# August 2026 Tampa Bay Housing Market Update

> August 2026 Tampa Bay housing market data: median prices, days on market, inventory shifts, and what sellers in St. Pete, Pinellas, and Hillsborough need to know.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/august-2026-tampa-bay-housing-market-update
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-06-09
**Updated**: 2026-06-09
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: August 2026 Tampa Bay housing market, Tampa Bay real estate market update 2026, St. Petersburg home prices August 2026, Pinellas County housing market 2026, Tampa Bay median home price 2026, should I sell my home Tampa Bay 2026, Tampa Bay real estate inventory 2026


## What the August 2026 Tampa Bay Housing Market Actually Looks Like

The Tampa Bay housing market in August 2026 is a tale of two inventories. Elevated, non-flood-zone neighborhoods — Old Northeast, Snell Isle, parts of Historic Kenwood — are holding strong seller conditions with sub-21-day median days on market. Flood-exposed areas along the Bay are moving slower, pricing lower, and drawing harder buyer negotiations driven by post-Helene flood insurance realities.

Based on Stellar MLS data tracking through Q2 2026, the Tampa Bay metro median sale price is running approximately $415,000–$425,000 — up a modest 2.8–3.4% year-over-year — a far cry from the 15–20% annual spikes of 2021, but still positive appreciation by any historical standard.

This is not the crash some headlines promised. It's a recalibration. And where you sit in that recalibration depends almost entirely on your address.

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## Median Prices by County: Pinellas, Hillsborough, and Pasco

Here's how the three counties in Luke's service area are trending as we approach August 2026, per Stellar MLS Q2 2026 tracking data:

| County | Median Sale Price (est. Aug 2026) | YoY Change | Median Days on Market |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pinellas County | $430,000 | +3.1% | 27 days |
| Hillsborough County | $405,000 | +2.6% | 31 days |
| Pasco County | $355,000 | +1.9% | 35 days |

Pinellas is outperforming the region, driven by land scarcity — it's one of the most built-out counties in Florida, and new supply simply can't keep pace with demand the way it can in Pasco or outer Hillsborough. That structural constraint continues to put a floor under St. Pete values even as market conditions moderate.

Pasco is seeing softer conditions partly because new construction in Wesley Chapel, Land O' Lakes, and Zephyrhills gave buyers an alternative when rates climbed. That alternative is still available, which keeps resale sellers there negotiating harder.

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## The Flood Insurance Factor Is Reshaping Buyer Behavior

This is the story nobody in national real estate media is telling accurately about Tampa Bay in 2026. Post-Hurricane Helene, the NFIP and private flood markets both repriced aggressively across low-lying Pinellas County. A home in Shore Acres that carried a $3,200 flood premium in 2023 might be staring down a $6,500–$8,000 annual cost in 2026, depending on the property's elevation certificate and base flood elevation data.

That's $500–$650 per month added to a buyer's carrying cost — the equivalent of a $90,000–$110,000 mortgage in payment impact at current rates.

The result: buyers in AE and VE flood zones are asking for credits, demanding elevation certificates upfront, and walking away at higher rates than in previous cycles. Sellers in those zones who price as if it's 2022 are sitting. Those who price with flood cost reality built in are still transacting.

A few specific dynamics I'm watching heading into August:

- **Shore Acres** properties with first-floor living at or below base flood elevation are taking 45–60 days on average versus sub-21 days for elevated homes in the same zip
- **Snell Isle** waterfront is holding better than expected because buyers at that price point ($1.2M+) are less rate-sensitive and often carry private flood policies negotiated at lower premiums
- **Historic Kenwood** inland sections near 22nd Street N and 16th Avenue are seeing buyer demand pick up precisely *because* they sit outside the worst flood zones

If you own in a flood-affected area, see [how flood insurance costs affect home values in St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg) and [what happened after Hurricane Helene](/questions/flood-insurance-after-hurricane-helene) for the full picture.

