Q: Is inventory really up 58% in Snohomish County?
A: Yes — that’s the official NWMLS figure for April 2026. Active listings rose from 1,325 to 2,094 year-over-year, the largest percentage increase of any county in the 23-county NWMLS region. More homes are available than at any point in recent memory, but high mortgage rates are keeping a lid on closed sales.
By every measure that matters to people trying to buy or sell a home in Everett right now, April 2026 delivered a split verdict. More homes hit the market than at any point in recent memory — Snohomish County added inventory at a rate of 58% year-over-year, the fastest growth in the entire NWMLS region, which spans 23 counties across Washington state. But fewer homes actually changed hands, and the median price ticked down for the first time in years, suggesting that the inventory flood hasn’t yet turned into a buying spree.
The official numbers came from the Northwest Multiple Listing Service, which published its April 2026 Market Snapshot on May 7. Here’s what they show for Snohomish County — and what they mean for anyone watching Everett’s real estate market.
The headline number: 58% more homes available
Active listings in Snohomish County jumped 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. Walla Walla (+54%), Okanogan (+52.4%), Skagit (+44.5%), and Thurston (+43.3%) were the next closest, but none matched Snohomish County’s pace.
For context, we’ve been tracking Snohomish County inventory steadily this year: in March, the NWMLS showed a 51.8% inventory surge; the Madrona Group’s April Sales Activity Intensity report came in at 54.9% per our earlier housing market update. April’s official NWMLS count shows the trend isn’t just continuing — it’s accelerating. Buyers have more to choose from than they have in years.
The price picture: flat to slightly down
The median sales price in Snohomish County came in at $750,000 in April 2026, down slightly from $755,500 in April 2025. That’s a modest -0.7% decline year-over-year, but it’s notable because it’s the first time in recent cycles that prices have moved down on an annual basis rather than up.
At $750,000, Snohomish County ranks third-highest among NWMLS counties — above the NWMLS-wide median, and above where many buyers expected the county to be given the economic uncertainty of the past year. Prices haven’t collapsed. They’ve quietly, gradually softened.
What does that mean on the ground in Everett? Sellers who listed with aggressive pricing expectations six months ago are finding that buyers are no longer obligated to stretch. It doesn’t mean deals — it means more honest conversations about what homes are actually worth.
Fewer buyers are closing, but more are going under contract
Here’s the tension that defines this spring market: closed sales in Snohomish County dropped 15% year-over-year — 104 fewer completed transactions than April 2025. That sounds alarming until you see the other side of the ledger.
Pending sales (homes under contract but not yet closed) were up 2% year-over-year across the NWMLS region. Buyers are active. They’re writing offers. They’re going under contract. What they’re doing less of is getting all the way to closing.
The most likely explanation is the mortgage rate environment. Rates sitting at 6.45% are not prohibitive, but they’re high enough that some buyers — particularly those relying on proceeds from a previous sale to qualify — are pausing at the final step. The “lock-in effect” is real: homeowners who refinanced at 3% in 2021 are still choosing to stay put rather than take on a 6.45% mortgage on a new purchase, which suppresses the resale pool even as the overall inventory count rises.
35 days on market and 2 months of supply — still not a buyer’s market, technically
Average days on market in Snohomish County came in at 35 days in April 2026. That’s longer than the sub-20-day paces we saw during peak 2021-2022 frenzy, but still far from the 60-90 day markets that characterized the 2008-2012 correction.
Supply stands at 2.0 months for residential resale — a number that still technically favors sellers (a balanced market is generally considered 4-6 months). But 2.0 months is a world away from the 0.5-0.7 month readings that produced the multiple-offer chaos of 2021-2022. Buyers have real negotiating power for the first time in years. They just have to qualify.
What this means for the Everett market specifically
Everett’s market has been one of the most interesting in the county to watch this year. We’ve covered the three-price-band split — Downtown and NW Everett moving in different directions from southeast zip codes — and the rental market’s softening, with apartment rents down 2% year-over-year to an average of $1,849 per month.
The NWMLS April data adds a layer: even as more homes come available, Everett buyers are navigating a market where the homes that sell quickly are the ones priced correctly from day one. With inventory at 2.0 months, sellers have less margin for optimistic overpricing than they did even six months ago.
For buyers, the calculus is real: more options, lower median, but 6.45% rates eating into purchasing power. A $750,000 home at 6.45% with 20% down carries a monthly principal-and-interest payment of approximately $3,770 — a number that limits who can comfortably qualify without significant equity or income.
For the Everett development market, the housing data matters because it sets the backdrop for the 300-plus waterfront apartments coming in the Millwright District Phase 2, the Econo Lodge conversion of 124 studio apartments at 9602 19th St SE, and other multifamily projects in the pipeline. Softer for-sale absorption means more households staying in the rental pool — which is actually a tailwind for Waterfront Place’s apartment occupancy (currently at 95%) and for the new units coming to market in 2026-2027.
The Sounder North ending in 2033 and the Sound Transit May 28 board decision will add another data point to the transit-oriented development picture around Everett Station, with implications for what gets built and where.
The takeaway for May 2026
More homes. Slightly lower prices. Fewer completions, but steady demand going under contract. That’s the April 2026 picture in Snohomish County. It’s the most balanced spring market we’ve seen in years — not a buyer’s market, not a seller’s market, but something closer to a market where both sides have to come prepared and priced to the moment.
The next NWMLS monthly release will cover May 2026 data, typically available in the first week of June. By then we’ll have the Sound Transit May 28 board decision on Everett Link, which will add one more long-term data point to the development pipeline around Everett Station and the waterfront.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the current median home price in Snohomish County?
The official NWMLS April 2026 median sales price in Snohomish County is $750,000, down slightly from $755,500 in April 2025.
How much did housing inventory grow in Snohomish County?
Active listings grew 58% year-over-year, from 1,325 to 2,094 — the largest inventory increase of any county in the 23-county NWMLS region for April 2026.
How long are homes sitting on the market in Snohomish County?
The average days on market in April 2026 was 35 days — longer than the sub-20-day pace of 2021-2022, but far from distressed-market territory.
What is the current mortgage rate environment?
As of April 2026, the NWMLS reports an average mortgage rate of 6.45% in the area, which is limiting the pool of buyers who can comfortably complete a purchase — even as more inventory becomes available.
How many months of housing supply does Snohomish County have?
Residential resale stands at 2.0 months of supply — technically still a seller’s market, but significantly improved for buyers compared to the 0.5-0.7 month readings of 2021-2022.
Are home prices falling in Snohomish County?
The official NWMLS April 2026 data shows Snohomish County median prices down 0.7% year-over-year ($750K vs. $755.5K in April 2025) — the first year-over-year decline in recent cycles. Prices are softening, not collapsing.
Is it a buyer’s market in Snohomish County?
Not technically — 2.0 months of supply still favors sellers in most definitions — but buyers have significantly more negotiating leverage than they’ve had in years. More choices, lower median, and sellers who are increasingly priced-to-sell rather than priced-to-wish.
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