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Georgia's Housing Market in 2026: Atlanta Is Normalizing, Savannah Is Booming, and the Rest of the State Nobody's Talking About | Local Home Buyers USA
Georgia Market Spotlight · March 2026

Atlanta Is Normalizing.
Savannah Is Booming.
The Rest Nobody's
Talking About Yet.

The Georgia Realtors president said publicly in February 2026: "All indicators give us reason to believe that 2026 will be a year of stabilization and recovery." She's right — but it reads completely differently depending on which Georgia you're in. Here's how to read all three.

Market 1 · Metro Atlanta
The Normalization
$360–415K · 56–98 days · 6 months supply · Buyer leverage returning for first time since 2019
Market 2 · Savannah
The Economic Rocket
Hyundai Metaplant 8,100 jobs · Gulfstream expansion · Port authority growth · 3–5% forecast
Market 3 · Secondary Cities
The Quiet Outperformers
Columbus +10.3% (highest in state) · Macon +5.6% · Augusta steady · Athens (UGA anchor)
📋 Georgia Realtors 2025 Annual Report (Feb 3, 2026): Statewide median $360,000 (flat YoY) · Avg price $448,554 (+2%) · 123,440 closed sales · 3.9 months supply · 56 days on market (+21.7%) · 95.4% sale-to-list Read the 2026 Playbook →
The Big Picture

One State. Three Completely
Different Housing Stories.

Georgia's 2025 Annual Report — the most authoritative source for the state, compiled from 14 MLSs representing 92% of real estate activity — tells a story of a market finding its equilibrium after years of pandemic-era distortion.

The headline from the Georgia REALTORS® 2025 Annual Report is deceptively simple: statewide median price held at $360,000 (0.0% YoY), with 123,440 closed sales (-1.1%) and 211,349 new listings (+7.8%). Average price rose modestly to $448,554 (+2%). Months of supply expanded to 3.9 (+14.7%). Days on market climbed to 56 (+21.7%). Sellers received 95.4% of original list price (-1.0 point).

Brianne Drake, 2026 President of the Georgia REALTORS®, framed it precisely: "Georgia's housing market is moving toward balance between buyers and sellers, and away from the red-hot seller's market that we've seen in recent years." She added: "While more inventory has come on the market throughout the state, we still have a way to go before we describe inventory as plentiful." Both statements are true simultaneously — and that tension is the defining characteristic of Georgia's 2026 market.

Redfin's January 2026 statewide snapshot confirmed the trend: $359,000 median (-0.21% YoY), 80 days on market (up 9 days), 55,653 homes for sale (+10.3% YoY), 6 months supply, 96.8% sale-to-list, 14.3% of homes above ask, and 25% with price drops. By any measure, this is a market in genuine transition from seller-dominant to balanced — and that transition creates the best buyer opportunity Georgia has offered since before the pandemic.

What makes Georgia's story complex is that the statewide numbers mask dramatic divergence beneath them. Metro Atlanta is normalizing — even declining modestly by some measures — while Savannah is anchored by one of the largest economic catalysts in the South. Columbus posted the highest median price gain in the state at +10.3% while most of the national conversation was still debating whether Atlanta would recover. The state that makes the most sense in 2026 is the one you read by submarket, not headline.

For buyers approaching Georgia, the 2026 Home Buyers Playbook walks through how to position offers in markets where buyer leverage is genuinely returning — a situation that didn't exist in Georgia in 2021, 2022, or most of 2023.

Georgia Realtors 2025 Annual Report — Key Metrics
Statewide Median Price$360,000 (0.0% YoY)
Average Sale Price$448,554 (+2.0%)
Closed Sales123,440 (−1.1%)
New Listings211,349 (+7.8%)
Homes for Sale40,189 (+13.1%)
Months of Supply3.9 (+14.7%)
Days on Market56 days (+21.7%)
Sale-to-List Ratio95.4% (−1.0 pt)
New Construction Supply4.2 months
Prev. Owned Supply3.7 months

"All indicators give us reason to believe that 2026 will be a year of stabilization and recovery."

