# Pinellas County Housing Market 2026: Prices, Trends & Outlook

> Pinellas County home prices, days on market, inventory trends, and what sellers and buyers need to know heading into 2026. Real data, local insight.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/pinellas-county-housing-market-2026
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-05-17
**Updated**: 2026-05-17
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: Pinellas County housing market 2026, Pinellas County home prices 2026, St. Petersburg real estate market 2026, Tampa Bay housing market trends, Pinellas County home values, should I sell my home Pinellas County, St. Pete real estate market report


The Pinellas County housing market in 2026 is a tale of two submarkets: elevated but moderating prices countywide, with pockets of outsized strength in walkable, flood-safe neighborhoods and notable softness in areas where post-Helene flood insurance costs have hammered buyer demand. The countywide median sale price sits at approximately **$415,000** as of Q1 2026, up 3.2% year-over-year per Stellar MLS — solid appreciation, though well off the 18–22% annual gains that defined 2021 and 2022.

If you own a home in Pinellas County and you're trying to figure out what it's worth right now, or whether this is the right time to sell, this is the most current local breakdown I can give you.

## Countywide Price Trends: Where We Are in 2026

Pinellas County's median home price has climbed from roughly $290,000 in early 2021 to $415,000 in Q1 2026 — a 43% cumulative increase over five years. That's substantial real equity for longtime homeowners.

But the pace has cooled sharply. Annual appreciation ran at 3.2% in the twelve months ending Q1 2026, compared to double-digit gains through 2021 and 2022. Higher mortgage rates — the 30-year fixed hovering between 6.6% and 7.1% through early 2026 — have compressed buying power and pulled some demand out of the market.

Active inventory is up approximately 40% year-over-year countywide. That's a meaningful shift. In 2022, I'd list a home in [Shore Acres](/neighborhoods/shore-acres) and have multiple offers by the weekend. Today, pricing precision matters in a way it simply didn't two years ago.

## Neighborhood-by-Neighborhood Price Breakdown

Averages lie. The "Pinellas County median" tells you very little about what your specific home is worth. Here's how the major submarkets are performing in 2026:

| Neighborhood / Area | Median Sale Price (Q1 2026) | YoY Change | Median DOM |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snell Isle (33704) | $1,250,000+ | +5.1% | 24 days |
| Old Northeast (33704) | $720,000 | +4.2% | 19 days |
| Downtown St. Pete (33701) | $490,000 | +2.8% | 31 days |
| Historic Kenwood (33705) | $345,000 | +3.6% | 28 days |
| Shore Acres (33703) | $580,000 | -1.4% | 52 days |
| Allendale (33710) | $325,000 | +2.9% | 35 days |
| Clearwater (33755–33767) | $395,000 | +1.7% | 41 days |
| Dunedin / Safety Harbor | $435,000 | +3.1% | 33 days |

*Source: Stellar MLS, Q1 2026. Data reflects closed sales; individual properties vary.*

The divergence between [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle) and Shore Acres tells the core story of this market. Both are waterfront. Both are desirable. But Shore Acres sits almost entirely in FEMA Flood Zone AE, and post-Helene insurance reforms have pushed annual premiums to $6,000–$12,000 for many homes there — a cost that buyers are now factoring heavily into their offers.

## The Flood Insurance Factor: Post-Helene Reality

Hurricane Helene's 2024 storm surge fundamentally changed how Pinellas County buyers and lenders think about flood risk. This is the single most important market variable that a national algorithm like Zillow's Zestimate completely misses.

Here's what I'm seeing on the ground:

- **Shore Acres and Riviera Bay** homes with ground-floor living are facing the sharpest price pressure. Some sellers have had to drop 8–12% from initial list price to close.
- **Elevated homes** (first finished floor at or above base flood elevation) are commanding clear premiums — buyers will pay more upfront to avoid a $10,000 annual insurance burden.
- **Non-flood-zone neighborhoods** like [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) and parts of [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast) are seeing a measurable demand shift. Buyers who got burned by Helene insurance sticker shock are specifically filtering for X-zone properties.
- FEMA's ongoing flood map revisions for Pinellas County are expected to reclassify additional parcels into higher-risk zones through 2026–2027. If your home is near the AE zone boundary, that's worth monitoring now.

For a deep dive on this, see [flood insurance cost in St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg) and [flood insurance after Hurricane Helene](/questions/flood-insurance-after-hurricane-helene).

## Days on Market and What It Means for Sellers

The median days on market countywide is 38 days as of Q1 2026, up from 22 days in 2022. That's not a crisis — it's a normalization. But it does mean that the "list it and leave it" strategy no longer works.

What I'm seeing differentiate fast sales from slow ones right now:

- **Accurate pricing from day one.** Homes that come to market more than 3–5% above true market value are sitting. Once a listing goes stale past 45 days in Pinellas County, buyers start assuming something is wrong, and you end up taking less than you would have with a sharper opening price.
- **Pre-listing prep.** A clean inspection report, fresh paint, and addressed deferred maintenance are converting directly into cleaner offers and fewer buyer credits. See [should I renovate before selling in Tampa Bay](/questions/should-i-renovate-before-selling-tampa-bay) for a full breakdown.
- **Flood disclosure and insurance documentation.** If your home has a history of flooding or carries a high-cost flood policy, getting ahead of that in your marketing — with an elevation certificate, current policy details, and a quote from a competitive insurer — materially speeds up the sale.

