American ‘K-shaped’ real estate market features plenty of options for high earners — but little for the rest
sellers still have choices and leverage, while everyone else faces shrinking options and rising costs. It’s a divide that mirrors the broader K-shaped economy defining 2025.
After an economic shock, parts of the economy shoot upward—like the top arm of the letter “K”—while others slide downward, forming a sharp split. The result is a recovery that rewards wealth and punishes everything else, widening the divide between those who can wait out volatility and those living paycheck to paycheck.
Now, that split is showing up across the economy from retail spending to job growth. But nowhere is it more apparent than in housing, where rising listings and cooling prices mean very different things depending on which side of the market you’re on.
“Sellers at the top of the market can quite literally afford to be more patient and price anchored,” explains Jake Krimmel, senior economist at Realtor.com®.
That’s because these sellers have choices: multiple properties, cash flow to float multiple mortgages, and enough savings to wait for the best offer. The typical homeowner doesn’t. Most are selling the home they live in, and the clock starts ticking the moment they list.
“The average family needs to sell to buy, so they’re more likely to cut their prices in order to secure their next move,” adds Krimmel. “Sellers of luxury homes have the luxury of time.”

Where patience pays
Even as 22 state economies flirt with recession, the wealthiest homeowners are holding firm, buoyed by the same forces that define the top of the K-shaped recovery: concentrated wealth, diversified assets, and the luxury of time.
“New York, which together account for over a fifth of US GDP, are holding their own, and their stability is crucial for the national economy to avoid a downturn,” explains Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics.
Those two states—alongside other affluent metros in the Northeast—anchor the upper curve of the housing market, where job centers in finance, biotech, and health care continue to generate steady demand, according to a recent report from Cotality.