Hurst/Euless/Bedford, TX Housing Market Data
Live housing data and market trends for Hurst, Euless, and Bedford, Texas (76021, 76039, 76054). This page provides live Hurst/Euless/Bedford housing data, including median home prices, days on market, inventory levels, and seller leverage indicators. The HEB housing market is driven by established neighborhoods, central DFW accessibility, Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD, and consistent resale activity rather than large-scale master-planned community development.
This page provides a live view of the Hurst/Euless/Bedford 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 Rather than relying on national headlines or outdated quarterly summaries, the charts below reflect current supply and demand conditions across the HEB Mid-Cities area.
Unlike many fast-growing North Texas suburbs, the Hurst/Euless/Bedford market is driven primarily by established neighborhoods, steady resale activity, and limited infill development rather than large-scale master-planned communities. Because of this, market shifts tend to be influenced by inventory levels, affordability, mortgage rates, and neighborhood-specific demand instead of builder phase releases.
We update the data below each week and it should be interpreted in the context of neighborhood, school district, and price tier.
Hurst, Euless, and Bedford form one of the most centrally located residential areas in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, offering convenient access to DFW Airport, major employment centers, and the highly regarded Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD. Learn more about the area's neighborhoods, schools, and lifestyle in our Hurst/Euless/Bedford 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 negotiating flexibility for buyers.
Higher readings indicate that demand is absorbing inventory more quickly. This typically strengthens seller leverage and reduces negotiation opportunities for buyers.
Unlike median price alone, the Market Action Index reflects market pressure. Price changes often lag behind shifts in supply and demand, making the index a valuable early indicator of changing market conditions.
In the Hurst/Euless/Bedford market, the index is influenced by factors such as:
• Steady resale inventory
• Mortgage rate changes
• Buyer demand across established neighborhoods
• Inventory availability within HEB ISD and surrounding communities
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 clearer picture of negotiating conditions throughout the HEB area.
Market data explains leverage. Execution determines results.
If you're evaluating your strategy in today's Hurst/Euless/Bedford market, see how we approach pricing and negotiations in our Best Realtor in Hurst/Euless/Bedford Guide.
Inventory represents the total number of active homes available for sale. It is one of the fastest ways to understand whether buyers have more choices or whether sellers benefit from limited competition. In the Hurst/Euless/Bedford market, inventory changes are driven primarily by resale activity rather than large-scale new construction.
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 can vary significantly between Hurst, Euless, and Bedford, as well as by neighborhood, school district, and price range. For community insights, school information, and neighborhood overviews, explore our Hurst/Euless/Bedford 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 Hurst/Euless/Bedford, 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.
The Hurst/Euless/Bedford market is not driven by large-scale new construction.
• Established neighborhoods with mature housing stock
• Limited large-scale residential development
• Strong resale market with consistent inventory turnover
• Central DFW location supporting steady buyer demand
• Market activity influenced by affordability, commute convenience, and school districts rather than builder releases
In rapidly growing suburbs like Celina or Prosper, new construction often drives pricing and negotiation leverage. In Hurst, Euless, and Bedford, resale inventory sets the pace of the market.
Median price movement in the HEB area is typically influenced by resale activity, mortgage rates, and inventory levels rather than new development phases.
Because of this, HEB market analysis requires:
• Neighborhood-level pricing review
• Absorption rate segmentation by price range
• School district and location analysis
• Comparison of updated versus original-condition homes
ZIP code averages alone do not accurately represent negotiating conditions across the HEB area.
The HEB market is primarily resale-driven. Pricing a home requires understanding neighborhood competition, recent comparable sales, and current buyer demand.
Before setting a list price, sellers should evaluate:
• Active competing listings nearby
• Absorption rate within their price range
• Average days on market for comparable homes
• Recent price reductions in the neighborhood
• Property condition compared to competing inventory
Homes in Bedford often perform differently than similar homes in Hurst or Euless because of neighborhood characteristics, school boundaries, and buyer preferences.
In the HEB market, neighborhood-level strategy determines leverage.
Sellers who price based solely on city-wide median values risk extended days on market when inventory increases.
Buyers should evaluate resale inventory across all three cities, as each offers different pricing, housing styles, and inventory levels.
Buyers should monitor:
• Inventory by neighborhood
• Days on market trends
• Price per square foot comparisons
• Recent price reductions
• School district boundaries
Longer days on market often indicate overpricing or condition issues rather than weak buyer demand.
Well-priced homes in desirable neighborhoods throughout Hurst, Euless, and Bedford continue to attract strong interest even during slower market cycles.
The HEB market rewards preparation, local knowledge, and accurate pricing analysis.
The HEB area attracts buyers looking for central DFW access, established neighborhoods, and strong long-term value.
Key demand drivers include:
• Convenient access to DFW Airport
• Central location between Dallas and Fort Worth
• Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD
• Mature neighborhoods with larger trees and established communities
• Diverse housing options across multiple price points
• Easy access to major highways, shopping, and employment centers
The HEB area appeals to first-time buyers, move-up families, professionals, and downsizers seeking convenience without sacrificing neighborhood stability.
Because inventory is largely resale-based, neighborhood conditions often vary more than city-wide statistics suggest.
Understanding why buyers choose Hurst, Euless, or Bedford helps explain how inventory absorbs and where negotiating leverage shifts.
The HEB market shifts between buyer and seller leverage based on inventory levels and buyer demand. The Market Action Index above measures the balance between supply and demand. Changes in inventory and days on market often indicate negotiating conditions before median prices begin to move.
