Josephine, TX Housing Market Update – March 2026
Reporting Period: Feb 1–Feb 28, 2026 • Data via NTREIS
Josephine is a small but growing Collin County community that has attracted buyers seeking affordable new construction at the outer edge of the eastern DFW corridor. Five closed sales in February is a normal volume for this market, and the numbers it produces should be read with the corresponding patience and context that small-volume markets require.
A note on sample size: With only 5 closed sales in February, Josephine's monthly statistics are subject to significant variability. A single transaction at an unusually high or low price point can meaningfully shift the median in a market this small. The figures below reflect which specific homes transacted this month — not a precise read on community-wide value trends. Multi-month rolling data provides a far more reliable picture.
Key Highlights | Josephine Housing Market Update
- Median Sale Price: $273,000 (↑ 4.9% YoY — see note above)
- Closed Sales: 5 (↓ 16.7% YoY — see note above)
- Active Listings: 31 (↑ 24.0% YoY)
- Months of Inventory: 7.0 (↑ 0.9 months YoY)
- Median Days on Market: 103 (↑ 52 days YoY)
- Median Price per Sq Ft: $153.24 (↓ 10.8% YoY — see note above)
- Close-to-Original List Price: 90.8%
PRICES
Josephine's February median of $273,000 — up 4.9% from a year ago — and price per square foot of $153.24 — down 10.8% — point in opposite directions, which is a reliable signal of transaction mix variability rather than coherent market movement. With five closings, the specific homes that transacted dominated both figures. The price distribution shows a market concentrated in accessible price tiers: 40% of closings in the $200–$299k range and 40% in the $300–$399k band, with the remaining 20% below $200k. No sales occurred above $400k. Josephine's value proposition remains clear — affordable entry-level and move-up pricing in a community with newer construction stock (median year built 2017).
SALES ACTIVITY
Five closed sales — down from 6 in February 2025, a nominal 16.7% decline representing one fewer transaction — is the kind of variability that simply doesn't carry meaningful analytical weight in a market this small. What's more instructive is the pace data: homes averaged 103 days on market in February, up 52 days from a year ago. That's a substantial increase — though in a community where individual transactions can skew the average significantly, it likely reflects one or two properties that sat extended periods before finding buyers. Days to close improved dramatically to 32 days, down 26 from last year, suggesting that once buyers commit, closings are moving efficiently.
INVENTORY
Active listings grew to 31 — up 24.0% from 25 a year ago — and months of inventory reached 7.0, firmly in buyer-market territory. In a community where 5 homes close per month, 31 active listings represents more than six months of supply at current absorption rates. Josephine's inventory expansion is consistent with new construction completions entering the market across the community's newer residential developments. Buyers here have meaningful selection relative to the pace of transactions.
MARKET BALANCE
At 7.0 months of inventory and a close-to-list ratio of 90.8%, Josephine is in buyer-market territory — consistent with other small, newer growth communities in Hunt and Collin counties that saw rapid construction during 2021–2024 and are now absorbing that supply at a more measured pace. The 90.8% close-to-list means buyers are negotiating roughly 9% off original list price on average — meaningful in a market where the median is near $273,000. Sellers here need to price with discipline, particularly when competing against new construction that may offer builder incentives and rate buydowns.
What Sellers Need to Know
- 7.0 months of inventory is a buyer's market — your pricing strategy needs to reflect that reality, particularly when competing against new construction with builder incentives.
- Homes averaged 103 days on market — plan for a longer marketing runway and avoid overpricing out of the gate, as price reductions in a small market are highly visible to the limited buyer pool.
- The close-to-list ratio of 90.8% means buyers expect to negotiate — build a realistic pricing strategy around that expectation rather than treating it as a surprise.
- Condition matters at this price point — buyers comparing your resale home to new construction will factor in any deferred maintenance when making offers.
What Buyers Need to Know
- 7.0 months of inventory gives you real leverage — take the time to compare both resale and new construction options before committing.
- The close-to-list ratio of 90.8% is your negotiating baseline — substantive offers below list price are being accepted in this market.
- Josephine's median year built of 2017 means most available inventory is relatively new — lower maintenance risk than older suburban markets, though inspection due diligence remains important.
- Compare builder incentives against resale opportunities carefully — rate buydowns and closing cost assistance from builders can look attractive but may be offset by higher base pricing.
2026 Josephine Housing Market Forecast
Josephine's 2026 outlook depends heavily on how quickly the current inventory overhang is absorbed. At 7.0 months of supply with 5 closings per month, the market is running a meaningful surplus — and unless demand accelerates or new listings slow, that condition is likely to persist through at least mid-year.
Josephine's affordability — with a median near $273,000 — positions it well to benefit from any improvement in mortgage rates, particularly among first-time buyers who have been priced out of closer-in communities. That buyer demographic is highly rate-sensitive, and even a half-point improvement in mortgage rates could meaningfully increase transaction volume in this price tier.
Given the extremely small monthly transaction volume, Josephine's market direction is best assessed over rolling six-month periods rather than individual months.
Interested in buying or selling in Josephine or the surrounding Collin County growth corridor? The Dunnican Team serves buyers and sellers across Northeast Dallas and the outlying communities. Let's talk.
Source: NTREIS MLS (Feb 1–Feb 28, 2026) with February 2025 comparison metrics from the Texas REALTORS® Data Relevance Project, in partnership with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University.