— Brianne Drake, 2026 President, Georgia REALTORS® · February 3, 2026
Georgia Realtors · February 2026

"Georgia's housing market is moving toward balance between buyers and sellers, and away from the red-hot seller's market that we've seen in recent years. While more inventory has come on the market throughout the state, we still have a way to go before we describe inventory as plentiful."

— Brianne Drake, 2026 President, Georgia Association of REALTORS®

The Three Georgias

Which Market
Are You Actually In?

The statewide $360,000 median tells you almost nothing useful. What matters is whether your transaction is happening in Atlanta's normalization, Savannah's economic boom, or the secondary cities the state's best appreciation data is quietly coming from.

1
Market 1
Metro Atlanta
"The Normalization" — and a real buyer window
$360–415K −0.8% to flat YoY
City DOM (Jan '26)
98 days
Metro Supply
4.4–6.5 mo
Sale-to-List
96.8%
Zillow Forecast
−1.3%

Atlanta city median hit $377K in January 2026 (Redfin), down 0.79% YoY, with 98 days on market — up sharply from 88 days last year. Active listings rose ~44% in 2025, bringing metro supply to 4.4 months. Zillow projects a modest −1.3% decline through mid-2026. This is Atlanta's first genuine buyer's market since 2019. Buyers can now request inspections, negotiate concessions, and take time to compare. The Beltline corridor and walkable in-town neighborhoods (Inman Park, Virginia-Highland, Grant Park) hold relative strength. Suburban rings — Gwinnett, Cherokee, Forsyth, Henry — are seeing more options and longer market times. New construction represented major competition in 2025, capturing 98% of list price vs 95% for resale.

→ Buyer Window Open · Price Carefully
2
Market 2
Savannah
"The Economic Rocket" — one of the South's strongest job stories
$335–349K −0.5 to −2.9% (temp. correction)
Hyundai Jobs
8,100+
Inventory YoY
+29.6%
'26 Forecast
+3–5%
New Const. Share
10.3%

Savannah's near-term price data looks soft — Redfin shows $349K (-2.9% YoY) and Zillow's ZHVI at $335,719 (-0.5%). But context completely changes the picture. The Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant America is projected to create over 8,100 direct jobs, making it one of the largest economic catalysts anywhere in the Southeast. Combined with Gulfstream Aerospace's continued expansion and the Georgia Ports Authority — the third-busiest port complex in the nation — Savannah has a jobs-to-demand pipeline that makes short-term price softness a buying opportunity, not a warning. The 2026 local forecast is 3–5% appreciation. Historic and waterfront properties maintain scarcity premiums. Inventory rose 29.6% YoY, the most in the state — which is creating selection for buyers who act before the Hyundai workforce fully arrives.

↑ Economic Momentum · Buy Before Workforce Arrives
3
Market 3
Columbus, Macon,
Augusta & Athens
"The Quiet Outperformers" — best appreciation data in the state
$180–320K +3–10% YoY range
Columbus YoY
+10.3%
Macon YoY
+5.6%
Athens Forecast
~+3%
Macon Inventory
+25.1%

While national media focused on Atlanta's cooling, Columbus posted the highest median price gain in the state at +10.3% — driven by persistently low inventory and high demand. Macon delivered +5.6%, with inventory up 25.1% YoY. Augusta benefits from the Masters Golf Tournament economy and stable Fort Gordon/Cyber Command employment. Athens has the University of Georgia anchor and a forecast of ~3% appreciation. These markets share a common trait: accessible price points ($180K–$320K range) with real employment anchors, making them some of the best risk-adjusted value plays in the South. They rarely make national headlines — which is exactly why the data on them is so compelling.

