Strike up the band: Punxsuatawney offers more than weather forecasts

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When Realtor.com’s Clare Trapasso wrote The Punxsutawney Effect: Why a Home Price Surge in Phil’s Hometown Offers Hope for the U.S. Housing Market she may not have seen the movie Groundhog Day anytime recently. If she had, we’d be seeing springtime already —over and over and over again. Not a bad thought in the dead of the 2024 winter.

Why? The nation’s most famous groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil, made headlines last week when he didn’t see his shadow, indicating spring is just around the bend. “But what might be even more remarkable is the real estate market in Phil’s hometown of Punxsutawney, PA, about 90 minutes northeast of Pittsburgh. While home prices in the small rural town have more than doubled over the past four years, actual current prices have remained relatively affordable.

As it is elsewhere in the U.S. right now, Punxsutawney has more buyers than homes for them to buy, making it a rousing sellers’ market. The median home list price in the town was just $216,000 in January, according to the most recent Realtor.com® data. That was just over half of the national price tag of $409,500.

It’s all relative, however. Back in pre-COVID 2020, the typical home in the town was on the market for $79,000. Over the past four years, prices have shot up more than 173%, according to an analysis of Realtor.com data, with much of that taking place between spring 2021 and spring 2022, slowing down only when mortgage rates climbed.

In Pennsylvania in general, prices rose about 28% over the same period as compared to the national average of 37%. So what is Punxsutawney’s secret? It’s not just the groundhog. It's a bidding war. Out-of-state buyers (from states such as Utah, Michigan, and California) were attracted to the lower prices, proximity to family members living nearby, and/or investment opportunities.

Amenities abound in the town as well, including the Punxsutawney Area Hospital and the Indiana University of Pennsylvania campus in Punxsutawney, which offers certificates in the culinary arts. Punxsutawney may have just 5,636 residents (July 2022), according to the U.S. Census Bureau, but it boasts dozens of groundhog statues.

Who knows? With falling interest rates and the prediction of early spring, old Phil might be smiling and dancing to the Pennsylvania Polka for a good, long while.

Realtor, TBWS


All information furnished has been forwarded to you and is provided by thetbwsgroup only for informational purposes. Forecasting shall be considered as events which may be expected but not guaranteed. Neither the forwarding party and/or company nor thetbwsgroup assume any responsibility to any person who relies on information or forecasting contained in this report and disclaims all liability in respect to decisions or actions, or lack thereof based on any or all of the contents of this report.

First Priority Home Loans is a DBA of Anchor Funding, Inc. NMLS #236419 & 1626581. California Bureau of Real Estate, Real Estate Broker Number 01276087. Loans made or arranged pursuant to the California Department of Business Oversight. California Finance Lenders Law license number 603 L293.  





Andre Enriques

Branch Manager/Mortgage Lender

NMLS: 220937

First Priority Home Loans

891 Kuhn Drive #204, Chula Vista CA

Company NMLS: 236419

Office: 619-323-2066

Cell: 619-208-6499

Email: andrefunds4u@sbcglobal.net

Web: http://www.andreenriques.com

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Andre Enriques

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Branch Manager/Mortgage Lender

NMLS: 220937

Cell: 619-208-6499


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