyers are seeing fewer options on the market.
Mortgage lock-in is keeping owners put
Many owners are effectively locked into ultra-low, pandemic-era mortgage rates and are hesitant to move because a new loan would likely mean a sharply higher monthly payment. ATTOM CEO Rob Barber cautioned that recent rate shifts “likely provided some relief” but that “that relief may be limited,” a dynamic the firm says is keeping plenty of would-be sellers on the sidelines. The upshot is fewer new listings and faster sales when fresh inventory finally hits the market.
Investors and cash buyers are crowding the market…