↑ Best Appreciation Data · Underreported Value
Savannah Deep Dive

Why Savannah Is the Most
Underpriced Economic Story in Georgia.

The near-term price data looks sideways. The employment data looks like one of the most significant economic transformations in Georgia's history. For buyers who read both layers, the gap between price and value is real.

  • Hyundai Metaplant America 8,100+ direct jobs projected
    Largest economic catalyst in SE Georgia
  • Gulfstream Aerospace Continued expansion
    Executives + aerospace workforce
  • Georgia Ports Authority 3rd busiest port complex in US
    Logistics + maritime employment base
  • SCAD (Art & Design) Creative economy anchor
    Faculty, staff, alumni retention
  • Tourism + Hospitality 14M+ annual visitors
    Short-term rental demand

The finite supply of premium properties — historic homes in the landmark district and waterfront estates — ensures that high-demand segments remain competitive regardless of broader inventory increases. Luxury and historic properties are forecast to outperform the broader Savannah market in 2026 due to irreplaceable scarcity.

Savannah Median (Redfin)
$349K
−2.9% YoY. Short-term softness against a long-term demand surge from Hyundai workforce.
Hyundai Jobs (Projected)
8,100+
Direct job creation from Metaplant alone — not counting supplier and service economy ripple.
Inventory YoY Change
+29.6%
Highest inventory expansion of any major Georgia market — creating buyer selection before demand peaks.
2026 Appreciation Forecast
3–5%
Local Savannah real estate analysts. Among the strongest metro-level forecasts in Georgia.
New Construction Share
10.3%
Highest new construction market share in Georgia (GAR 2025 Annual Report). Supply is growing but demand trajectory is stronger.
Downtown Historic Median
$610K
−5.8% YoY (Redfin). Premium correction creating rare entry into Savannah's landmark district.
GAR 2025 Annual Report — City Performance

How Georgia's Major Markets
Actually Performed in 2025

The Georgia REALTORS 2025 Annual Report (Feb 2026) is the definitive source — compiled from 14 MLSs across the state. The city-level data tells a story very different from the Atlanta-dominated headlines.

Columbus
+10.3%
Macon
+5.6%
Augusta
+~3%
Savannah
~Flat
Atlanta Metro
~Flat/−

Median Price YoY Change 2025 · Source: Georgia REALTORS® 2025 Annual Housing Market Report · February 3, 2026

