Why More and More Real Estate Investors Are Seeing the Potential of the Suburbs Via Unsplash

Real estate investors have bought more than 40,000 homes across the United States in the first quarter of 2024. 

A new Redfin report published Wednesday noted that investors purchased roughly 44,000 homes in the first quarter of this year. It marked a 0.5% increase from the number of homes investors scooped up in the same period in 2023. 

Specifically, Redfin investors bought 18.7% of homes sold in the first quarter of 2024, which amounts to roughly one in five homes sold during the period. That is up from 17.9% a year earlier and marks the highest share in nearly two years, the analysis noted. That being said, that is fewer homes than investors bought throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Redfin defines "investor" as any institution or business that purchases residential properties. 

Real Estate Investors Now Buying More Single-Family Homes

Real estate investors purchased 3.9% more single-family homes in the first quarter of 2024, marking the first time the share increased in nearly two years. Overall, single-family homes represented 68.9% of investor purchases in the first quarter of this year.

In comparison, investor purchases of townhouses, condominiums, cooperatives, and multifamily properties declined. Condos represented 18.7% of investor purchases, while townhouses made up 7.2% and multifamily properties represented 5.3% of all purchases. 

"When home prices got crazy high during the pandemic, investors sold out. But several months ago, they started to ramp back up. I'm not seeing a lot of home flippers in our market, but there are a lot of investors looking for single-family homes to rent out, which are in short supply." Dallas Redfin Premier agent Connie Durnal said in the report. 

Furthermore, investors bought a record 26.1% of low-priced US homes sold in the first quarter. Affordable homes represented 47.5% of all investor purchases made in the first quarter. 

"Any home that is entry-level is immediately pounced on," Brian Connelly, a Redfin Premier agent in Boston, said. "There's a mix of first-time homebuyers, investors, and second-home buyers all fighting for homes."

The analysis comes after lawmakers sponsored a bill with legislation that would bar Wall Street firms and investors from buying single-family homes in a bid to resolve the country's housing affordability crisis.

READ NEXT: US Lawmakers Mull Banning Wall Street From Buying up Single-Family Homes Amid Housing Crisis