Snohomish County Housing Market April 2026: Inventory Up 58%, Median Drops to $750K — A Complete Everett Buyer and Seller Guide

Quick answer: The Northwest Multiple Listing Service’s official April 2026 Market Snapshot shows Snohomish County with the largest year-over-year inventory growth of any county in the 23-county NWMLS region — a 58% jump in active listings (1,325 in April 2025 to 2,094 in April 2026). The county’s median sales price ticked down for the first time in this cycle to $750,000 (-0.7% YoY), closed sales fell 15%, but pending sales rose 2% across the NWMLS region. Average days on market: 35. Months of supply: about 2 — still technically a seller’s market, but the slowest sellers’ market in years. Mortgage rates around 6.45% are doing most of the work.

If you’ve been following Snohomish County’s housing market month-to-month, the official NWMLS April 2026 numbers — published May 7 — confirm a story that’s been building since late winter: the county is unwinding from the most extreme inventory shortage in modern memory, but the unwind is happening through inventory growth and price softening, not through a transaction surge. The most useful way to read April: more homes available, more buyers writing offers, fewer of those offers turning into closings.

This is the comprehensive Everett-anchored guide to what NWMLS reported, what it means for buyers and sellers in the city right now, and how the county compares to the rest of the region.

The Headline: 58% Inventory Surge — Largest in the NWMLS Region

Active residential listings in Snohomish County rose from 1,325 in April 2025 to 2,094 in April 2026 — a 58% year-over-year increase that led every county in the NWMLS coverage area. The next-closest counties were Walla Walla (+54%), Okanogan (+52.4%), Skagit (+44.5%), and Thurston (+43.3%). King County, by comparison, saw a smaller percentage jump because its inventory was less depleted to begin with.

This isn’t a one-month spike. The March 2026 NWMLS report showed Snohomish County inventory up 51.8% year-over-year. The Madrona Group’s April Sales Activity Intensity index registered 54.9%. April’s official number — 58% — confirms the trend is accelerating, not normalizing.

For Everett specifically, the inventory growth is concentrated in the parts of the city where homes have been slowest to come back to the market: established single-family neighborhoods that owners have held through the rate-cycle freeze, and certain townhome and condo segments that depended on the lowest-rate refi window of 2020-2021.

The Price Picture: First Annual Decline of the Cycle

The Snohomish County median sales price came in at $750,000 in April 2026, down slightly from $755,500 in April 2025 — a -0.7% year-over-year change. Modest in size but meaningful in shape: this is the first time in the current cycle that the county’s median has moved down on an annual basis rather than up.

Snohomish County still ranks third-highest among NWMLS counties for median price, above the NWMLS-wide median, and above where many forecasters expected the county to settle given the mortgage-rate environment. Prices haven’t collapsed. They’ve quietly, gradually softened.

The on-the-ground translation in Everett: sellers who priced aggressively six months ago are finding that buyers are no longer obligated to stretch. That’s not a market crash — it’s the structural correction of a market that had become unsustainably tight on the listing side.

Closed Sales Down 15%, Pending Sales Up 2%

Here’s the tension that defines the spring 2026 Snohomish County market: closed sales dropped 15% year-over-year — 104 fewer completed transactions than April 2025. That sounds alarming until you read the other side of the ledger: pending sales (homes under contract but not yet closed) rose 2% year-over-year across the NWMLS region.

The takeaway: buyers are writing offers. They’re going under contract. What they’re doing less of is reaching the closing table. The most consistent explanation is the mortgage-rate environment.

The 6.45% Rate and the Lock-In Effect

Mortgage rates sitting at 6.45% are not prohibitive — millions of households have closed mortgages at higher historical rates — but they’re high enough that some buyers, particularly those relying on proceeds from a previous home sale to qualify, are pausing at the final step. The arithmetic of trading a sub-3% mortgage from 2020-2021 for a 6.45% mortgage on a new property is doing real damage to the resale pool.

This is the well-documented “lock-in effect”: homeowners who refinanced at 3% in 2021 are choosing to stay put rather than take on the new monthly payment. That suppresses the resale supply pipeline at the same time as some new sellers (relocations, downsizing, life changes that override the rate calculation) are listing — which is why the inventory count rises while the buyer-seller flow remains constrained.

35 Days on Market and 2 Months of Supply

Average days on market in Snohomish County came in at 35 days in April 2026, up from prior cycles when well-priced homes sold in single-digit days. That’s slow by recent memory but still fast by historical norms.

Months of supply — the time it would take to sell every active listing at the current pace — sits at roughly 2 months in the county. The textbook definition of a balanced market is 4-6 months. Below 4 is generally a seller’s market; above 6 is generally a buyer’s market. At 2 months, Snohomish County is technically still a seller’s market — the slowest seller’s market in years, but a seller’s market nonetheless.

