Pittsburgh Real Estate · 2026 Guide
Real Estate in Pittsburgh: The Complete 2026 Buyer & Seller Guide
A plain-English look at how the Pittsburgh real estate market actually works in 2026: what homes cost, which neighborhoods to know, how the buying and selling process runs, and the numbers that should shape your next move.
Last updated: June 6, 2026 · 11 min read · By: The John Marzullo Team
Quick answer
As of spring 2026, the median home in the city of Pittsburgh sold for roughly $245,000, with homes averaging about 84 days on the market and sellers receiving near 93% of list price (Redfin). Compared with pricier U.S. metros, Pittsburgh remains one of the more affordable major housing markets, and 2026 is trending toward more balanced conditions for buyers and sellers alike.
Pittsburgh real estate at a glance
Real estate in Pittsburgh tends to surprise people coming from the coasts. The region pairs a major-metro economy, anchored by health systems, universities, and a growing technology sector, with home prices that sit well below the national median. That combination is why Pittsburgh keeps showing up on affordability lists, and why both first-time buyers and long-distance investors keep paying attention.
Here is where the city-wide numbers stood in spring 2026. Treat these as a moving snapshot rather than a fixed quote; the market shifts month to month, and your specific neighborhood and price band can look very different.
| Metric | Spring 2026 (city of Pittsburgh) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Median sale price | ~$245,000 (3 mo. ending April 2026) | Redfin |
| Year-over-year price change | Roughly flat to +4% depending on source | Redfin / Zillow |
| Median days on market | ~84 days (up from ~72 a year earlier) | Redfin |
| Sale-to-list ratio | ~93% of asking price | Redfin |
| Months of supply | ~2 months | Redfin |
Key takeaway: A sub-$250,000 median, multi-week marketing times, and a roughly two-month supply describe a market that has cooled from the frenzy of 2021 and 2022 into something closer to balance. Buyers have room to negotiate and inspect; sellers who price to current data still move.
What it costs to buy a home in Pittsburgh
The headline median masks a wide range. Within the city and its surrounding municipalities you can find condos and rowhouses under $200,000 and detached homes well into seven figures. What you pay depends far more on municipality, school district, lot size, and condition than on any single city-wide average.
A useful way to budget is to work backward from monthly payment. On a $245,000 home with 10% down and a 30-year mortgage, your principal and interest plus taxes and insurance will land in a range that many local households can carry on a single professional income, something that is simply not true in Boston, Denver, or Seattle. That math is the core of Pittsburgh’s appeal, and it is why the region draws both relocating remote workers and investors.
Price tiers across the region
The table below groups well-known areas by general price tier. These are directional, not quotes; current figures move with each month’s sales, so confirm live numbers before you set a budget.
| General tier | Representative areas | What you tend to get |
|---|---|---|
| Entry / value | Brookline, Carrick, Banksville, parts of the South Hills | Rowhouses and modest detached homes, shorter commutes, lower tax bills |
| Mid-market | Lawrenceville, Squirrel Hill, Mt. Lebanon, Bethel Park | Walkable business districts, established housing stock, strong school options |
| Upper-market | Shadyside, Sewickley, Upper St. Clair, Peters Township | Larger lots, top-rated districts, premium walkable villages |
| Premium | Fox Chapel, parts of Sewickley Heights | Acreage, custom construction, the region’s highest price points |
Want current numbers for your price range and target neighborhood?
Pittsburgh neighborhoods and suburbs
Pittsburgh is famously a city of neighborhoods, 90 of them inside the city limits, plus more than 100 surrounding municipalities in Allegheny County and the collar counties. Each has its own zoning, tax millage, and school district, which is why two homes a mile apart can carry very different total costs of ownership.
A few anchors worth knowing as you orient yourself:
Lawrenceville runs along Butler Street with a dense strip of restaurants, galleries, and converted industrial buildings; its housing stock is largely brick rowhomes, many renovated over the past decade. Squirrel Hill centers on the Forbes and Murray business district, offers Frick Park at its edge, and connects downtown by bus and the parkway. Mt. Lebanon and Upper St. Clair in the South Hills are known for highly rated school districts and a mix of mid-century and older homes, with the Red Line trolley serving Mt. Lebanon directly.
