Frisco, TX Housing Market Data
Frisco, TX Housing Market Data Frisco, Texas Real Estate Market Report Live housing data and market trends for Frisco, Texas (75033, 75034). This page provides live Frisco TX housing data including median home prices, days on market, inventory levels, and seller leverage indicators.
This page provides a live view of the Frisco, TX housing market using real-time inventory, pricing, and absorption data. Rather than relying on national headlines or outdated quarterly summaries, the charts below reflect current supply and demand conditions inside Frisco’s housing market.
Frisco’s housing market is heavily influenced by resale inventory, corporate and job growth, and a mix of established neighborhoods and ongoing development. Because of this, inventory levels and pricing trends tend to be more stable than rapidly developing suburbs, but can still shift based on demand and interest rates.
We update the data below each week and should be interpreted in context of neighborhood and price tier.
Frisco, Texas is a high-demand city located in Collin and Denton County. Learn more about the community, schools, and neighborhoods in our Frisco Community & Neighborhood Guide.
The Market Action Index measures the balance between available inventory and the rate at which homes are going under contract. It is a supply-and-demand indicator, not a price indicator.
Lower readings indicate that inventory is accumulating relative to buyer demand. This typically increases negotiation flexibility for buyers.
Higher readings indicate that demand is absorbing inventory more quickly. This typically strengthens seller leverage and reduces negotiation windows.
Unlike median price alone, the Market Action Index reflects market pressure. Price changes often lag behind shifts in supply and demand. The index can signal a change in negotiating conditions before price trends visibly adjust.
In Frisco specifically, the index tends to move more steadily than in rapidly developing suburbs because of:
• More established resale inventory
• Less reliance on phased new construction releases
• Strong and consistent buyer demand
• More balanced absorption across price tiers
The Market Action Index should always be interpreted alongside inventory trends and days on market. No single metric tells the full story, but together they provide a clear picture of negotiating dynamics.
Market data explains leverage. Execution determines results.
If you're evaluating strategy in Frisco’s current conditions, see how we structure pricing and negotiation in our Best Realtor in Frisco guide.
Inventory represents the total number of active homes available for sale. Inventory is the fastest way to see whether buyers have options or sellers have scarcity. In Frisco, inventory trends are influenced by both resale listings and ongoing development, which do not enter the market evenly.
When inventory trends upward, buyers usually gain leverage. When it trends downward, sellers usually gain leverage. Watch inventory trends over time instead of focusing on one-week fluctuations.
When inventory expands:
• Buyers gain negotiating leverage
• Days on market typically increase
• Pricing becomes more competitive
When inventory contracts:
• Sellers gain leverage
• Homes move more quickly
• Negotiation windows narrow
The direction of inventory movement is often more important than the absolute number at any single point in time.
Inventory and absorption vary significantly by subdivision. For community-level insight, school zoning context, and neighborhood dynamics, review our Frisco Community & Neighborhood Guide.
Let's take a look at the overall picture factoring in pricing, demand, and inventory pressure.
Each metric serves a different purpose:
Median List Price
Reflects the midpoint of current active listings. In Prosper, this number is influenced by new construction concentration and luxury price tiers.
Average and Median Days on Market
Indicate absorption speed. Rising days on market typically signal increasing buyer selectivity. Declining days on market suggest tightening demand.
Market Action Index
Measures supply versus demand balance. It often signals negotiating shifts before price adjustments occur.
Inventory
Tracks total active listings. Directional movement matters more than short-term fluctuations.
Price Per Square Foot
Helps normalize comparisons across varying home sizes and luxury tiers.
Median Rent
Provides context for investor activity and broader housing demand trends.
Frisco is a more established and balanced market compared to rapidly developing suburbs.
Key structural differences:
• Higher concentration of established resale inventory
• More consistent and stabilized development patterns
• Strong corporate and employment base
• Wider range of price tiers and housing types
• More consistent absorption across neighborhoods
In emerging suburbs, builder inventory often sets the tone for pricing and negotiation leverage. In Frisco, resale activity and sustained buyer demand play a larger role in market direction.
Median price movement in Frisco is typically driven by overall demand, inventory levels, and price-tier shifts rather than just new inventory releases.
