How hot is the real estate market in Ulster County? Home prices rose year over year

The median sales price for a single-family home in Ulster County during October was $330,000. That's an increase of 12.6% compared with October 2020, according to a USA TODAY Network localized analysis generated with data from Realtor.com.

The number of houses sold fell by 30.7% from a year earlier. A total of 192 houses were sold countywide during the month of October. During the same period a year earlier, 277 single-family homes were sold.

Database: New York Real Estate Market Report

Home sales: Real estate frenzy slowed as 2021 came to an end

Real estate sales can take weeks or months to be recorded and collected. This is the latest data made available through Realtor.com to the USA TODAY Network.

Condominiums and townhomes sold in October had a median sales price of $267,000. That figure represents a 17.1% increase year-over-year. In Ulster County, nine were sold, down 43.8% from a year earlier.

How hot is Ulster County's real estate market in New York?

Information on your local housing markets is available through the USA TODAY Network, with more data from Realtor.com.

The top 10% of the properties sold had prices of at least $625,000, up 2.5% from a year before.

In October, four properties sold for $1 million or more: four single-family homes.

The median home sale price — the midway point of all the houses or units sold over a period of time — is used in this report instead of the average home sale price because experts say the median offers a more accurate view of what's happening in a market. In finding the average price, all prices of homes sold are added and then divided by the number of homes sold. This measure can be skewed by one low or high price.

The USA TODAY Network is publishing localized versions of this story on its news sites across the country, generated with data from Realtor.com. The story was written by Sean Lahman.

This article originally appeared on Poughkeepsie Journal: Ulster County's average home sold for a higher price year over year