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Is The Housing Market Crashing in Chandler?



Chandler, AZ Real Estate  |  Market Update  |  July 2026  |  Dawn Forkenbrock, The Forkenbrock Group

This is one of the questions I hear most often right now, and I want to answer it honestly rather than the way some agents answer it, which is to tell buyers and sellers whatever keeps them moving forward. The short answer is no, the Chandler housing market is not crashing. But the market has changed, and understanding what has actually changed and why matters more than a yes or no if you are trying to make a real decision about buying or selling here.

Headlines about real estate tend to swing between extremes. In 2021 and 2022, the coverage was all about a market on fire, bidding wars, and homes selling for far above asking price. Now the coverage skews toward fear, with words like “crash” and “collapse” showing up regularly. Neither extreme captures what is actually happening in Chandler. The reality is more nuanced, and more useful to you as someone trying to make a real estate decision, than either headline suggests.

What the Chandler Market Actually Looks Like Right Now

Chandler’s housing market has moderated from the extraordinary pace of 2020 through 2022. Homes are taking longer to sell than they did at the peak. Sellers are having to price more carefully and, in many cases, offer concessions that were unheard of two years ago. Buyers have more options and more negotiating room than they did when inventory was at historic lows.

None of that is a crash. It is a correction from conditions that were, by any reasonable measure, unsustainable. When homes were appreciating at twenty to thirty percent annually and going under contract within hours of listing, that was not a normal market. The market normalizing back toward something closer to historical norms is not a collapse. It is the market behaving the way markets eventually do after extended periods of unusual conditions.

A market where homes sit for three weeks instead of three days is not a crashing market. It is a market where buyers have time to think and sellers have to be strategic. Those are not the same thing, and conflating them leads to decisions based on fear rather than facts.

Why Chandler Is Not 2008

The 2008 housing crash is the frame of reference most people are using when they worry about a crash today, and it is worth being specific about why today’s conditions in Chandler are fundamentally different from what caused that collapse.

What Caused 2008

Massive oversupply of homes from speculative overbuilding throughout the mid-2000s

Widespread use of subprime loans, no-doc loans, and other products that put borrowers into homes they could not afford

Rampant speculative buying from investors and flippers who had no intention of occupying the homes

Loan securitization practices that disconnected lenders from the risk of default

When prices fell, millions of homeowners were immediately underwater with no equity cushion

What Chandler Has Today

Relatively tight housing supply with limited available land for new development within city limits

Strict lending standards in place since the post-2008 regulatory overhaul, meaning most Chandler buyers qualified legitimately

Most Chandler homeowners have substantial equity built up from years of appreciation, giving them a significant buffer

Strong owner-occupant demand driven by employment, schools, and lifestyle rather than speculation

A large, diverse employer base that supports consistent population and economic growth

The conditions that made 2008 catastrophic do not exist in Chandler today. That does not mean prices cannot soften further from current levels, but it does mean the structural risk of a collapse is not present in the way it was eighteen years ago.

What Is Actually Driving the Slowdown

The primary driver of the slower pace in Chandler’s market right now is affordability pressure from elevated mortgage interest rates. This is important to understand clearly because it is a very different kind of problem from the one that caused 2008.

When interest rates rise significantly, the monthly payment on any given home price increases substantially. A buyer who qualified for a $550,000 home at a 3 percent rate may only qualify for a $420,000 home at a 7 percent rate. That reduced purchasing power pulls buyers out of certain price tiers, slows sales volume, and gives sellers less pricing power than they had when rates were low. This is rate-driven affordability compression, not a fundamental collapse in demand or property values.

The underlying demand for housing in Chandler has not disappeared. Chandler continues to attract employers, workers, and families relocating from higher-cost markets. Intel’s ongoing investment in its Chandler semiconductor facilities, continued growth along the Price Road tech corridor, and Chandler’s reputation as one of the best-managed cities in Arizona all support long-term demand. The buyers are there. The question is how many of them can qualify at current rate levels, and that number goes up as rates come down.

Dawn’s Perspective on Rates

One of the most common things I hear from buyers right now is that they are waiting for rates to drop before purchasing. That is a reasonable instinct, but it carries its own risk. If and when rates drop meaningfully, a significant wave of buyers who have been sitting on the sidelines will re-enter the market at the same time. That surge in demand, combined with Chandler’s limited inventory, could push prices up faster than any rate savings would offset. Buying in a slower market with the ability to refinance later is a strategy worth considering alongside waiting.

What the Data Says About Chandler Home Values

Rather than relying on headlines, it helps to look at what the actual data shows about Chandler home values over time and in the current market.