Because of this, Frisco analysis requires:
• Neighborhood-level pricing review
• School zoning and location context
• Absorption rate segmentation by price tier
• Direct comparison of comparable resale and newer homes
ZIP-level averages alone do not accurately represent negotiating conditions inside Frisco.
Frisco is a data-driven market. Pricing a resale home requires direct comparison against active inventory within the same neighborhood, school zoning, and price tier.
While new construction exists in Frisco, resale pricing is more influenced by comparable sales and current competition than by builder incentives alone.
Before setting a list price, sellers should evaluate:
• Active inventory in their neighborhood
• Comparable sales within the same school zone
• Absorption rate within their specific price band
• Average days on market for similar homes
• Price reductions occurring in the last 30–60 days
City-wide median pricing rarely reflects what is happening inside a single Frisco neighborhood. Homes in Phillips Creek Ranch trade differently than homes in Newman Village or Grayhawk.
In Frisco, neighborhood-level strategy determines leverage.
Sellers who price based solely on a rising median risk extended days on market when inventory expands.
Frisco buyers must evaluate inventory across multiple neighborhoods and price tiers.
Because the market is more balanced, buyer leverage often depends on:
• Inventory levels within specific neighborhoods
• Days on market trends for comparable homes
• Pricing relative to recent comparable sales
• Competition in high-demand school zones
• Price per square foot differences across communities
Longer days on market in Frisco frequently indicate overpricing relative to comparable homes rather than a lack of overall demand.
Well-priced homes in high-demand communities continue to move even in slower absorption cycles.
Frisco rewards preparation and market awareness. Buyers who understand neighborhood-level dynamics negotiate from strength.
Frisco attracts a wide range of buyers, including relocation, move-up, and executive buyers, primarily because of its strong job market, established communities, and reputation for highly rated public schools.
Beyond schools, key demand drivers include:
• Strong corporate presence and job opportunities
• Access to the Dallas North Tollway and major employment hubs
• Mix of established neighborhoods and newer communities
• Amenity-rich developments and community planning
• Proximity to retail, dining, and entertainment
• Continued economic and infrastructure growth
Frisco appeals to buyers seeking a balance of lifestyle, location, and long-term value across multiple price tiers.
Because demand is influenced by school zoning, neighborhood desirability, and proximity to employment, certain areas trade at different speeds even within the same city.
Understanding why buyers choose Frisco helps explain how inventory absorbs and where leverage shifts occur.
Frisco shifts between leverage conditions based on inventory levels and buyer demand. The Market Action Index above measures supply versus demand balance. Directional movement in inventory and days on market often signals negotiation changes before median price adjusts.
New construction exists in Frisco, but resale pricing is more influenced by comparable sales, neighborhood demand, and overall inventory levels. In certain areas, buyers may still compare resale options against newer homes, but builder incentives typically have less direct impact than in rapidly developing suburbs.
Frisco’s housing mix includes a wide range of price tiers. When higher-priced homes enter or exit the market, the city-wide median can shift even if absorption in lower price bands remains steady. Price-tier segmentation matters more than overall median movement.
Absorption varies by tier. Historically, homes in the mid-range price points tend to move more quickly than higher-end luxury properties. Market speed depends on inventory concentration, buyer demand, and neighborhood-level desirability.
Days on market fluctuate based on pricing accuracy, inventory levels, and buyer demand. When inventory expands, average days on market typically increase. When inventory contracts and demand strengthens, well-priced homes move more quickly.
Frisco is a more established and balanced market with a mix of resale homes and ongoing development. Inventory enters the market more consistently rather than in large phases. Because of this, negotiation leverage tends to shift more gradually, and neighborhood-level analysis remains critical.
Frisco pricing is influenced by overall demand, inventory levels, and price-tier segmentation. Short-term median shifts often reflect changes in higher-end inventory rather than broad demand changes. Price stability should be evaluated alongside inventory direction and days on market trends rather than relying on one-week fluctuations.
Selling conditions depend on inventory levels within your specific neighborhood and price band. When inventory expands, sellers may face more competition. In lower inventory cycles with steady absorption, sellers typically experience stronger leverage. Strategy is tier-specific, not city-wide.