Market Median Price YoY Change Key Driver 2026 Position Buyer Signal
Atlanta (City) $377K (Redfin Jan '26) −0.8% YoY Normalization, inventory +44% Buyer Window Negotiate. Request inspections. Take your time.
Atlanta Metro (28 counties) $385–415K ~Flat / −1.3% Sub-market divergence, suburban softness Balanced / Buyer Suburbs offering selection. Beltline-adjacent holds value.
Columbus Not published +10.3% (highest in state) Fort Benning/Moore, low inventory Seller's Market Move fast. Price is supported by supply constraint.
Macon ~$180–220K range +5.6% Affordability + inventory +25.1% Growing Accessible entry, solid appreciation. More selection than last year.
Savannah $335–349K −0.5 to −2.9% (correction) Hyundai Metaplant, port, Gulfstream Long-term strongest Buy before Hyundai workforce fully arrives. 3–5% forecast.
Augusta Mid–upper $200Ks Steady / Modest + Cyber Command, Masters economy Stable Reliable government employment base. New construction +8.6% share.
Athens Mid $200K–$320K ~+3% forecast University of Georgia anchor University-Resilient UGA provides year-round demand floor. Rental yields strong.
If You're Buying in Georgia
More Leverage Than Any Point Since 2019. Know Which Market You're In.
  • Metro Atlanta's 98-day DOM and 6+ months of supply in some pockets represent the best buyer conditions in the market since before the pandemic. You can request inspections, negotiate closing credits, and ask for repairs — things that were completely off the table in 2021–2023. This is not a distressed market. It's a normalized one. That's even better.
  • Savannah's near-term softness (-2.9% YoY on Redfin) is a window, not a warning. The Hyundai Metaplant creating 8,100+ jobs, Gulfstream's expansion, and port growth give Savannah a demand pipeline that most Georgia markets don't have. Buyers who read the employment data and act before the workforce fully arrives are positioned in exactly the way that generates long-term equity.
  • If you're focused on affordability and appreciation, Columbus (+10.3%) and Macon (+5.6%) are the most compelling combination in the state — low entry price, real employment anchors (Fort Moore/Benning, healthcare, logistics), and the kind of appreciation data that usually comes from markets getting discovered. Use the 2026 Buyers Playbook to position your offer in seller-leaning markets like Columbus.
  • New construction is competing hard in Georgia — capturing 98% of list price vs. 95% for resale in 2025. If you're comparing new builds to resale, make sure you're comparing total costs, not just list price. Builder incentives (rate buydowns, upgrades) can change the math significantly.
  • Athens and Augusta offer university and government employment floors that keep those markets resilient regardless of broader cycles. Athens especially has rental demand from UGA that sustains buyer competition year-round.
If You're Selling in Georgia
The Market Has Shifted. Preparation and Pricing Are Now the Whole Game.
  • The GAR president said it directly: 56 days on market (+21.7%), 95.4% sale-to-list (-1.0 pt), and 211,349 new listings (+7.8%). This is not 2022. Buyers have choices, time, and patience. Sellers who price on 2021–2022 comps, skip professional staging, or list without strong marketing will generate the majority of those 25% price-reduction listings we're seeing statewide.
  • Columbus and Macon sellers have real leverage right now. Columbus at +10.3% YoY is a genuine seller's market — low inventory, high demand, limited competition. Price accurately and you'll move quickly. Don't over-test the market just because the numbers are strong.
  • Savannah sellers of historic district and waterfront properties maintain significant scarcity premiums. The downtown historic median at $610K (-5.8% YoY per Redfin) has corrected — which means sellers in this segment need to price to current comps, not peak 2022. But the long-term case for Savannah is stronger than any other Georgia market.
  • Atlanta sellers: presentation and pricing determine everything in 2026. With active listings up 44% in the metro, buyers are absolutely comparing. A well-priced, well-photographed, professionally staged home in the right neighborhood still generates offers quickly. The difference is that "well-priced" now means 2026 comps, not neighborhood peak. Our We Sell With You program provides the strategy and execution that separates results in a competitive-presentation market.
  • Cash buyers are active in Georgia's affordable markets — Columbus, Macon, Augusta, parts of outer Atlanta. In a state where values remain well above pre-COVID levels, know your equity position before accepting any first-call offer. What cash buyers don't tell you covers this directly. And if you're selling a condo in Atlanta, the condo selling guide covers the HOA and financing dynamics specific to your property type.
C
Claudia
Our Voice to the World · Local Home Buyers USA

"People are reading Georgia through the Atlanta headlines and missing the actual story. Columbus posted the highest price appreciation in the state in 2025 — higher than Atlanta, higher than Savannah, higher than every market that gets national coverage — and almost nobody outside Georgia knows it. Savannah has one of the strongest employment demand pipelines in the South from the Hyundai Metaplant and it's sitting at a near-term price correction. Atlanta is giving buyers leverage they haven't had since 2019. All three of those situations are opportunities. The mistake is treating Georgia like one market when it's clearly three."

Meet Claudia — Our Voice to the World →
Local Home Buyers USA Georgia Market Spotlight · March 2026 · Slug: georgia-housing-market-2026-atlanta-savannah-spotlight Data: Georgia REALTORS 2025 Annual Report (Feb 3, 2026) · Redfin · Zillow · Norada · Innago · AtlantaFi · Justin Landis Group · Heather Murphy Group · RealWealth · LEX18 For informational purposes only. Not financial or real estate advice.