New construction has a limited influence because most of the housing market consists of established resale neighborhoods. While occasional infill developments add inventory, resale pricing is primarily driven by comparable sales, neighborhood demand, and home condition rather than builder incentives.
The HEB market includes a wide range of home styles, sizes, and price points across three cities. A larger number of higher-priced or remodeled homes selling during a given period can shift the median price even when overall buyer demand remains consistent. Neighborhood-level analysis provides a more accurate picture than city-wide averages.
Homes in the entry-level and mid-price ranges generally experience the strongest buyer demand. Higher-priced homes often have longer marketing periods because of a smaller buyer pool. Absorption varies by neighborhood, condition, and pricing strategy.
Days on market fluctuate based on pricing accuracy, inventory levels, and neighborhood demand. Well-priced homes in desirable areas often sell quickly, while overpriced properties typically remain on the market longer. Monitoring neighborhood-specific absorption trends provides the clearest expectations.
Unlike many rapidly growing suburbs, Hurst, Euless, and Bedford are mature communities with established neighborhoods and limited large-scale development. The market is driven by steady resale activity, central DFW access, HEB ISD, and long-term neighborhood stability rather than builder expansion.
Home values have generally benefited from the area's central location and consistent buyer demand. Short-term price movement is influenced by inventory levels, mortgage rates, and neighborhood-specific activity. Evaluating inventory direction and absorption trends provides better insight than median price alone.
Selling conditions depend on inventory levels, neighborhood competition, and price range. When inventory is limited, sellers often benefit from stronger negotiating leverage. Accurate pricing based on recent comparable sales remains one of the most important factors for a successful sale.
Negotiation strength changes as inventory and days on market fluctuate. When inventory increases, buyers often gain additional flexibility on price and terms. When inventory remains limited, sellers generally maintain stronger negotiating leverage.
Popular neighborhoods vary by buyer preference, but areas offering highly rated HEB ISD schools, convenient highway access, established homes, and nearby parks consistently attract strong buyer demand. Neighborhood-level inventory often influences competition more than city-wide trends.
The market data above updates automatically to reflect current active listings and real-time housing conditions. Monitoring trends over several weeks provides a more accurate understanding of market direction than focusing on short-term changes.
The Cliff Freeman Group analyzes the HEB housing market at the neighborhood and price-tier level rather than relying solely on city-wide median statistics.
Our analysis focuses on:
• Neighborhood-specific inventory trends
• Absorption rates by price range
• Comparable resale home competition
• Days-on-market movement before pricing shifts occur
• Property condition and renovation impact
• School district and location-driven demand
The Hurst/Euless/Bedford market behaves differently from many North Texas growth markets because it is driven primarily by established resale neighborhoods rather than new construction.
Understanding neighborhood-level absorption provides a clearer picture of pricing, negotiation leverage, and buyer demand than city-wide averages alone.
Request a neighborhood-specific analysis tailored to your property or target community. If you'd like help interpreting what these trends mean for your situation, start the conversation here: tcfg.homes/contact-us
The Hurst/Euless/Bedford market is an established, resale-driven, neighborhood-segmented market.
It cannot be accurately analyzed using city-wide median prices alone.
Our evaluation framework focuses on four structural drivers that shape housing activity across the HEB area.
Inventory is distributed unevenly across Hurst, Euless, and Bedford.
Some neighborhoods experience limited turnover, while others see more consistent resale activity throughout the year. Because of this, market conditions can vary significantly even within the same ZIP code.
We monitor:
• Active inventory by neighborhood
• New listing velocity
• Pending sales activity
• Inventory trends over time
This provides a clearer picture of negotiating leverage than city-wide averages.
The HEB market serves a wide range of buyers, from first-time homeowners to executive purchasers.
A shift in higher-priced home sales can influence the overall median without reflecting conditions in more affordable price ranges.
We segment absorption by:
• Under $400K
• $400K–$600K
• $600K–$800K
• $800K+
Each segment responds differently to inventory levels, buyer demand, and interest rate changes.
Median prices alone do not capture these differences.
In Hurst, Euless, and Bedford, buyers often compare multiple resale homes rather than choosing between resale and new construction.
Updated homes typically compete against other renovated properties, while homes requiring updates compete on value and pricing.
We track:
• Days on market by property condition
• Price reduction frequency
• Pending-to-active ratios
• Comparable home performance
This helps identify pricing pressure before broader market statistics begin to shift.
Buyer demand across the HEB area is influenced by several local factors, including:
• Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD attendance zones
• Proximity to DFW Airport
• Highway accessibility
• Neighborhood amenities and parks
• Access to major employment centers throughout Dallas and Fort Worth
Demand can vary significantly between neighborhoods, even when homes share similar prices.
Location often influences absorption more than city-wide trends.
Many online reports rely on:
• Median price
• Total inventory count
• Average days on market
These are useful benchmarks but are lagging indicators.
In Hurst/Euless/Bedford, market shifts often appear first through:
• Neighborhood inventory changes
• Pending sales activity
• Price reductions
• Absorption rate movement within specific price ranges
By the time median prices move, negotiating conditions have often already changed.
When reviewing the Market Snapshot:
• Rising inventory + stable MAI = market balancing
• Rising inventory + declining MAI = buyer leverage increasing
• Stable inventory + rising MAI = seller strength improving
• Declining days on market + stable pricing = buyer demand strengthening before prices adjust
In the HEB market, direction matters more than week-to-week fluctuations.
Hurst, Euless, and Bedford are not high-growth builder markets.
They are mature, established communities where neighborhood inventory, resale competition, school districts, and location drive market performance.
City-wide averages provide useful context.
Neighborhood-level absorption determines pricing strategy, negotiation leverage, and market opportunity.