San Antonio Real Estate at an Inflection Point: Mid-2026 Market Data, Neighborhood Winners, and What Smart Buyers Do Next
San Antonio's housing market has spent three years correcting from its pandemic peak. The frantic bidding wars, waived inspections, and six-figure over-ask offers are memories. What has replaced them is a market defined by data — and right now, the data is telling a story of transition. Not collapse. Not recovery. Something more nuanced, and more profitable for those paying attention.
As of March 2026, the San Antonio-New Braunfels MSA sits at a genuine inflection point. Prices have stabilized after a 14.5% decline from the May 2022 peak. Inventory is elevated but no longer surging. And buyer activity, measured by pending contracts, is quietly accelerating. The question is no longer whether the market has bottomed — it is which neighborhoods will lead the next cycle and who will be positioned to benefit.
This report breaks down the numbers across the entire metro, highlights the suburban markets flashing opportunity signals, and provides actionable strategies for buyers, sellers, and investors heading into summer 2026.
The Metro-Wide Numbers: Where San Antonio Stands Right Now
Before zooming into neighborhoods, here is the macro picture across the San Antonio-New Braunfels MSA as of early March 2026.
•Average Sold Price: $567,932 — up 3.6% from March 2023, marking the third consecutive year of spring gains. However, this figure remains $96,583 below the all-time peak of $664,515 set in May 2022, a decline of 14.5% from the top.
•Median Sales Price (MSA): $412,000 — down 3.6% year-over-year from spring 2025. The city of San Antonio proper holds a premium at approximately $540,000.
•Active Residential Listings: 13,747 across the San Antonio metro — 8.5% more than March 2025 levels.
•Months of Inventory: 4.89 months metro-wide, up 8.4% from 4.51 months at this point last year. Across the 30 Central Texas cities tracked, inventory ranges from 2.80 to 11.00 months.
•Average Days on Market: 91 days — the highest reading since March 2011. Homes are sitting nearly three full months before finding a buyer.
•Price Reductions: 47.3% of all active listings have had at least one price cut — a clear signal that sellers are adjusting to the market rather than dictating terms.
•Pending Contracts: 4,261 homes under contract, a 6.0% increase over March 2025 — the first meaningful uptick in buyer activity in over a year.
•Distressed Properties: 2,483 pre-foreclosure, auction, and REO properties across San Antonio, growing at a rate of 17 per week.
These numbers paint a market that is balanced-to-buyer-favorable at the San Antonio metro level, but with significant variation city by city. The 91-day average market time and nearly 50% price-reduction rate give buyers real leverage. But the 6% jump in pending contracts suggests that window may not stay this wide for long.
Suburban Spotlight: The Cities Leading and Lagging
One of the biggest mistakes buyers and investors make is treating San Antonio as a single market. The reality is that conditions vary dramatically across the 30 cities in the San Antonio metro. Here is where the sharpest opportunities — and the biggest risks — are concentrated right now.
Stone Oak: The Tightest Market in the Metro
Stone Oak stands out as the closest thing to a seller's market in the entire San Antonio area, with just 2.90 months of inventory. The median home price hovers around $450,000, up roughly 2.1% year-over-year — modest appreciation, but appreciation nonetheless in a market where most cities are flat or declining.
What is driving Stone Oak's resilience? Helotes ISD school ratings, direct access to the 183A toll corridor for tech-sector commuters, and a relatively constrained supply of new construction compared to faster-growing suburbs. If you are selling in Stone Oak, you still have pricing power. If you are buying, expect competition and be prepared to move quickly.
New Braunfels: Buyer's Market With Depth
New Braunfels tells a very different story. With 1,058 active listings and 6.3 months of supply, this is firmly buyer's territory. The median price has pulled back to approximately $405,000, down from $490,000 a year ago — though much of that decline reflects a shift in the mix toward more entry-level closings rather than a collapse in comparable values.
New Braunfels's appeal is straightforward: lower price points tha San Antonio proper, proximity to the growing tech corridor along I-35, and a historic downtown that draws retirees and remote workers. For buyers willing to trade a longer commute for value, New Braunfels offers the deepest inventory in the San Antonio metro.
Converse: The Balanced Play
Converse sits right in the middle at 4.7 months of supply and a $390,000 median — affordable by San Antonio standards, with enough inventory for buyers to be selective but not so much that the market feels soft. The neighborhoods around Lake Converse command premium pricing, while Falcon Pointe and Rowe Lane offer solid family-oriented housing at attainable price points.
Converse benefits from its position between San Antonio and Schertz, drawing commuters in both directions. It does not have Stone Oak's scarcity premium, but it also does not have New Braunfels's oversupply risk.
The Value Corridor: Cibolo, Kyle, and Liberty Hill
For buyers prioritizing affordability, three suburbs are offering exceptional deals. Cibolo, Kyle, and Liberty Hill all have price reduction rates above 50%, meaning more than half of all active listings have already been cut. Median prices in these markets range from the mid-$300,000s to low $400,000s, and aggressive negotiation — 8-10% below asking — is common.
The trade-off is commute time (25-40 minutes to downtown San Antonio) and less-established amenities. But for investors seeking cash-flow-positive rental properties or first-time buyers stretching their budget, these outer suburbs offer the strongest value proposition in the San Antonio metro.