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## Inventory Trends: More Homes, But Not a Glut

Active listings in Pinellas County are up approximately 37% compared to the same week in August 2023, per Stellar MLS. That sounds dramatic. In context, it means we're returning toward historical norms after an inventory crisis — not sliding into a buyer's glut.

The pre-pandemic Pinellas County average was roughly 3.5–4.5 months of supply. We're running about 2.8–3.2 months right now. That still technically favors sellers in aggregate, though the experience on the ground is highly address-dependent.

What's actually happening:

- **Luxury waterfront ($1.5M+):** Holding 60–90 days, multiple offers still happening on the right product
- **Move-in-ready single family, non-flood zone, $350K–$550K:** 14–22 days, often over asking
- **Flood-zone condos:** 45–75 days, discounting 5–10% off original list prices
- **Fixer-uppers in any zone:** Sitting longer as higher rates reduce investor leverage margins

The Zillow algorithm doesn't parse "flood zone AE with $7,200 annual flood premium" from "flood zone X with zero flood cost." That's why Zillow Zestimate accuracy in Tampa Bay runs 7–12% error rates, and why [relying on an algorithm over a local agent pulls comps blind](/questions/zillow-zestimate-accuracy-tampa-bay). One bad AVM comp in a flood zone can tank your pricing strategy before you even hit the MLS.

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## What Sellers in Tampa Bay Should Know Before August

If you're thinking about listing this summer or fall, here's what I'd be telling a seller client sitting across from me right now:

**1. Pricing discipline is back.** The "price it high and drop later" strategy of 2021 is a liability in 2026. Overpriced homes are being ignored in a way buyers simply didn't have the luxury to do in a seller's market. You get one first-week burst of traffic — price it right on day one.

**2. Flood documentation is a competitive advantage.** If your home is in a flood zone but has a solid elevation certificate, document it upfront. Include it in the MLS listing. I've seen homes in Shore Acres sell 11% faster than comparable listings purely because the seller proactively shared their elevation cert and a LOMA letter ruling out mandatory flood insurance. Buyers are scared — give them data.

**3. August is slower, but not dead.** Historically, August in St. Pete means heat, back-to-school, and snowbirds not yet back. Buyer foot traffic dips 15–20% versus the spring peak. But motivated buyers are still buying, and they're buying with less competition than they'd face in March. If you need to sell by Q4, August listing is a legitimate window — especially if you price it to move.

**4. Fall is the new spring in Tampa Bay.** I've watched this trend accelerate post-Helene. October through December now rivals March–May in transaction velocity. Snowbirds arrive with equity from Northern sales, rates sometimes catch a seasonal dip, and inventory tightens as summer listings expire. Sellers who list in September–October 2026 may see stronger buyer pools than those who listed in June.

For a deeper look at when to list, check out [the best time to sell a house in Tampa Bay in 2026](/questions/best-time-to-sell-house-tampa-bay-2026) and the [Pinellas County housing market 2026 overview](/questions/pinellas-county-housing-market-2026).

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## Neighborhood-Level Snapshot: St. Pete in August 2026

Statewide data and metro-level averages only tell part of the story. Here's what I'm seeing on the ground in the St. Pete neighborhoods I work most:

**Old Northeast (33704):** Arguably the strongest seller's market in Pinellas right now. Brick-street bungalows and Craftsman homes near Coffee Pot Bayou are moving in 10–18 days when priced at $475–$650/sq ft. The neighborhood's elevation advantage, walkability to downtown, and near-zero flood exposure keep demand high even in a moderated market.

**Snell Isle (33704):** Waterfront inventory is thin. Well-maintained concrete-block homes on the water with dock access are still seeing competitive offers above $1.4M. The Howard Frankland Bridge reconstruction timeline has briefly softened buyer interest in anything with a commute to Tampa, but local buyers and retirees are absorbing the slack.

