Each year I calculate the median price stated on deeds recorded for each of the ten communities within the Middlesex North Registry District. This year, I decided to get a head start and did the calculations at the end of November, basing the 2016 median sales price on the first eleven months of the year (I'll redo the numbers in January for the full year). Here are the numbers for each town, compared to the previous year and to the highest price reached during the real estate bubble:
Lowell: 2016 median price of $229,154 is 4% higher than 2015 median of $221,000. Lowell's highest median was $254,900 in 2005.
Billerica: 2016 median price of $365,000 is 4% higher than 2015 median of $350,000. It also exceeds the bubble median of $359,900 from 2005 for the first time.
Carlisle: 2016 median price of $569,500 is 2% higher than 2015 median of $560,000. Carlisle's highest median was $597,500 in 2007.
Chelmsford: 2016 median price of $330,000 is 2% higher than 2015 median of $323,000, and exceeds the bubble median of $325,000 in 2005 for the first time.
Dracut: 2016 median price of $271,000 is 4% higher than 2015 median of $259,900, but still trails the bubble median of $275,450 from 2008.
Dunstable: 2016 median price of $430,000 is statistically the same as 2015 median of $430,400, and still trails bubble median of $460,000 in 2005.
Tewksbury: 2016 median price of $354,900 is 8% higher than 2015 median of $329,450, and exceeds the bubble median of $345,000 in 2005 for the first time.
Tyngsborough: 2016 median of $314,950 is 9% higher than 2015 median of $288,500, but still trails the bubble median of $350,000 in 2006.
Westford: 2016 median of $405,000 is 7% higher than 2015 median of $380,000, but still trails the bubble median of $420,000 from 2005.
Wilmington: 2016 median of $403,500 is 1% higher than 2015 median of $400,000. Both of these exceed the bubble median high of $384,450 from 2006.
Monday, December 05, 2016
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