North of the rivers, Fox Chapel offers large wooded lots and the region’s premium price points, while Sewickley pairs a walkable riverfront village with access to the airport corridor. In the northern suburbs, Cranberry Township and Pine-Richland have absorbed much of the region’s newer construction and commercial growth along the I-79 and Route 19 corridors.
For a deeper look at any single community, our neighborhood guides break down housing stock, walk scores, transit, and current listings. The right area for you comes down to commute, budget, school priorities, and how much yard versus walkability you want, not to any one-size label.
The home buying process in Pittsburgh
The mechanics in Pennsylvania follow a familiar arc, with a few local wrinkles around transfer tax and inspections. Here is the path most buyers walk:
- Get pre-approved. A lender verifies income, assets, and credit and issues a letter stating your borrowing range. In a balanced market this still matters, since sellers want certainty.
- Define your search. Lock your must-haves (municipality, district, price ceiling, bed/bath count) so showings stay efficient.
- Tour and compare. With homes averaging roughly 84 days on market in 2026, you generally have time to see options and revisit before deciding.
- Write an offer. Your agent prepares the Pennsylvania Agreement of Sale, including price, deposit, contingencies, and proposed closing date.
- Inspect and negotiate. Standard inspections cover structure, roof, mechanicals, radon (common in this region), and often sewer lines in older neighborhoods.
- Appraisal and underwriting. Your lender confirms value and clears conditions.
- Close. You sign, fund, and record. Pennsylvania splits a 2% realty transfer tax, customarily shared between buyer and seller.
Two local notes worth budgeting for: radon testing is routine here and mitigation, if needed, is usually a few thousand dollars; and many older city homes still have clay or terracotta sewer laterals, so a scope inspection can save a costly surprise.
Selling a home in Pittsburgh
For sellers, 2026 rewards realistic pricing over hope. With sellers receiving around 93% of list and homes taking longer to move than they did two years ago, the listings that win are the ones priced to current comparable sales, prepared well, and marketed with strong photography and online reach.
A productive listing plan usually includes a pre-list walkthrough to flag repairs, a comparative market analysis grounded in the last 90 days of nearby sales, light staging and decluttering, professional photos, and a coordinated launch across the MLS and major portals. Pricing at or just under a logical search threshold, for example $249,900 rather than $255,000, can widen the buyer pool meaningfully.
Seller takeaway: The fastest path to a strong sale in 2026 is accurate pricing plus preparation, not a high list price you intend to cut later. Days on market climb every time a home is repriced downward.
Property taxes and closing costs
Total cost of ownership in this region is driven heavily by property taxes, which combine county, municipal, and school district millage. Two homes at the same price can carry meaningfully different annual tax bills depending on the municipality. Before you commit to an area, run the actual millage, our Allegheny County property tax guide walks through how the assessment and millage system works and how to estimate a bill.
On the transaction itself, budget for Pennsylvania’s 2% realty transfer tax (typically split with the other party), title and settlement fees, lender costs if financing, and prepaid taxes and insurance at closing. A buyer financing a purchase should generally plan for closing costs in the low single-digit percentages of price on top of the down payment.
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Disclaimer: This guide is for general information only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Market figures are drawn from third-party sources including Redfin and Zillow as of spring 2026 and change over time; verify current data before making decisions. Consult a licensed professional for advice specific to your situation.
The John Marzullo Team
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Cite this article
APA: Marzullo, J. (2026). Real Estate in Pittsburgh: The Complete 2026 Buyer & Seller Guide. The John Marzullo Team. https://johnmarzulloteam.com/real-estate-pittsburgh/
MLA: Marzullo, John. “Real Estate in Pittsburgh: The Complete 2026 Buyer & Seller Guide.” The John Marzullo Team, 6 Jun. 2026, https://johnmarzulloteam.com/real-estate-pittsburgh/.
Plain: Real Estate in Pittsburgh: The Complete 2026 Buyer & Seller Guide. by John Marzullo (The John Marzullo Team, https://johnmarzulloteam.com/real-estate-pittsburgh/, Jun 2026)


