Las Vegas’ housing market finished the year with a bump in sales and prices compared to the end of 2015.
Housing
Two master-planned communities in the Las Vegas Valley were among the top 10 nationally for home sales last year, a new report shows.
This rural Southern Nevada outpost doesn’t seem like an ideal spot for new real estate projects. But for Las Vegas broker and investor Mason Harvey, Indian Springs is ripe for construction.
Nevada’s foreclosure mediation program, created at the height of the housing crisis to give borrowers a last chance to hold onto their homes, will accept its last enrollments at the end of this month as it nears a legislatively mandated closure.
Summerlin re-emerged in the national spotlight in 2016, and developers of the 26-year-old master-planned community are relishing therole it will play in Southern Nevada over the next two decades.
U.S. home values climbed last month at the fastest annual pace since the boom years, with Las Vegas ahead of the national average, a new report shows.
Builders closed 762 new-home sales in Clark County last month, bringing the year’s tally through November to 7,035, up 14.5 percent from the same 11-month period in 2015, according to Las Vegas housing tracker Home Builders Research.
Foreclosure filings climbed in Las Vegas last month despite dropping nationally, a new report shows.
Housing advocates have sued mortgage giant Fannie Mae, alleging a “stark pattern of discriminatory conduct” over its upkeep of foreclosed homes in Las Vegas and dozens of other metro areas.
The median sales price of previously owned single-family homes — the bulk of the market — was $240,000 in November in Southern Nevada.
A Las Vegas real estate association is ditching an older neighborhood to build a new headquarters in the southwest valley, perhaps the fastest-growing area of Southern Nevada.
When Jose Navarro started working at foreclosure auctions during the recession, Las Vegas’ economy was a mess – but it was a great time to flip houses.
Las Vegas’ housing market is a far cry from the boom days of a decade ago, but at least one thing is approaching those levels again: new-home prices.
Ousted this year from running the Silicon Valley company they founded, a wealthy tech couple has snapped up a few hundred Las Vegas condos and moved to the top floor of Donald Trump’s gold-gilded tower near the Strip.
Thomas Benson is a purported “sovereign citizen,” or a follower of anti-government ideology whose adherents are known for financial scams, nonsensical writings and occasional violence.