Royse City, TX Housing Market Update – February 2026
Reporting Period: Feb 1–Feb 28, 2026 • Data via NTREIS
Royse City has experienced extraordinary growth over the past decade — the kind that reshapes a community almost faster than the data can keep pace. February's numbers reflect a market that grew quickly, is now digesting that growth, and is finding a new equilibrium. The price picture looks softer than it probably is; the inventory picture is more relevant. Context, as always, matters.
A note on sample size: With 18 closed sales in February, Royse City's monthly statistics are subject to meaningful variability. In a market this size, the specific mix of homes that close in any given month — particularly the balance between new construction and resale, or between lower and higher price points — can produce percentage swings that don't reflect actual value movement across the community as a whole. Treat the year-over-year comparisons as directional indicators, not precise valuations.
Key Highlights | Royse City Housing Market Update
- Median Sale Price: $269,000 (↓ 11.7% YoY — see note above)
- Closed Sales: 18 (flat YoY — 0.0%)
- Active Listings: 124 (↑ 3.3% YoY)
- Months of Inventory: 5.9 (↑ 0.2 months YoY)
- Median Days on Market: 87 (↓ 10 days YoY)
- Median Price per Sq Ft: $145.84 (↓ 6.3% YoY)
- Close-to-Original List Price: 92.7%
PRICES
Royse City's February median price of $269,000 represents an 11.7% decline from February 2025 — a headline number that warrants scrutiny before acceptance. The price distribution tells the underlying story: 47.1% of February's closings occurred in the $200–$299k range, and 35.3% in the $300–$399k range. With only 18 total transactions, a tilt toward lower price points within that distribution can compress the median substantially. Price per square foot came in at $145.84, down 6.3% year over year — notable, but again, in a market where 18 homes closed and many of those were newer construction in the entry-level range, the number should be read with appropriate caution.
SALES ACTIVITY
Transaction volume was flat — 18 closed sales in February 2026, matching February 2025 exactly. That steadiness, while modest in absolute terms, at least suggests demand hasn't evaporated. What's genuinely encouraging here is the pace improvement: homes averaged 87 days on market — 10 days fewer than last February. Total days from listing to close was 119, down 7 days year over year. Buyers are deliberating longer before entering the market, but once they're in contract, the process is moving faster. That's not a bad operating environment for motivated sellers.
INVENTORY
Active listings reached 124 in February — a 3.3% increase year over year — and months of inventory ticked up slightly to 5.9. That puts Royse City just below the 6.0-month threshold that traditionally marks a buyer's market, and well above the tight conditions that defined the community during its fastest growth phase. New construction has played an outsized role in shaping Royse City's inventory profile; the median year built of 2021 reflects how recently much of the housing stock was added. Builder-driven supply competition remains a real factor for resale sellers in this market.
MARKET BALANCE
At 5.9 months of inventory, Royse City is on the cusp of buyer-market territory — and the close-to-list ratio of 92.7% (down from 95.5% in early 2024) confirms that buyers are leveraging that position. Sellers are conceding roughly 7% off original list price on average, which in Royse City's price range is meaningful. The market isn't in freefall — transactions are steady and the pace has actually improved — but sellers who price optimistically will face resistance from a buyer pool that has both time and options on its side.
What Sellers Need to Know
- New construction competition is a real factor in Royse City — resale sellers are competing with builders who offer rate buydowns and incentives that individual sellers typically can't match.
- With 5.9 months of inventory, buyers have meaningful selection; pricing your home at or below market ensures it gets evaluated — pricing above it risks sitting while similar properties transact.
- The close-to-list ratio of 92.7% is your negotiating baseline — build your pricing strategy around that reality rather than expecting full-price offers.
- The pace improvement is good news: once under contract, transactions are moving faster. A well-priced home has a real path to closing efficiently.
What Buyers Need to Know
- 5.9 months of inventory means you're in a strong negotiating position — take your time, compare both resale and new construction options, and don't feel pressured to move faster than your comfort level allows.
- The close-to-list ratio of 92.7% suggests that meaningful negotiation on price is the norm here — come with a well-researched offer, not a lowball, but don't assume you have to pay full list either.
- The median year built of 2021 is the newest among the cities tracked in this report — much of Royse City's housing stock is recent construction with modern finishes and layouts.
- Compare builder incentives against resale value carefully — new construction rate buydowns can look attractive upfront while a well-priced resale may offer better long-term equity potential.
2026 Royse City Housing Market Forecast
Royse City's trajectory in 2026 will depend meaningfully on two variables: how much new construction inventory builders bring to market, and whether mortgage rates move favorably enough to bring more first-time and move-up buyers off the sidelines. The community's affordability relative to the broader metro remains one of its strongest assets — and that positioning becomes more powerful as rate sensitivity improves.
The pace improvement seen in February — homes moving to contract faster once active buyers engage — is a quiet positive worth watching. If that trend continues into spring, it could signal that demand is building in ways the raw transaction counts don't yet fully reflect.
Pricing is likely to remain soft in the near term — closer to the $260k–$290k median range than the highs of 2023–2024 — as the market digests its supply overhang. That's not necessarily a negative for the community long-term; affordability at this range keeps Royse City accessible to a wide buyer pool that higher-priced markets simply can't serve.
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.
Royse City's growth story is still being written — and The Dunnican Team can help you make the most of where the market stands right now. Get in touch.