Market Indicator 2020 to 2022 Peak Period Current Conditions
Appreciation rate 20 to 30 percent annually at peak Moderated; slight year-over-year softening in some segments
Days on market Single digits to low teens at peak; multiple offer situations common Longer; well-priced homes still move within a few weeks
Seller concessions Rare to nonexistent; buyers often waived all contingencies More common; rate buydowns and closing cost credits actively negotiated
Inventory levels Extremely low; buyers had very few options Improved; buyers have more choices though supply remains relatively tight
Buyer competition Intense; multiple offers on well-priced homes within hours Reduced; qualified buyers still competing on desirable homes but with more time
Overall price level Rising sharply from pre-pandemic base Elevated from pre-pandemic levels; modest softening from 2022 peak in some areas

What This Means If You Are Buying in Chandler

If you are a buyer who has been watching Chandler’s market and wondering whether to wait for a crash before purchasing, here is what I would tell you based on what I am seeing in real transactions right now.

  • You have more options than you did two years ago. Inventory has improved from the historic lows of the peak market. You are unlikely to be competing against fifteen other offers on every home you like. That is a real and meaningful improvement in the buying experience.
  • Prices remain elevated in absolute terms. Chandler is not cheap. Even with some moderation from the 2022 peak, homes here are significantly more expensive than they were in 2019. If you are hoping for prices to return to pre-pandemic levels, there is no data suggesting that is a likely outcome in a supply-constrained market like Chandler.
  • Rate buydowns and seller concessions are real negotiating tools. In today’s Chandler market, motivated sellers are willing to contribute toward closing costs or fund a rate buydown to make the payment work for a buyer. Those tools were not available at the peak and represent genuine value for buyers who know how to negotiate for them.
  • The right time to buy is when your situation is ready, not when the market is perfect. Trying to time the market precisely is difficult even for professional economists. If your finances are in order, your timeline is right, and you plan to stay in Chandler for several years, waiting for a crash that may not come could cost you more than it saves.

What This Means If You Are Selling in Chandler

For sellers, the adjustment from peak conditions requires a recalibration of expectations. The sellers who are struggling right now are almost always the ones who are pricing based on what their neighbor’s home sold for in early 2022 rather than what comparable homes are selling for today. Those are different numbers, and treating them as the same leads to overpriced listings that sit, accumulate days on market, and ultimately sell for less than a correctly priced listing would have from the start.

The sellers who are doing well right now are pricing accurately, preparing their homes carefully before listing, and being open to the concessions that today’s buyers expect. A well-priced Chandler home in a desirable neighborhood, whether near the Price Road corridor, in Ocotillo, or in the Fulton Ranch area, still attracts qualified buyers and closes at a strong price. The market is not broken. It is just less forgiving of mistakes than it was when demand was so intense that nearly any price worked.

Dawn’s Tip for Sellers

If your Chandler home has been on the market for more than thirty days without an accepted offer, the most likely explanation is pricing. It is almost never the home itself, the neighborhood, or bad luck. Buyers in today’s market are well-informed and have enough options to be patient. A price that made sense six months ago may not make sense today, and the longer you wait to adjust, the more it costs you in carrying costs, missed opportunities, and eventual price reductions that are larger than an earlier adjustment would have required.

The Chandler Fundamentals That Have Not Changed

Whatever happens to interest rates or national economic conditions in the short term, the factors that make Chandler a strong long-term real estate market have not changed and are unlikely to change.

  • Employment base: Intel’s Chandler campus is one of the largest semiconductor manufacturing facilities in the United States. NXP Semiconductors, Northrop Grumman, Wells Fargo, and dozens of other major employers maintain large operations in or adjacent to Chandler. That employment base drives consistent housing demand from workers who need to live near where they work.
  • Population growth: Arizona continues to be one of the fastest-growing states in the country, and the Phoenix metro absorbs a large share of that growth. Chandler, with its combination of jobs, schools, and quality of life, draws a disproportionate share of that inbound population.
  • Limited land supply: Chandler is largely built out within its city limits. Unlike some Phoenix metro communities that can expand outward indefinitely, Chandler’s growth is constrained by geography and existing development. That supply constraint is a long-term price support that does not disappear in a down cycle.
  • School quality: Chandler Unified School District consistently ranks among the top districts in Arizona. For the significant portion of Chandler buyers who are families with school-age children, that reputation is a demand driver that does not fluctuate with interest rates.
  • Revitalized downtown: Chandler’s downtown has developed into a genuine destination over the past decade. That investment in walkability, dining, and entertainment adds a quality-of-life dimension to Chandler’s appeal that was not present twenty years ago and that continues to attract buyers who want more than a purely suburban experience.