For Everett-specific micro-markets — downtown condos, north Everett historic neighborhoods, south Everett single-family on the Mukilteo/Boeing-commute corridor — the months-of-supply figure varies. The 2-month county-wide number is the average; some segments are tighter, some are looser.

How Snohomish County Compares to the Region

The NWMLS region covers 23 counties across Washington state. Across that footprint, the same general dynamic holds — inventory up, closings down, pendings flat to up — but Snohomish leads on the inventory surge specifically. King County, which absorbs much of the region’s discretionary buying power, saw a smaller percentage inventory jump because it was working from a higher base.

For an Everett buyer comparing options, the county-by-county data points to one structural fact: Snohomish has more new inventory available right now, relative to the prior year, than almost anywhere else in the NWMLS footprint. For a seller, it points to the inverse: the buyer pool has more competing options than at any point since the pre-2020 market.

What April 2026 Means for Buyers in Everett Right Now

Three actionable reads:

Selection has improved meaningfully. 2,094 active listings is not 2018-era inventory but it’s more selection than buyers have had in years. The compromises that defined the 2021-2023 buyer experience (multiple offers within hours, escalation clauses, waived inspections) are negotiable in many price brackets again.

Negotiating leverage has shifted slightly toward the buyer. A 35-day average DOM and a 2-month supply means well-priced homes still sell, but overpriced homes sit. Buyers can ask for inspections, ask for repairs, and ask sellers to absorb closing costs — none of which were viable in 2021-2022.

The rate-payment math is what it is. 6.45% is not going meaningfully lower in the near term per most forecasters’ published outlooks. Buyers waiting for a 5% mortgage may wait a long time. Buyers who can carry a 6.45% payment now are buying into the most negotiable Snohomish County market in years.

What April 2026 Means for Sellers in Everett Right Now

The first thing to absorb: the comp set you’re pricing against has changed. A home that would have drawn three offers in 48 hours in spring 2022 may now sit for 30+ days if priced to its 2022 ceiling. Pricing to the current market matters more than it has in the entire post-pandemic cycle.

The second: presentation matters again. Inspections, light staging, professional photography, and a price that opens with room to negotiate are back in the playbook. Buyers are choosing among 2,094 active listings, not five.

The third: pendings are up 2% across the region. Buyers are out there. The path to sale is just longer than it was — fewer impulse offers, more inspection-contingent deals.

Where This Connects to the Broader Everett Story

The April 2026 NWMLS data sits inside a larger Everett housing context: the Boeing 737 North Line ramp this summer (covered in our Boeing North Line workers’ housing guide), the FF(X) frigate program timeline at NAVSTA Everett (covered in our Navy PCS housing guide), and the Snohomish County apartment market that hit $640M in 2025 sales. All of those ripple into the for-sale market eventually.

For the broader analytical context on Everett’s three-submarket housing story (citywide, downtown, NW Everett, 98208), see our Everett’s Three Housing Markets deep-dive.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Everett housing market crashing?

No. A 0.7% annual median price decline and a 2-month supply count is a gradual softening, not a crash. The Snohomish County market is still technically a seller’s market by months-of-supply standard. What’s happening is a controlled unwind from extreme tightness, not a collapse.

Why did closed sales drop 15% if pending sales rose?

Closed sales reflect deals that finalized in April 2026. Pending sales reflect deals that went under contract in April 2026 (and may close in May or June). The 15% closed-sales drop reflects deals that fell through in March or April at the final step — most consistently because of mortgage-rate-driven affordability re-checks at the underwriting stage.

What’s the median price in Everett specifically?

The $750,000 figure is the Snohomish County median. Everett-specific medians vary by neighborhood, with downtown condos and Casino Road corridor segments often below the county median and Northwest Everett, View Ridge, and waterfront-adjacent neighborhoods often above it.

When will mortgage rates come down?

Most major forecasters expect gradual easing into 2027 rather than a sharp drop. Buyers waiting for a 5% mortgage are likely waiting through at least one more housing cycle.

Should I buy now or wait?

That’s a personal-finance question rather than a market-timing question. The market right now offers more selection and more negotiating leverage than it has in years; the rate environment is what it is. If you can carry the payment at 6.45% and you’d be choosing among more options than recent buyers had, the timing case is reasonable. If you’d be stretching at the rate, waiting may make sense.

Why is Snohomish County’s inventory up more than King County’s?

Snohomish County’s inventory was more depleted in 2024-2025, so the percentage jump back is mathematically larger. King County never bottomed out as severely, so its recovery looks smaller in percentage terms even though the underlying dynamic is similar.

Where can I see the original NWMLS report?

The Northwest Multiple Listing Service publishes the monthly Market Snapshot through its official channels. The April 2026 data was released May 7. Local real estate brokers also typically post NWMLS-derived charts within days of release.

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