Three Forces Shaping the Second Half of 2026
1. Construction Starts Are Falling — And That Changes Everything
San Antonio authorized 22,000+ new housing units in 2024 alone, ranking sixth nationally. That flood of supply was the primary driver of the inventory surge and price correction we have experienced. But here is the critical development: new construction starts have decelerated sharply in early 2026 as builders respond to slower absorption rates and rising material costs.
This is significant because it means the supply pipeline is thinning. The existing inventory glut will gradually work itself off through sales and lease-ups, but the replacement supply behind it is smaller. If demand holds steady or improves — and the pending contract data suggests it is — the balance of power will shift back toward sellers within 12-18 months.
2. Distressed Properties Are Accelerating
The growth of distressed properties at 17 per week is a trend that deserves close attention. At 2,483 properties and climbing, this is not yet a crisis — San Antonio's distressed rate is well below national averages and far below what we saw in 2009-2011. But it is a source of deal flow for investors and a drag on neighborhood-level pricing where concentrations are highest.
The distressed pipeline is concentrated in outer suburban developments where speculative buyers purchased at 2021-2022 peak prices and are now underwater. East Bexar County, northern Atascosa County, and parts of Wilson County have the highest distressed property density.
3. Rate Expectations Are Resetting
The Federal Reserve has signaled a cautious approach to further rate cuts, and the mortgage market has responded accordingly. The 30-year fixed rate has settled into the mid-6% range after briefly dipping to a 15-month low in late 2025. The consensus expectation of sub-5% rates in 2026 has evaporated.
This is actually clarifying for the market. When buyers stop waiting for a rate environment that is not coming, they make decisions based on current conditions. The 6% increase in pending contracts is evidence that this psychological shift is underway. Buyers who locked in at 6.5% and bought at 2026 prices will likely be well-positioned compared to those who wait for rates that may not materialize.
Actionable Strategies by Buyer Type
First-Time Buyers
Your moment is now, but be strategic. Target Converse, Kyle, or Cibolo for the best value. Focus on listings that have been on market for 60+ days — these sellers are motivated and will negotiate on price, closing costs, and repairs. Request a rate buydown as part of seller concessions; a 2-1 buydown on a $400,000 home can save you $6,000+ in the first two years.
Move-Up Buyers
The challenge is selling your current home in a slower market while buying into a neighborhood that may not be discounting. If you are moving from a suburb into San Antonio proper or into Stone Oak, expect to sell at a modest discount (5-8% below peak) but buy into a market that is also softer. The net effect is often close to neutral. Prioritize selling first, then negotiating aggressively on the buy side.
Investors
The two highest-conviction plays in March 2026 are Alamo Heights / East Side Opportunity Zone acquisitions (78203, 78202) and distressed property purchases in the outer suburbs. For Opportunity Zone plays, you need a 10-year holding horizon to capture the full capital gains exclusion, but the combination of zero tax on gains plus neighborhood-level appreciation of 5-8% annually creates a compelling compounding story.
For distressed plays, target properties 15-25% below comparable market value with clear title. The best opportunities are pre-foreclosure purchases where you can negotiate directly with the seller before the property hits the auction block.
Sellers
Price discipline is everything in this market. If your home has been listed for 30 days without a showing, you are overpriced — full stop. Study the close-to-list ratio in your specific neighborhood (metro-wide it is roughly 90.6%) and price accordingly. Offer concessions upfront: seller-paid closing costs, home warranties, and rate buydowns attract more buyers than a higher list price with no incentives.
What the Data Says About Timing
The spring 2026 buying season is showing the first real signs of demand improvement in over a year. Pending contracts are up 6%. New listing activity is moderating. Construction starts are declining. These are the conditions that precede a market tightening.
History shows that San Antonio real estate cycles move in roughly 4-5 year swings. The current correction began in mid-2022 and has now run nearly four years. While past performance does not guarantee future results, the structural demand drivers that made San Antonio one of the country's fastest-growing cities — tech employment, quality of life, no state income tax, and a young demographic profile — have not changed.
The difference between Q2 2026 and 2022 is that today's market rewards homework, patience, and negotiation rather than speed and aggression. The data is abundant, the leverage is real, and the opportunities are specific and identifiable.
The Bottom Line
San Antonio's real estate market in mid-2026 is not a monolith — it is 30 distinct micro-markets, each sending its own signals. Stone Oak is tight and competitive. New Braunfels is deep in buyer's territory. The outer suburbs are offering deals that would have been unthinkable three years ago. And across the San Antonio metro, the first hints of a demand recovery are emerging in the pending contract data.
For buyers: act on data, not headlines. The market is not crashing, and waiting for a crash that is not coming means missing the best negotiating window in over a decade.
For sellers: meet the market where it is. The homes that are selling are priced right, offered with concessions, and marketed aggressively. The homes that are sitting are the ones priced for 2022.
For investors: the Opportunity Zone dynamics in Alamo Heights / East Side, the distressed property pipeline, and the coming supply contraction create a rare convergence of factors. The next 6-12 months may represent the best entry point of this cycle.
The data does not lie. But it does reward those who dig deeper than the headline numbers. That is what San Antonio Signals is built to help you do.
San Antonio Signals delivers real-time market intelligence, off-market deal alerts, and neighborhood-level analytics for San Antonio real estate professionals and investors. Stop guessing. Start signaling. Visit sanantonio-signals.com.