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Mid-Year: What’s Really Going On in Maine’s Housing Market?

Mid-Year: What’s Really Going On in Maine’s Housing Market?

Maine’s Housing Market Halfway Through 2026: Explained Like You’re 5

What People Thought Would Happen

At the end of 2025, housing experts (people who study house sales) in Maine and across the country predicted a change in the real estate market (the world of buying and selling homes).

  • For more than five years, it had been a super strong seller’s market. That means people selling houses had all the power.
  • There were very few houses for sale (low inventory – think of it as the number of toys on the store shelf) and lots of people wanted to buy (high demand).
  • This pushed prices way up and made owning a home impossible for many.

There were signs the market might be softening (calming down), and many believed 2026 would become more balanced (fair for both buyers and sellers).

But now we are halfway through the year, and people who want to buy a home are still waiting for that shift.

Important: Even though some numbers look a bit better, buying a home is still really tough for many, especially younger folks.

Real Stories From the Trenches

Lizzy Gillen, 28, closed on a four-bedroom home in Augusta (a city in Maine) last week. She said the experience was like being “in the trenches” – meaning it was a hard fight.

Aaron Kregenow, 32, also recently bought a home in Augusta. He called the process an “emotional rollercoaster” – full of ups and downs.

(The original article includes photos of Lizzy with her husband Timothy Speropolous and their golden retriever Charlie, and Aaron with his wife Jenna Kregenow outside their old Victorian home, but the story is what matters.)

Why It Still Feels Hard, Even With “Good” News

On the surface, things are moving in a helpful direction:

  • Real estate professionals (agents who help buy/sell) report a steady rise in inventory over recent months, giving buyers more options.
  • Homes are staying on the market (waiting to be sold) a little longer.
  • The super-fast price growth of past years is slowing.

But for Aaron and Lizzy, that’s of little comfort. More options don’t matter if they’re all too expensive. Slower price growth doesn’t help if prices are already way above what you can pay.

Before the pandemic (the big world health crisis around 2020), people aged 20 to 40 made up most of the sales for Steve Levine, owner of Westbrook-based American Real Estate. Now he says, “feasibly, they just can’t do it,” and “I just don’t see it getting better.”

A Moving Goal Post (Prices Keep Rising)

Maine’s median home sale price (the middle number – half the homes sold for more, half for less) was $436,000 last month (June 2026), according to the Maine Association of Realtors. That’s a new record.

For the first six months of 2026, the average median price was $405,395.

  • This is the first year the January–June median is above $400,000, even though early months were below that.
  • At the same time in 2021, the average median was $277,208. That’s a 46% increase in five years.

Each year since 2021, the year-over-year average median (first six months) rose by at least $20,000. This year it’s only about $6,500 higher than last year – so prices still climb, but more slowly.

Tom Landry, at Benchmark Real Estate in Portland, is hopeful next year will favor buyers. But right now, he says prices and interest rates (extra money you pay the bank for lending you cash to buy a house) created an “affordability crisis” that leaves many boxed out.

Important: A slowdown in price growth is not a price drop – if the starting price is already too high, it’s still unaffordable.

Aaron’s Saving Struggle (Numbered Example)

Aaron tried to do everything right:

  1. After college, when friends bought houses, he waited to keep saving.
  2. He aimed to save 20% for a down payment (the upfront cash chunk you pay yourself).
  3. Then the pandemic hit, the market went haywire, and a few years turned into eight.
  4. He said: “I can’t control what the market is… you’re trying so hard to save but you can’t even dream of coming close… It’s like you kick a field goal and as the ball’s in the air, the field goal just moves 200 yards back.”

Every time he saved, the target moved farther away.

Still Not Enough Housing

By June, 6,515 Maine homes had changed hands this year. That’s almost 2,000 more than the first six months of last year and the best January–June since 2022.

Matt Pouliot, an Augusta-based agent, says more sales and more listings isn’t automatically improvement. People now see this as “the new normal” and those waiting are deciding “hey, it’s time to make a move.”

There’s still not enough housing to meet demand. Until the state builds a lot more – specifically entry-level homes below $400,000 – the conversation will repeat every six months.

  • Maine municipalities (town governments) issued about 7,500 building permits (official permission to build) last year.
  • They issued 3,200 certificates of occupancy (papers saying a home is safe to live in) – though only 61% of towns track these.

That technically met the 2025 target, the first step to close Maine’s gap of 84,000 homes. But Pouliot argues it’s not enough.

  • He said: “We created less than 4,000 places to live in a state of 1.4 million people. People can’t find a home because it doesn’t exist.”
  • He noted June had 1,600 sales, not 3,600, not because buyers are missing but because 2,000 more homes are missing.

This shortage also clogs the pipeline: Levine says selling your house is easy, but “where are you going to go?” scares owners of existing homes.

Putting Down Roots (Two Friends Find Homes)

Kregenow and Gillen, friends and former coworkers, entered the market in early 2026, each seeking a simple “generic Maine starter home” (a first basic house).

  • Both had a budget around $300,000, slightly above Augusta’s median.
  • Pickings were slim; everything in range needed big fixes like a new roof.

Then they heard of a four-bedroom, 120-year-old Sears and Roebuck catalog home (a house you could order from a magazine long ago) with a beautiful white picket fence.

  • Both were interested – including Aaron and his wife.
  • Lizzy hated the idea of a bidding war (multiple buyers offering more to win) with friends, so she canceled her showing.
  • Aaron and Jenna bought that house.
  • Months later, Lizzy and her husband found a ranch on 2 acres with blueberry bushes and refurbished oak floors salvaged from a 1940s barn fire in Jackman.

Though both succeeded, Lizzy lamented the young-person plight: “There shouldn’t be people saying they make great money, they went to college, they pay their bills… but they just can’t buy a house. I feel like that’s really sad. People shouldn’t have to fight so hard to stay in the place that they love.”

Summary

Halfway through 2026, Maine’s housing market shows small calming signs: more homes for sale, slower price jumps, and more sales than last year. But the median price hit a record $436,000 in June, and the six-month average is $405,395 – up 46% from 2021. Young buyers remain shut out by high prices, interest rates, and too few affordable homes being built. Experts warn that without a big boost in cheap housing, the struggle continues. Two friends, Lizzy and Aaron, eventually found homes, but only after an emotional, frustrating battle.

FAQ

Q1: What does “median home price” mean in kid terms?
A: If you line up all the house prices from smallest to biggest, the one right in the middle is the median. Half sold for more, half for less.

Q2: Why is it called a “seller’s market”?
A: Because there are few homes for sale and many wanna-be buyers, sellers can pick the best offer and charge high prices – they hold the cards.

Q3: What is a “down payment”?
A: When buying a house, you borrow most money from a bank. The down payment is the cash you pay upfront yourself, like 20% of the price.

Q4: Why don’t more building permits solve the problem fast?
A: Maine needs 84,000 extra homes. Last year only about 4,000 new living spaces were created for 1.4 million people – far too few.

Q5: Will 2027 be better for buyers?
A: Some like Tom Landry hope next year favors buyers, but others like Steve Levine doubt it. It hinges on prices, interest rates, and how many homes get built.

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