Shawnee Housing Market 2025 Year in Review. What the Headlines Missed
If you only followed national housing headlines in 2025, you probably heard a lot of noise. Interest rates. Market slowdowns. Buyer hesitation. Depending on the week, the story swung from “everything is frozen” to “the worst is yet to come.”
That’s not what played out in Shawnee.
Yes, the market cooled compared to the frantic pace of recent years.
Cooling does not mean collapsing. What we saw locally in 2025 was a market returning to something healthier and more sustainable.
More homes came on the market. Buyers had more choices. Homes took longer to sell. Prices still rose, just more calmly.
This year-end review examines single-family home data for Shawnee, utilizing MLS numbers for ZIP codes 74801 and 74804, with some contextual information from the broader Central Oklahoma market and the national landscape.
The big picture for Shawnee in 2025
More homes listed, slightly fewer sold
In 2025, 861 single-family homes were newly listed in Shawnee. That’s an 8.2% increase compared to 2024.
At the same time, 615 homes sold, down 5.5% from the prior year. Pending sales finished the year essentially flat, down less than 1%.
What this tells us is important. Homeowners were more willing to list, but buyers took more time deciding. That’s not a stalled market. That is a market adjusting to higher rates and more normal conditions.
Prices rose, but without the frenzy
The median sales price in Shawnee in 2025 was $218,750, up 4.2% from 2024.
That kind of price growth shows stability without overheating. Prices did not spike artificially, and they did not fall apart. They moved steadily, which is what you want in a market that people live in, not speculate on.
Homes continued to sell close to list price as well. The percentage of list price received stayed essentially unchanged year over year.
Homes took longer to sell. That’s normal.
In 2025, the average days on market rose to 50 days, up from 42 days in 2024. This shift is often misunderstood.
Longer marketing times do not automatically mean something is wrong. In an overheated market, buyers rush and waive protections. In a calmer market, buyers slow down, compare options, and make more thoughtful decisions.
That’s exactly what we saw in Shawnee.
December 2025. A classic year-end market
December always behaves differently, and 2025 was no exception.
Compared to November:
- – New listings dipped from 61 to 54
- + Homes sold increased from 41 to 47
- = Pending sales held steady at 41
- – Median sales price shifted from $238,500 to $204,000
- + Days on market increased from 38 to 66
- – Active inventory declined slightly to 211 homes
December price numbers often bounce around because fewer homes are closing. One or two higher-end or lower-end sales can move the median. That is why December snapshots should always be read in context of the full year.
The full-year data tells a more reliable story.
Shawnee prices in 2025 finished higher than in 2024 overall.
What the showings data tells us about buyer demand
Showings are a helpful way to measure buyer activity before contracts are signed.
In December, Shawnee recorded 384 total showings, virtually identical to 383 showings in November. Buyer interest averaged 1.9 showings per active listing in both months.
This doesn’t mean each home sells after 1.9 showings. It is a market-wide indicator of how active buyers are compared to how many homes are available. In faster seller’s markets, this number tends to be higher because buyers feel pressure to see everything quickly. In a more balanced market, fewer showings per listing usually mean buyers are narrowing their choices, not disappearing.
One interesting note. December showings increased in higher price ranges, suggesting motivated buyers were still in the market, just more selective.
Inventory and months supply. Why this matters
Months supply of inventory estimates how long it would take to sell all homes currently on the market if no new listings were added, based on the current pace of sales.
As a general rule:
- About 6 months of supply is considered a balanced market
- Less than 6 months favors sellers
- More than 6 months begins to favor buyers
Shawnee finished December with about 4.0 months of supply, down slightly from 4.4 months in November. That still places Shawnee in a seller’s market, but a far calmer one than we experienced in recent years.
Buyers have more options. Sellers need to be more intentional. A balanced market is usually healthier long-term than an overheated one.
Shawnee versus the bigger picture
Across the broader Central Oklahoma market, inventory increased in 2025, and months supply moved closer to balanced levels. Shawnee followed that same pattern rather than showing signs of stress or sudden decline.
Nationally, existing-home sales remained subdued, and most headlines focused on interest rates and affordability challenges. Those issues are real. But local markets don’t all behave the same way.
In Shawnee, homes continued to sell every month. Prices held up over the year. Buyer activity remained steady. That local context matters, especially when national coverage makes it sound like one story applies everywhere.
What this means heading into 2026
For sellers
The market rewards sellers who:
- Price their listing based on real data, not 2025 headlines
- Prepare the home so buyers feel confident
- Understand that negotiations are part of a normal transaction
Homes still sell. They just sell best when expectations match today’s conditions.
For buyers
More inventory means:
- More choices
- Less pressure
- Better opportunities for thoughtful negotiation
The buyers who do best are prepared, patient, and well-advised.
Want the numbers for your neighborhood?
Shawnee is not one single market. Different price ranges and neighborhoods behave differently.
If you want a quick, plain-English snapshot for your specific area or price point, I’m happy to run a micro-report and walk through it with you. Just click the button below to request your Local Market Value Assessment.
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