46°F
weather icon Clear

Las Vegas homebuilders thriving amid ‘buying frenzy’

Updated April 20, 2018 - 5:51 pm

Las Vegas homebuilders had their best first quarter in a decade this year amid a “buying frenzy,” a new report says.

Builders closed 1,058 new-home sales in Clark County last month, putting the first-quarter total at 2,401. That’s up 17.1 percent from the same quarter last year, Home Builders Research reported Thursday.

The median sales price of last month’s closings was $357,195, up 8 percent from a year earlier.


CLICK TO ENLARGE

Builders also pulled 1,107 new-home permits in March. That brought the year’s sum to 3,013, up “an incredible … 35 percent,” the report said.

Home Builders Research President Andrew Smith and founder Dennis Smith wrote that the first quarter was the best in a decade for closings and permits, as Las Vegas’ “buying frenzy” produced more than 1,000 of each during the same month for the first time since 2007.

Moreover, prices will likely keep climbing amid “robust demand,” rising construction costs and other factors, the Smiths wrote.

They also noted that Texas builder LGI Homes — which recently entered the local market with the purchase of a vacant subdivision in the northeast valley — targets first-time buyers, especially those living in apartments and rental homes, with heavy amounts of direct mailings.

LGI’s entry marks a rare new competitor in Las Vegas, whose roster of main homebuilders hasn’t changed much in the past several years.

And its 102-house project site, on Lake Mead Boulevard near Lamb Boulevard, sits next to what was a homeless camp as of a few weeks ago.

The encampment had a motor home, shopping carts, tents, a couch and other items scattered about, as well as a makeshift kitchen of sorts outside, with a stocked pantry, cookware and a small table.

It’s “no secret” to any homebuilder in town that there is plenty of demand for affordable new homes, and there are still some available parcels “in some of the less desirable locations” that could allow for lower-priced houses, the Smiths wrote.

“Yes, it is risky,” they said. “However, there are times when another perspective from an outside source can see an opportunity in a different way.”

Contact Eli Segall at esegall@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
 
How much did a house cost in Las Vegas before the pandemic?

Las Vegas Realtors data shows the median sale price has risen more than $160,000 since December 2019 — before the COVID pandemic swept across the globe.

 
More than 1,400 new homes planned for North Las Vegas

KB Home has purchased over 200 acres of land in North Las Vegas and plans to build a community of new homes for first-time homebuyers.

Jerry Lewis’ Las Vegas home sells again

Jerry Lewis’ former house has sold again, adding to a long list of transactions related to the property over the past few years.