Markets slow. Markets correct. What they rarely do in supply-constrained, employment-anchored cities with strong population growth is crash. Chandler has all three of those characteristics. That does not make it immune to economic cycles, but it does mean the structural risk of a collapse is considerably lower here than in markets without those fundamentals.

The Honest Bottom Line

The Chandler housing market is not crashing. It is normalizing after an extraordinary period of appreciation, and that normalization feels jarring to anyone who got used to the peak conditions of 2021 and 2022. Homes take longer to sell. Sellers have to price carefully. Buyers have to manage affordability at current rate levels. These are the conditions of a balanced or slightly buyer-favored market, not a crashing one.

Whether you are buying or selling in Chandler right now, the decisions you make should be based on your actual financial situation, your timeline, and a realistic read of what comparable homes are selling for today, not on national headlines or comparisons to 2008. If you want a clear picture of what the current market means for your specific situation in Chandler, that is exactly the conversation I am here to have with you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the housing market crashing in Chandler AZ?

No. The Chandler housing market is not crashing. Home values have moderated from the peak appreciation rates of 2021 and 2022, but prices have not collapsed and the fundamentals that support Chandler’s market remain strong. Chandler has a large, diverse employment base anchored by Intel, NXP Semiconductors, and other major employers, consistent population growth, limited land for new development, and strong long-term demand from buyers relocating to the Phoenix metro. A slower market is not the same as a crashing market.

Are home prices dropping in Chandler AZ?

Chandler home prices have seen some moderation from the peak levels reached in 2022, but prices have not dropped sharply. The market shifted from the extreme seller conditions of 2020 to 2022 toward a more balanced environment where buyers have more options and sellers need to price accurately to attract offers. Homes that are priced correctly for current conditions in Chandler continue to sell. Homes that are priced based on 2022 peak values tend to sit.

Is it a good time to buy a home in Chandler AZ?

For buyers who are financially ready and plan to stay in Chandler for at least three to five years, today’s market offers more options and less competition than the peak market of 2021 and 2022. You are less likely to lose a home to fifteen competing offers and more likely to have time to make a thoughtful decision. That said, Chandler home prices remain elevated in absolute terms, and affordability at current interest rate levels is a real consideration. The right time to buy is when your financial situation and lifestyle needs align, not based solely on market timing.

Is it a good time to sell a home in Chandler AZ?

Chandler sellers who price accurately and present their homes well are still achieving strong sale prices. The market is not what it was in 2021 and 2022, when nearly any price was achievable, but qualified buyers are active and well-priced homes are moving. Sellers who adjust their expectations to current market conditions rather than peak conditions, and work with an agent who knows how to position a home correctly in Chandler’s current environment, can still achieve excellent results.

What is causing the slowdown in the Chandler housing market?

The primary driver of the slowdown in Chandler and across the broader Phoenix metro is affordability pressure from elevated mortgage interest rates. Higher rates reduce what buyers can afford at a given price point, which reduces the pool of qualified buyers and slows the pace of sales. This is a fundamentally different dynamic from the conditions that caused the 2008 housing crash, which was driven by widespread loan fraud, overbuilding, and a collapse of mortgage underwriting standards. Today’s Chandler market has none of those conditions.

How does the current Chandler housing market compare to 2008?

The current Chandler market is fundamentally different from 2008 in the ways that matter most. In 2008, the market collapsed because of a massive oversupply of homes, rampant speculative buying, and loans made to borrowers who could not realistically afford them. Today, Chandler has a relatively tight housing supply, most homeowners have significant equity built up from years of appreciation, and lending standards are considerably stricter than they were in the mid-2000s. A correction is not the same as a crash, and today’s conditions do not mirror the structural failures that caused 2008.

Want an honest read on what the current Chandler market means for your specific situation as a buyer or seller? I am here to give you the straight answer.

Chandler AZ Real Estate
Chandler AZ Housing Market
Is the Housing Market Crashing Chandler
Chandler AZ Home Prices
Chandler AZ Market Update 2026
East Valley Real Estate Market
Should I Buy a Home in Chandler AZ
Should I Sell My Home in Chandler AZ
Dawn Forkenbrock REALTOR
The Forkenbrock Group
Chandler Real Estate 2026
About Dawn Forkenbrock: Dawn is a licensed REALTOR and member of The Forkenbrock Group specializing in the East Valley communities of Chandler, Gilbert, Queen Creek, San Tan Valley, and Mesa. She works with buyers and sellers who want a clear, honest picture of the market rather than the version that simply tells them what they want to hear. theforkenbrockgroup.com

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