As the scales tip in favor of homebuyers, more sellers are finding themselves unhappy with their prospects—and yanking their homes off the market.
In April, 5.8% of all home listings in the U.S. were taken off the market, according to a new analysis from Redfin. That rate matches the record high number of delistings in March 2020, when uncertainty about the pandemic shuttered businesses and slowed real estate deals to a crawl. Delisting rates were also this high in December of last year, a trend that points to a shifting market in which buyers now wield more power than sellers. With pickier buyers making more demands, sellers are less likely to lock in their dream deals, sometimes pulling their homes offline in the process.
Delistings rose for the second month in a row in April, up 3.8% from March. Homeowners generally delist when they aren’t able to land the price they wanted, and sometimes they decide against selling altogether. In other instances, they might relist, putting a previously delisted home back up for sale after at least a month off the market. In April, 2.5% of homes on the market were relistings, matching the mid-2020 highs seen when properties returned to the market after early pandemic withdrawals.
“Sellers are still getting used to the post-pandemic normal,” Arlington, Virginia, Redfin agent Patricia Ammann said in the report. “Prices aren’t soaring like they were five years ago—high gas prices and the rising cost of living overall are trickling down to the housing market, making buyers much less likely to bid prices up. Buyers know they have negotiating power, often offering under the asking price and completing inspections, but some sellers just won’t budge.”
Delisting on the rise
Home sellers might not always get their way in today’s market, but buyers often can. Mortgage rates remain high, but housing inventory is growing, giving buyers more options and freeing up a tight market. Buyers are still grappling with high mortgage rates, but the number of homes for sale in 2026 is up, bolstering buyers with more options to choose from and more bargaining power.
Like with all housing trends, local data tells a deeper story. Delistings were most common in Atlanta and San Jose, California, in April, with 10.7% and 9.3% of homes pulled from the market, respectively. The opposite is true in Pittsburgh, where only 3.5% of listings were removed from the market in April, followed by Columbus, Chicago, and Cincinnati.
When it comes to relistings, San Francisco leads the pack. In April, 4.2% of homes listed there were relistings, followed by nearby San Jose with 4.1%. With interest in the Bay Area again on the rise, buyers are putting previously delisted homes back online to see what happens.
The Bay Area housing market heated back up this year, with the median sale price of a home in San Francisco up 14.4% compared with 2025. This jump reverses pandemic-era lows, when many residents and tech businesses decamped for other parts of the country, and highlights a stark contrast with cities like Austin, where home prices and housing inventory have cooled off.