## Is Zillow Getting Pinellas County Values Right?

Short answer: no, and it matters more here than in most markets.

Zillow's Zestimate algorithm carries a 7–12% median error rate in Florida, per Zillow's own published accuracy data. In Pinellas County specifically, that error compounds because:

1. Flood zone status is not priced into the Zestimate
2. Post-Helene insurance premium differences between adjacent streets aren't reflected
3. Renovation quality and lot orientation (bay-view vs. canal-facing) move values dramatically in a way square footage data can't capture
4. Pinellas County has a high share of non-arm's-length transfers (family sales, estate sales) that skew the algorithm's training data

A $580,000 Zestimate on a Shore Acres home with $10,000/year flood insurance and a first-floor master bedroom is not the same as a $580,000 Zestimate on an elevated Old Northeast craftsman with no flood insurance requirement. Real comps from a local agent who has walked both properties is the only way to know the real number.

For more on this, see [Zillow Zestimate accuracy in Tampa Bay](/questions/zillow-zestimate-accuracy-tampa-bay).

## What Sellers Should Know Heading Into Mid-2026

The Pinellas County market in 2026 still rewards prepared, well-priced sellers. Values are near all-time highs. Motivated buyers are active — particularly the wave of remote workers and retirees relocating from higher-cost metros who are less rate-sensitive than typical first-time buyers. Inventory has loosened, but Pinellas County remains supply-constrained in the premium segments.

A few things I'd prioritize if you're thinking about listing this year:

1. **Get a real valuation, not a Zestimate.** The gap between algorithm and actual market value is meaningful enough to cost you tens of thousands if you price from the wrong baseline.
2. **Understand your flood zone status and insurance costs.** Buyers are asking, lenders are asking, and if you don't have the answer ready, it slows or kills deals.
3. **Time the spring/summer window.** Historically, [the best time to sell in Tampa Bay](/questions/best-time-to-sell-house-tampa-bay-2026) is February through early June — we're in that window now.
4. **Know your competition.** Active inventory is up 40% countywide. I'll pull what's competing with your home in your zip code and show you exactly what you're up against before you go live.

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If you want a real MLS-based valuation for your Pinellas County address — not a Zestimate, actual closed comps from homes that match yours — [drop your address here](/contact) and I'll text you 3 comps within 24 hours. Free, no pressure, no obligation. That's the starting point for every smart pricing conversation I have with sellers right now.


## Frequently asked questions

**Q: Are home prices still rising in Pinellas County in 2026?**

Pinellas County median home prices are up approximately 3.2% year-over-year as of Q1 2026, according to Stellar MLS data. Price growth has moderated compared to the 2021–2022 surge, but values remain well above pre-pandemic levels. Waterfront and walkable neighborhoods like Snell Isle and Old Northeast continue to outperform the broader county average.

**Q: How long does it take to sell a home in Pinellas County in 2026?**

The median days on market for Pinellas County in Q1 2026 is approximately 38 days, up from 22 days in 2022. Well-priced homes in desirable zip codes like 33704 (Old Northeast) and 33701 (Downtown St. Pete) are still moving in under 20 days. Overpriced listings are sitting longer and requiring price reductions.

**Q: Is it a buyer's or seller's market in Pinellas County right now?**

Pinellas County is in a transitional market in 2026 — no longer the extreme seller's market of 2021–2022, but not a full buyer's market either. Active inventory has grown roughly 40% year-over-year, giving buyers more options, but tight supply in premium neighborhoods still gives well-positioned sellers meaningful leverage.

**Q: How has Hurricane Helene affected Pinellas County home values?**

Hurricane Helene's 2024 flooding triggered a significant reassessment of flood risk across Pinellas County, particularly in Shore Acres, Riviera Bay, and low-lying coastal areas. Flood insurance premiums have spiked — some Shore Acres homeowners report annual premiums exceeding $8,000 — which is compressing buyer demand and prices in those specific submarkets. Elevated and non-flood-zone properties have seen comparatively stronger demand as a result.

**Q: What is the median home price in Pinellas County in 2026?**

The median sale price in Pinellas County is approximately $415,000 as of Q1 2026, per Stellar MLS. That figure varies significantly by neighborhood — waterfront single-family homes in Snell Isle regularly close above $1.2M, while inland neighborhoods like Historic Kenwood and Allendale are producing medians closer to $310,000–$370,000.

**Q: Is 2026 a good time to sell a home in Pinellas County?**

For most Pinellas County homeowners, 2026 still represents a strong exit opportunity. Values are near all-time highs, motivated buyers remain active, and seller net proceeds are historically favorable. Timing, pricing strategy, and pre-listing preparation matter more now than they did in 2021, when nearly anything sold. An accurate, MLS-based valuation is the essential first step.


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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.*