Negotiation strength shifts with inventory expansion and days on market movement. In expanding inventory cycles, buyers often gain flexibility on price, repairs, or closing terms. In tightening inventory cycles, seller concessions tend to narrow. Monitoring directional movement in these metrics provides more clarity than isolated median numbers.
Yes, but to a lesser extent than in rapidly developing suburbs. Frisco’s housing market includes both resale and new construction, but pricing is more heavily influenced by comparable sales and neighborhood demand. Buyers may still compare resale properties against newer homes, but builder incentives typically have less immediate impact on resale pricing.
The embedded market data above updates automatically to reflect current active listings and real-time market conditions. Because Frisco inventory changes more consistently rather than in phases, monitoring trends over time provides more reliable insight than single-week shifts.
The Cliff Freeman Group studies Frisco at the neighborhood and price-tier level rather than relying on city-wide medians alone.
Our analysis focuses on:
• Inventory levels within specific neighborhoods
• Absorption rates within specific price bands
• Comparable sales within school zones
• Resale versus newer home competition
• Days-on-market movement before price shifts occur
• Inventory trends across different communities
Frisco’s housing market behaves differently than rapidly developing suburbs because supply enters the market more consistently. Leverage tends to shift more gradually based on inventory levels and buyer demand.
Understanding Frisco requires tracking both neighborhood-level dynamics and overall market conditions.
City-wide medians alone are insufficient for pricing or negotiation strategy in Frisco. Neighborhood-level absorption determines leverage.
Request a neighborhood-level analysis tailored to your property or target area. If you need help interpreting what these trends mean for your situation, start the conversation here:
tcfg.homes/contact-us
Frisco is a more established, demand-driven, price-tier segmented market.
It cannot be analyzed using city-wide medians alone.
Our evaluation framework focuses on four structural drivers specific to Frisco:
Frisco’s inventory enters the market more consistently rather than in phases.
Because of this, shifts in absorption are driven more by changes in buyer demand and overall inventory levels than by sudden supply increases.
Resale sellers must position pricing based on current comparable sales, neighborhood competition, and days on market trends.
We monitor:
• Active inventory levels by neighborhood
• Buyer demand trends
• Days on market movement
• Price reduction activity
This determines real leverage conditions.
Frisco includes a wide range of price tiers, from entry-level to luxury.
A movement in higher price segments can shift the city-wide median without affecting lower or mid-range absorption.
We segment absorption by:
• Entry to mid-range price points
• Mid to upper-mid tiers
• Luxury segments
• High-end custom homes
Each tier trades at different speeds.
City-wide medians do not capture this nuance.
In Frisco, resale homes primarily compete with other resale properties, though newer homes and limited new construction can still influence buyer decisions.
Buyers cross-shop:
• Move-in ready resale
• Recently built homes
• Limited new construction options
If newer homes offer updated finishes or incentives, resale pricing pressure can appear in comparable neighborhoods before median price adjusts.
We track:
• Resale absorption rate
• Inventory levels by neighborhood
• Price reduction frequency
• Days on market trends
This reveals pressure earlier than median statistics.
Frisco demand is influenced by:
• Frisco ISD zoning and school boundaries
• Access to the Dallas North Tollway and major employment hubs
• Corporate expansion and job growth
• Retail, dining, and entertainment development
• Established community reputation
Demand in Phillips Creek Ranch does not mirror demand in other Frisco neighborhoods.
Neighborhood-level desirability impacts absorption more than city-wide trends.
Most online reports rely on:
• Median price
• Basic inventory count
• Average days on market
These metrics are lagging indicators.
In Frisco, leverage shifts appear first in:
• Inventory expansion or contraction
• Days on market changes
• Price reductions within specific neighborhoods
• Absorption slowdowns across price tiers
By the time median pricing reacts, negotiation power has already changed.
When reviewing the Market Snapshot:
• Rising inventory + stable MAI = transition phase
• Rising inventory + declining MAI = buyer leverage increasing
• Stable inventory + rising MAI = seller strength consolidating
• Declining DOM + flat price = demand strengthening before price moves
In Frisco, pressure builds before price moves.
Directional movement matters more than single-week volatility.
Frisco is not a generic DFW suburb.
It is a demand-driven, price-tier segmented market where neighborhood-level analysis determines leverage.
City-wide averages are reference points.
Neighborhood-level absorption determines strategy.