Top Agents in Indianapolis, Indiana – Individuals By Sides

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Rank – City SidesFull NameCompanyLocationSidesProfile
Michael JonesRE/MAX At the CrossingIndianapolis, IN 85.0View Profile
Jeremy SandlinF.C. Tucker CompanyIndianapolis, IN 77.0View Profile
Scott HackmanCENTURY 21 ScheetzIndianapolis, IN 74.0View Profile
Lisa Stokes-BearCENTURY 21 ScheetzIndianapolis, IN 62.0View Profile
Kristal MunozRE/MAX At the CrossingIndianapolis, IN 58.0View Profile
Kristen YazelCENTURY 21 ScheetzIndianapolis, IN 53.0View Profile
Steffanie HensleyRE/MAX At the CrossingIndianapolis, IN 48.0View Profile
Zachary WilliamseXp RealtyIndianapolis, IN 42.0View Profile
Mary WernkeEncore Sotheby’s International RealtyIndianapolis, IN 41.0View Profile
Mary BoustaniKeller WilliamsIndianapolis, IN 41.0View Profile

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2023 Indianapolis, Indiana Housing Market Summary

Indianapolis, Indiana started 2023 with a total of 1,544 single-family homes on the market, with a median home price of $250,000 and an average price per square foot of $141. By the end of the year, inventory had increased to 1,634 homes on the market (+5%), with a median home price of $262,000 (+4%) and an average price per square foot of $165 (+17%).

At the start of 2023, the median days on market (DOM) was 63 days – by the end of the year, median DOM had remained the same at 63 days.

Indianapolis started the year with 51% of homes taking a price cut (for reference, 35% is the national average for price reductions in a ‘normal’ year.) By the end of the year, about 52% of Indianapolis homes for sale had taken a price cut.

Finally, Altos’ proprietary Market Action Index (MAI) shows that Indianapolis started 2023 as a seller’s market, with an MAI score of 39; by the end of the year, the MAI had dropped to 36 – a slight seller’s advantage.

This market summary is powered by Altos Research – click here to run a free report for your area.

Real Estate News

Opinion: How real estate will come back stronger 

Oct 14, 2024By

The latest tumult in real estate feels like our world has been turned upside down yet again. But underneath all the frenzy, I see a genuine opportunity for us to turn this into a positive and come back even stronger than before. I often think of the term “Anti-fragile” from the book of the same name by Nassim Taleb. The principle is that people and organizations can build their success around being able to come back even stronger after a wallop, instead of just withstanding the impact. This is real estate’s moment to become even more anti-fragile.

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