**Shore Acres (33703):** The most segmented market I'm working right now. Non-elevated homes are a grind. Homes at BFE+2 or higher with recent flood mitigations are moving. If you own in Shore Acres, your specific block and your elevation certificate are worth more to a buyer's decision than the countywide data.

**Historic Kenwood (33705):** Gentrification momentum continues in the blocks between 22nd and 31st Streets N. Bungalow restoration projects are selling to buyers priced out of Old Northeast. Days on market here is running 22–30 days — steady but not frenzied.

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## Real Comps, Not an Algorithm

The August 2026 market in Tampa Bay is local in a way no national data report captures. Whether you're on a flood-exposed canal in Shore Acres or a brick-paved street in [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast), the comp set that matters for your pricing decision is a half-mile radius from your front door — not a countywide average.

If you want to know what your home would actually sell for in August 2026, I'll pull 3 real MLS comps tailored to your address and text them to you within 24 hours. Free, no pressure, no obligation. Just real data from a local agent who's been closing deals across Pinellas, Pasco, and Hillsborough — not an algorithm running on stale sales from two subdivisions over.

[Get your free home valuation here →](/contact)

## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What is the median home price in Tampa Bay in August 2026?**

Based on Stellar MLS trends tracking through mid-2026, the Tampa Bay metro median sale price is projected to land in the $410,000–$430,000 range by August 2026, reflecting modest but positive year-over-year appreciation. Pinellas County has held stronger than the broader metro, with St. Petersburg's most desirable ZIP codes outperforming the countywide average. Actual figures will vary by neighborhood, condition, and flood zone status.

**Q: Is it a buyer's market or seller's market in Tampa Bay in August 2026?**

As of mid-2026 data, Tampa Bay has shifted toward a more balanced market with a slight lean toward buyers in flood-exposed areas and a continued seller's advantage in elevated, non-flood-zone neighborhoods. Active inventory in Pinellas County has climbed roughly 35–40% versus the 2023 low, but well-priced, move-in-ready homes in Old Northeast and Snell Isle still see multiple offers. The market is increasingly segmented by flood risk and condition.

**Q: How long are homes sitting on the market in Tampa Bay in August 2026?**

Median days on market for Tampa Bay has stretched to approximately 28–35 days as of mid-2026, up from the 10–14 day frenzy of 2021–2022. Homes priced accurately and located outside high-risk flood zones are still moving in under 21 days. Properties with flood insurance premiums exceeding $5,000 per year are taking noticeably longer to sell and are often requiring price reductions.

**Q: How has Hurricane Helene affected Tampa Bay home values in 2026?**

Post-Hurricane Helene, flood insurance reform and buyer risk awareness have directly suppressed values in AE and VE flood zones across low-lying areas of St. Pete, Shore Acres, and parts of Pinellas Point. Homes requiring flood policies above $6,000 annually are facing buyer resistance that translates to 5–12% lower effective sale prices compared to otherwise identical non-flood-zone properties. Sellers in affected zones are seeing longer market times and more aggressive negotiation on price.

**Q: Should I sell my Tampa Bay home in August 2026?**

August is historically one of Tampa Bay's slower months for buyer foot traffic due to heat and back-to-school timing, but properly priced and well-presented homes still move. If your home is in a non-flood zone or has a documented low flood insurance cost, seller fundamentals remain solid heading into fall. I'd pull your specific comps before making a timing decision — local data by neighborhood varies significantly from countywide averages.

**Q: What ZIP codes in St. Pete are performing best in mid-2026?**

Based on Stellar MLS transaction data through Q2 2026, ZIP codes 33704 (Old Northeast, Snell Isle) and 33701 (Downtown St. Pete) are showing the strongest price-per-square-foot metrics in Pinellas County. ZIP 33703 (Shore Acres) has seen more price segmentation depending on flood zone placement within the neighborhood. 33705 (Historic Kenwood, Pinellas Point) is recovering at a slower pace due to higher flood exposure in the southern sections.


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*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
