Spring real estate — March 2026 Cover
March 2026 Edition  ·  Published March 4, 2026

Spring Has a Stutter: Three Markets Reading Differently

Rates paused. Buyers returned... sort of. Inventory is back, but the math still doesn't work for everyone. We break down NWA, Colombia, and Tampa Bay — three markets where spring means something very different.

+8.3% NWA median home price YoY
18 days Avg days on market, Bentonville AR
6.4% 30yr fixed rate, March 2026
$1.9T Est. US spring purchase volume

Three Markets, One Season, Zero Consensus

The Federal Reserve held rates steady through January, and mortgage rates followed with a modest exhale — the 30-year fixed settling around 6.4%, down from the 7.1% peak of late 2023. This was supposed to be the release valve. In some ZIP codes, it was. In others, buyers came back to the table, ran the numbers, and quietly closed their laptops again. The math doesn't lie: at 6.4%, a $312,000 home in Rogers, Arkansas pencils at just over $1,560 a month. That's workable. In Tampa Bay's coastal submarkets, a comparable home at $480,000 erases the cash flow case entirely. Same rate. Very different story.

Northwest Arkansas is not running on momentum alone — it's running on institutional conviction. Bentonville in particular is back to multi-offer situations in the $275K–$375K corridor. New construction permits in Q1 were up 14% year-over-year, and Walmart's continued HQ investment plus Tyson Foods' regional anchoring means the demand floor isn't going anywhere. The Milken Institute glow from the February ranking is real, but it was validation, not revelation — the operators who bet on NWA two years ago are already stacking equity. The market is still open, but the easy trades are behind you.

Tampa Bay is a different animal entirely. The insurance exodus and hurricane-driven relocations that accelerated through 2024 have flooded coastal inventory. Prices in Pinellas County coastal submarkets are down 3–5% from their 2024 peaks, and homeowner insurance costs have become a dealbreaker for a meaningful percentage of buyers. That said, inland Hillsborough — Wesley Chapel, Riverview, Brandon — is absorbing demand with surprising resilience. Renters priced out of the coast are buying inland. It's a split market: the headline is ugly, the submarket is interesting.

Colombia is the sleeper story of Q1 2026. The Colombian peso stabilized in the 4,100–4,200 COP/USD range after a brutal 2023–24 volatility cycle. For USD buyers, this creates a window that didn't exist 18 months ago: you're getting 7–9% price growth in COP terms, but in dollar terms, prices are flat. That's the arbitrage. Medellín's Laureles and Envigado corridors, Bogotá's Chapinero Alto and Usaquén, and Cartagena's Getsemaní district are all seeing real transaction volume from diaspora and international buyers who understand what peso stabilization means for their dollar. That window closes as the currency rerates. The clock is ticking.

"This isn't a recovery season. It's a sorting season."

Spring 2026 isn't a recovery season. It's a sorting season. The operators who read the micro will eat. The ones waiting for macro confirmation — for the Fed to cut, for prices to fall, for the "right time" to arrive in a Bloomberg headline — will watch from the sideline while the smart money closes quietly on a Thursday afternoon in Bentonville or Laureles. Punto y aparte.

The Capital Migration Is Real — and It's Accelerating

The remote work narrative has calcified into remote work reality. The companies that pulled their return-to-office mandates in 2023 and 2024 now have employees who are 18–24 months deep into secondary cities — with social roots, school enrollments, and neighborhood equity. RTO threats land hollow now. The workforce has voted with its U-Haul, and the capital is following.

NWA, Huntsville AL, Chattanooga TN, Greenville SC — these were the "forgotten tier" cities that real estate publications wrote off as quirky outliers three years ago. They are now what Bloomberg is starting to call "smart money tier." The infrastructure is there — airports with direct flights to both coasts, walkable downtown cores, university research anchors, and cost-of-living ratios that make the Bay Area feel like a memory from another century. The professionals who moved there are not going back.

