OPPORTUNITY ZONE HOME PRICE GROWTH MATCHES REST OF NATION
Home prices rose in 54.6 percent of census tracts inside and outside Opportunity Zones in third quarter.
The analysis found that median single-family home and condo prices rose quarter-over-quarter in half (49.7 percent) of the Opportunity Zones with sufficient data in both quarters. Compared to the third quarter of 2024, median home prices rose in 54.6 percent of Opportunity Zones.
The third quarter of 2025 saw 11.3 percent of opportunity zones (422) hit their highest median home price since the Great Recession in 2008. And typical home prices rose by at least 10 percent year-over-year in 36.2 percent of Opportunity Zones with sufficient data to analyze.
"Opportunity Zones were just as likely to see home prices grow as neighborhoods outside these zones, showing these areas are also benefitting from this sustained rise in home prices," said
Opportunity Zones are defined in the Tax Act legislation as census tracts in or alongside low-income neighborhoods that meet various criteria for redevelopment in all 50 states, the
Median home prices also rose in 54.6 percent of census tracts outside of Opportunity Zones, meaning that tracts inside the zones were equally as likely to see price growth as those outside the zones.
However, median prices inside Opportunity Zones continue to be much lower than those outside. The typical home sales price was above the national median of
Half of the
Due to the small number of sales in many Opportunity Zones, median price measurements can be very volatile. The typical sales prices rose or fell by more than 5 percent year-over-year in 80 percent of
Major findings from the report:
- Median prices for single family homes and condos rose from the second to the third quarter of 2025 in 49.7 percent (1,644) of the 3,311 Opportunity Zones with sufficient data in both quarters. Year-over-Year, median prices rose in 54.6 (1,827) of the 3,346 Opportunity Zones with sufficient data.
- Home prices rose year-over-year in the same share of tracts outside of Opportunity Zones: 54.6 percent (30,213) of 55,379 tracts with sufficient data.
- A higher share of tracts inside Opportunity Zones (36.2 percent) saw median prices grow by more than 10 percent year-over-year compared to tracts outside (31.6 percent).
- Opportunity Zones with the lowest median home values were also least likely to see price growth, with only 39.7 percent of zones where the median sales price was less than
$125,000 experiencing year-over-year growth. - Among states with at least 25 Opportunity Zones with sufficient data to analyze,
Arkansas had the highest share of Opportunity Zones where median home prices grew year-over-year (median prices rose in 76 percent of the state's Opportunity Zones). It was followed byNew York (prices rose in 71.4 percent of zones),Minnesota (prices rose in 67.2 percent of zones);Alabama (prices rose in 65.2 percent of zones); andIowa (prices rose in 64.7 percent of zones). - Typical home prices inside Opportunity Zones tended to be lower than outside. Only 20 percent of
Opportunity Zone tracts had median sales prices above the national median of$370,000 . - Most Midwestern Opportunity Zones (54 percent) had median home values below
$175,000 , compared to 38 percent in the Northeast, 37 percent in the South, and 5 percent in the West.
Conclusion
ATTOM's Q3 2025 Opportunity Zones Report reveals that home prices in Opportunity Zones rose at the same pace as the rest of the nation in the third quarter of 2025, increasing year-over-year in 54.6 percent of zones analyzed and matching the share of growth in non-
Report methodology
The ATTOM Opportunity Zones analysis is based on home sales price data derived from recorded sales deeds. Statistics for previous quarters are revised when each new report is issued as more deed data becomes available. ATTOM's analysis compared median home prices in census tracts designated as Opportunity Zones by the Internal Revenue Service. Except where noted, tracts were used for the analysis if they had at least five sales in the second quarter of 2025. Median household income data for tracts and counties comes from surveys taken by the U.S. Census Bureau (www.census.gov) from 2019 through 2023. The list of designated Qualified Opportunity Zones is located at U.S. Department of the Treasury. Regions are based on designations by the Census Bureau.
About ATTOM
ATTOM
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From flexible delivery solutions—such as Property Data APIs, Bulk File Licenses, Cloud Delivery, Real Estate Market Trends—to AI-Ready datasets, ATTOM fuels smarter decision-making across industries including real estate, mortgage, insurance, government, and more.
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SOURCE ATTOM
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