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Michigan and Wisconsin beat the coasts for the hottest housing markets, Redfin finds
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Michigan and Wisconsin beat the coasts for the hottest housing markets, Redfin finds

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Last updated: May 7, 2026 4:13 pm
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Published: May 7, 2026
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Here is how Redfin ranks the 10 hottest neighborhoods in America for 2026 and their respective median home sales price:Why Midwest suburbs are winning the housing marketThe first-time buyer squeeze isn’t going away

You can buy a house outside Detroit for $158,000. That’s why the Midwest just beat the coasts—again—for America’s hottest neighborhoods.

Six of the 10 hottest neighborhoods in the U.S. for 2026 are in the Midwest, according to a Redfin analysis released Wednesday. This marks the second consecutive year the region has dominated Redfin’s annual ranking of the 100 most populous metro areas by year-over-year growth in listing views. Redfin also measures buyer competition for its ranking. 

This year’s ranking makes one thing clear: In a housing market still strained by the affordability crisis, buyers are following their wallets and opting for more accessible markets. The Midwest has become a more attractive place to plant roots, given that housing costs there can be at least 30% cheaper than in major coastal metros.

Here is how Redfin ranks the 10 hottest neighborhoods in America for 2026 and their respective median home sales price:

  1. Land O’ Lakes, FL (Tampa metro) — $425,000
  2. Plant City, FL (Tampa metro) — $320,000
  3. Oak Creek, WI (Milwaukee metro) — $381,200
  4. Oceanside, NY (Nassau County) — $725,000
  5. West Bend, WI (Milwaukee metro) — $350,000
  6. Lincoln Park, MI (Detroit metro) — $158,000
  7. Lee’s Summit, MO (Kansas City metro) — $397,500
  8. Little Neck, Queens, NY (New York City metro) — $796,500
  9. Howell, MI (Warren metro) — $385,000
  10. Menomonee Falls, WI (Milwaukee metro) — $410,000

“For many, it’s not just about cheaper homes, but about being able to build wealth earlier without drowning in overhead,” Danielle Andrews, a real estate agent with Realty One Group Next Generation, previously told Fortune.

Wisconsin alone had three of the hottest neighborhoods in the top 10: Oak Creek, West Bend, and Menomonee Falls, all Milwaukee suburbs. Michigan claimed two more in Lincoln Park (near Detroit) and Howell (in the southeast region of the state). 

Lee’s Summit, a Kansas City, Missouri suburb, rounded out the Midwest’s six. Two Florida neighborhoods near Tampa, Land O’ Lakes and Plant City, took the top two spots, and the New York City area placed a pair of suburbs (Oceanside and Little Neck, Queens) on the list.

Why Midwest suburbs are winning the housing market

The Midwest is winning today’s housing market because it often offers more affordable prices than coastal cities. 

While the U.S. median home price has surpassed $400,000, several Midwest neighborhoods on Redfin’s list sell for far less. Lincoln Park, for example, has a median sale price of $158,000, which is less than half the national figure. Oak Creek sits at $381,200, and Lee’s Summit at $397,500.

“Midwest cities and lesser-known places in Florida are having a moment—and affordability is the reason,” Redfin Senior Economist Asad Khan wrote in the report. “Many of these neighborhoods sit just outside major hubs like Milwaukee, Chicago, and Tampa, hitting a sweet spot: lower cost of living without giving up access to highly rated schools, shopping, and dining. They have the convenience of big cities without the big-city price tags.”

But these markets also show evidence of heating up. Lincoln Park, for example, has seen a 14% year-over-year increase in home sales, and nearly 40% of homes sold above asking price. The same is true in Howell, where more than one-quarter of homes sold above asking, and demand is tight.

So don’t mistake “affordable” for “easy.” In Oak Creek, 38% of homes sold above their listing price. In West Bend, that figure was 45.1%, and in Menomonee Falls, 41.6%. Median sale prices in West Bend and Oak Creek climbed 16.7% and 12.8% year over year, respectively.

“It’s pretty low inventory,” Michigan-based Redfin Premier real estate agent Anne Loehr said in the report. “There aren’t many homes to sell because it’s such a popular place.”

That dynamic isn’t entirely new, but there’s plenty of evidence that it’s accelerating. Another ConsumerAffairs analysis published in July 2025, based on U.S. Census Bureau and Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) data, shows that seven of the 10 most accessible metros for young homeowners are in the Midwest.

“Importantly, the cost of living [in the Midwest], especially for essentials like groceries, gas, and health care, is better aligned with local wages, allowing Gen Z buyers to not just get by—but actually get ahead,” Realty One’s Andrews previously told Fortune. “The Midwest is no longer just affordable: It’s aspirational for a generation redefining success.”

To be sure, buyers also continue to watch their affordability math as borrowing costs stay high. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 6.3% as of April 30, according to Freddie Mac, after the Federal Reserve held rates steady for a third time this year. Rates briefly dipped below 6% in mid-April before climbing back, leaving would-be buyers with little of the relief they’d hoped for in 2026. Rates are still nearly double their pandemic-era lows, which were sub-3%.

The first-time buyer squeeze isn’t going away

Even with rates roughly half a percentage point below where they sat a year ago, first-time homebuyers, especially, remain strained for affordability. The share of first-time home buyers fell to a record low of 21% in 2025, according to a National Association of Realtors report, and the typical age of a first-time buyer climbed to an all-time high of 40.

“The historically low share of first-time buyers underscores the real-world consequences of a housing market starved for affordable inventory,” Jessica Lautz, NAR deputy chief economist and vice president of research, said in a statement.

But for buyers who feel ready, Redfin’s latest ranking shows the American Dream can still be achieved even when options seem bleak. It might just look different from the aspirational vision of living in a large home in a popular suburb outside a big city.

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