Greater Boston Suburbs · Single-Family Homes
The May 2026 Market Report

Needham · Wellesley · Newton · Medfield · Dover  |  Data: MLS PIN · Norfolk County Registry of Deeds

Avg. Sale Price
Norfolk County
$1.30M
↑ 13% vs. Q1 2025
30-yr Fixed Rate
Massachusetts
6.63%
Freddie Mac avg: 6.30%
Mortgages Recorded
Q1 2026 · Norfolk Co.
4,137
↑ 26% vs. Q1 2025
Foreclosure Deeds
Q1 2026 · Norfolk Co.
11
↓ 39% vs. Q1 2025

Market Overview

May 2026

Spring 2026 is unfolding exactly as the corridor’s history would predict: fewer homes for sale, faster decisions, and prices that continue to rise. The Norfolk County Registry of Deeds confirmed that Q1 2026 total sales volume reached $1.75 billion — a 5% increase year-over-year — even as the number of transactions slipped 7% because inventory, not buyer appetite, remains the binding constraint.

“Higher sale prices driven by demand with limited inventory demonstrate that folks want to live in our Norfolk County communities.”
— Register of Deeds William P. O’Donnell, April 2026

The lock-in effect is still very real. With the Massachusetts 30-year rate sitting at 6.63% heading into May, owners who locked in 3%–4% mortgages during 2020–2022 have every financial incentive to stay put. The result: buyers competing for a thin slice of well-priced listings, and sellers who do list enjoying outsized negotiating strength.

One bright spot for buyers is the mortgage surge. A 26% jump in mortgage filings across Norfolk County signals that buyers who have been waiting on the sidelines are beginning to move — accepting current rate realities and getting ahead of the traditionally active May and June window. Foreclosure activity, at just 11 deeds county-wide, remains historically low, a sign of broad homeowner financial stability across this market.

Town-by-Town Snapshot

Current Conditions

Figures reflect MLS PIN closed sales data and current listing conditions as of May 2026. Median prices represent single-family residential properties.

Town Median Price YoY Change Est. DOM Market Character
Wellesley Hottest
02482 · Norfolk County
$2.03M ↑ ~5% 12–16 days Multiple offers common; pre-market activity high
02458 · Middlesex County
$1.99M ↑ ~4% 14–18 days Village-by-village variation; MBTA access a premium
Dover Rising
02030 · Norfolk County
$1.79M ↑ ~6% 18–24 days Estate lots drawing buyers priced out of Wellesley
02492 · Norfolk County
$1.53M ↑ ~4% 14–20 days Strong school district; walkable pockets near the Highlands
Medfield Value Play
02052 · Norfolk County
$1.07M ↑ ~5% 20–28 days Walkable downtown; spillover demand from pricier neighbors

Three Signals Shaping the Market

🔒 Rate Lock Persists

Sellers who refinanced at 3%–4% face an effective cost of $800–$1,200/month to trade up into a 6.63% loan. Until rates ease meaningfully, many will stay put — keeping supply constrained and protecting values for those who do list.

📈 Prices Still Climbing

The Norfolk County average sale price of $1,301,355 represents a 13% year-over-year increase. With inventory below balanced-market levels and spring demand accelerating, upward price pressure continues into summer.

🌊 Spillover to Dover & Medfield

Buyers priced out of Wellesley ($2M+) and Newton are turning to Dover and Medfield. Both towns offer comparable school quality, Route 128 access, and significantly more land — making them standout value opportunities this spring.

Rate & Economic Context

May 2026

30-Year Fixed · Massachusetts

6.63%
As of May 2, 2026 · Source: Bankrate

Freddie Mac’s national average moved to 6.30% for the week ending May 1. Economists broadly expect rates to hold in the low-to-mid 6% range through the spring buying season, citing uncertainty from oil price volatility and ongoing geopolitical pressures on inflation expectations.

Jumbo Loan Threshold · Norfolk Co.

$962K
2026 conforming limit · FHFA

Norfolk County’s elevated conforming loan limit of $962,550 is a meaningful advantage for buyers. Many Needham and Medfield purchases can still clear the conforming threshold — avoiding true jumbo pricing — while Wellesley, Newton, and Dover purchases typically require jumbo financing at or above $1M.

Guidance for Buyers & Sellers

For Buyers

  • Get fully underwritten pre-approval — not just pre-qualification — before touring. Listing agents in this corridor vet buyer readiness before accepting showings.
  • In Wellesley and Newton, budget 5–10% above list price for competitive offers on move-in ready homes. Days on market under 16 is your cue.
  • Consider Dover and Medfield if Wellesley/Newton pricing has stretched your budget. Comparable school rankings at meaningfully lower medians.
  • The 26% jump in mortgage filings county-wide signals rising spring competition. Acting in May gives you an edge over peak June demand.
  • The conforming loan limit is $962,550 in Norfolk County — Needham and Medfield purchases may qualify for non-jumbo terms.

For Sellers

  • Homes priced correctly within the first 7 days are generating multiple offers. Overpricing by even 3–5% is causing meaningful DOM extension in the current market.
  • March 2026 saw a 21% price increase vs. March 2025 for all property types in Norfolk County — use recent comps, not last year’s data, when setting your list price.
  • Pre-market outreach and private listing networks are increasingly effective in Wellesley and Dover, where buyer pools are deep and qualified.
  • Stage for the buyer profile — Route 128 tech executives, Boston healthcare professionals, and remote-work families from outside New England dominate inbound demand in all five towns.
  • Foreclosure activity is near zero county-wide, reflecting strong equity positions. If you’re considering a move-up purchase, your negotiating position as a seller has rarely been stronger.