Southern Nevada communities among top spots in US for home sales
Southern Nevada communities were among the top-selling spots in the nation for homebuilders last year despite the valley’s badly battered economy, a new report shows.
Builders sold 1,439 homes in Summerlin last year, third most among U.S. master-planned communities, and 1,017 in North Las Vegas’ Valley Vista community, which was sixth most, real estate consulting firm RCLCO reported Tuesday.
Buyers also picked up 849 homes in Henderson’s Cadence community, ranking it 11th in the U.S.; 544 in Henderson’s Inspirada community, 33rd; and 472 in Skye Canyon in the upper northwest valley, 46th in the country.
Sales in Skye Canyon, Summerlin and Cadence were up 3 percent, 9 percent and 13 percent, respectively, from 2019, and down 16 percent in Inspirada.
RCLCO did not provide year-ago figures for Valley Vista.
The coronavirus pandemic has dealt a heavy blow to Las Vegas’ tourism-centered economy, and the pipeline of home sales initially shrank fast after Southern Nevada rapidly shut down in March over fears of the virus. But the market recovered and, even as the economy limped along, kicked off a hot streak of record home prices and rising sales, thanks in large part to record-low mortgage rates.
The shrunken borrowing costs have let buyers lock in lower monthly payments and stretch their budgets.
Across Southern Nevada, builders notched more than 10,000 net sales — newly signed sales contracts minus cancellations — last year through November, topping full-year totals from 2019 and 2018, according to Las Vegas housing tracker Andrew Smith, president of Home Builders Research.
On the resale market, the median sales price of single-family homes hit an all-time high for the sixth consecutive month in November, at $345,000, trade association Las Vegas Realtors reported.
Meanwhile, Las Vegas’ unemployment rate in November, 11.5 percent, was highest in the nation among large metro areas, federal data shows.
The economic fallout from the pandemic has not hit everyone the same, helping explain why the housing market has taken off despite the chaos around it. Job losses have hit the service sector especially hard, in many cases affecting lower-wage workers who couldn’t afford to buy a house anyway, real estate broker Tom Blanchard, last year’s president of LVR, has said.
Among master-planned communities, Summerlin has long been a top-selling spot for builders. It spans 22,500 acres along the valley’s western rim, boasts more than 100,000 residents and commands some of the highest home and land prices in Southern Nevada.
David O’Reilly, CEO of Summerlin developer Howard Hughes Corp., which sells land there to homebuilders, said in an interview with the Review-Journal last month that the community saw “amazing” results in 2020.
“The way we got there has been nothing short of a yo-yo,” he said.
This story has been updated with revised figures from RCLCO about Valley Vista’s sales total, Inspirada’s ranking, and the change in Skye Canyon’s sales total from 2019.
Contact Eli Segall at esegall@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.