Coral Springs home sale prices surge, city named hot market, December data shows
Coral Springs home prices rose sharply from November to December 2025 as the Broward County real estate market ended the year on a high note, new data shows.
Broward home sales rose for a fourth consecutive month in December, hinting that a yearslong decline in South Florida could be starting to reverse, according to the MIAMI Association of Realtors.
Residential real estate sales increased 10.6% year-over-year for single-family homes in December and 5.2% for condos and townhomes.
“Broward County and Fort Lauderdale real estate finished 2025 strong, and we expect demand to increase in 2026 because of South Florida wealth migration, lower mortgage rates and more,” Broward-MIAMI President Sophia Allen said.
On the whole, Broward County home sales were still down in 2025 from 2024, but the rate of decline is slower in South Florida than from 2022-2024, according to the firm. In 2025, single-family home sales were down 1.9%, and condo sales dipped 9.4%.
Coral Springs was named one of the hottest markets in Broward in the fourth quarter of 2025, based on the number of homes sold relative to the number of listings. There was only a 2.8 months supply of inventory in the city in Q4, the third lowest in the county.
The median price of the 80 homes that were sold in Coral Springs in December jumped up sharply, by nearly $50,000, compared to November’s prices. The median sale price was $705,000 in December, compared to $657,000 in November, when 74 homes were sold. Condo prices remained flat.
Coral Springs homes that sold in December were also far more expensive than the $614,500 median price of homes in Broward at large, according to the data.
While Coral Springs was the third-largest market in Broward in 2025 in terms of single-family home sales, it continues to have a much smaller condo and townhome sector. The median price of condo and townhome sales, of which there were 34, was $203,000, compared to the county average of $257,000.
The city’s single-family home market performed better than December 2024, with a 21% increase in year-over-year closed sales.
“Bolstered by declining mortgage rates, Southeast Florida’s housing market finished strong in December 2025, with both single-family and condominium sales up a remarkable 14% from one year ago,” MIAMI Realtors Chief Economist Gay Cororaton said. “This momentum is likely to pick up further in 2026, leading to heightened buyer competition and higher prices as demand intensifies.”