Top Medium Teams in Charlotte, North Carolina – Ranked by Sides

Download the Rankings

Rank – City SidesTeam NameCompanyLocationSidesProfile
1Best In The Carolinas®Coldwell Banker RealtyCharlotte, NC 152.0View Profile
2The Belcher GroupRE/MAX ExecutiveCharlotte, NC 103.0View Profile
3Carl Richmond AssociatesAllen Tate RealtorsCharlotte, NC 100.0View Profile
4Clockwork Realty GroupCompassCharlotte, NC 98.0View Profile
5The Griesinger GroupeXp RealtyCharlotte, NC 89.0View Profile
6John Siddons TeamBerkshire Hathaway HomeServices Carolinas RealtyCharlotte, NC 83.0View Profile
7Kennedy Homes of the CarolinasKeller WilliamsCharlotte, NC 60.5View Profile
8Becky McGrath TeamCottingham ChalkCharlotte, NC 57.0View Profile
9Jennifer Vick & CoCompassCharlotte, NC 53.0View Profile
10Joe Huneycutt TeamCottingham ChalkCharlotte, NC 35.0View Profile

Download the Rankings

2023 Charlotte, North Carolina Housing Market Summary

Charlotte, North Carolina started 2023 with a total of 1,153 single-family homes on the market, with a median home price of $414,000 and an average price per square foot of $247. By the end of the year, inventory had decreased to 876 homes on the market (-24%), with a median home price of $440,000 (+6%) and an average price per square foot of $283 (+14%).

At the start of 2023, the median days on market (DOM) was 63 days – by the end of the year, median DOM had decreased to 56 days.

Charlotte started the year with 47% 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 38% of Charlotte homes for sale had taken a price cut.

Finally, Altos’ proprietary Market Action Index (MAI) shows that Charlotte started 2023 as a seller’s market, with an MAI score of 43; by the end of the year, the MAI had dropped to 40 – a slight seller’s advantage.

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

Housing Market News

Lower mortgage rates attracting more homebuyers 

Sep 16, 2024By

An often misguided premise I see on social media is that lower mortgage rates are doing nothing for housing demand. That’s ok — very few people are looking at the data without an agenda. However, the point of this tracker is to show you evidence that lower rates have already changed housing data. So, let’s […]

Load More

Frequently Asked Questions