Key Data Points — /THRUST

$4.2B moved into secondary US markets in Q4 2025 (Bloomberg)
Top targets: NWA, Huntsville AL, Boise ID, Chattanooga TN, Greenville SC

Bloomberg tracked $4.2 billion in institutional capital flowing into secondary markets in Q4 2025 alone. These aren't speculative plays — they're conviction bets by funds that spent 18 months modeling out the migration patterns and liked what they saw. Multifamily developers are breaking ground in markets they hadn't touched in a decade. Industrial/logistics demand is reshaping the suburban rings of these cities faster than residential data can capture.

For operators: the opportunity isn't the headline cities — it's the shadow markets they create. The suburbs of Bentonville. The neighborhoods adjacent to new Amazon and Walmart distribution corridors in Northwest Arkansas. The transitional blocks in Chattanooga's Southside. Ojo con esto — the real estate cycle in these second-tier submarkets is 12–18 months behind the headline, which means the entry window is still open. But it closes fast when the institutional capital arrives and compresses yields. Be before the institutions, or be priced out by them.

What the Street Is Saying Before Zillow Knows It

Brand intelligence has a methodology the real estate industry has spent decades ignoring: cultural signals precede market data by 6 to 18 months. Consumer behavior changes before transaction records reflect it. The coffee shop opens. The gallery appears. The pop-up runs out of stock on a Tuesday. These are not lifestyle observations — they are leading indicators with a track record that any serious operator should be mapping alongside their MLS feeds.

Signal one: the convergence of independent specialty coffee shops and co-working hybrid spaces signals a neighborhood in pre-gentrification phase. Not early gentrification — pre-gentrification. The pioneer class has arrived: the freelancers, the remote creatives, the young professionals who want authenticity over amenity. They are the advance scouts of a neighborhood's transformation. Right now, I'm watching East Bentonville, Laureles in Medellín, and Seminole Heights in Tampa. All three show this pattern. None of them are priced for it yet.

Signal two: art gallery density and pop-up retail clustering. Bogotá's Chapinero district and NWA's emerging Fayetteville Arts Corridor are both showing increasing gallery and creative retail concentration. When the creative economy decides a neighborhood is worth the rent — even temporarily — it's writing a check that residential real estate cashes 24 months later. This is not speculation. This is pattern recognition from three continents.

"When the third specialty coffee shop opens on a block, you've already missed the trade."

Signal three: Michelin-adjacent restaurant openings in non-obvious cities. The Crystal Bridges effect is the canonical case — a world-class cultural institution arrives in Bentonville, Arkansas, and within five years, the culinary scene, the hospitality index, and the residential premium all follow. We are seeing early versions of this pattern in Huntsville (with its growing arts infrastructure) and in Medellín (where the culinary renaissance in El Poblado adjacent neighborhoods is pulling international attention). Museum anchors drive 5–7 year real estate cycles. If there's a museum in the conversation, get in the conversation early.

El Peso Se Estabilizó. ¿Y Ahora Qué?

The COP/USD exchange rate settled in the 4,100–4,200 range by early 2026 — a stabilization that carries enormous weight for anyone watching the Colombian market with USD liquidity. After two years of volatility that swung the rate as high as 4,700 in late 2023, the current band represents a pricing floor that gives international buyers a legible framework. You can model this. You can underwrite it. The chaos is gone, for now.

What this stabilization creates is a 6–12 month window of dollar purchasing power that the Colombian market has not seen at scale. In COP terms, Medellín prices grew 7–9% in 2025. In USD terms? Flat. Which means a buyer with dollars is effectively entering at 2023 prices in inflation-adjusted terms, into a market with demonstrably stronger fundamentals than 2023. The best plays are in the El Poblado adjacent corridors — Laureles, Envigado — which offer the lifestyle premium without the El Poblado price ceiling. In Bogotá, Chapinero Alto and Usaquén represent the same logic. And Cartagena's Getsemaní is the Getsemaní 2.0 story — slowly, then all at once.

Colombia Entry Window — Key Numbers

4,180 COP/USD — current rate (stable, Feb 28)
+7–9% price growth in COP · ~0% in USD terms
15–20% below delivery price on pre-sale new construction

New construction is the sharpest play. Pre-sale prices in Medellín and Bogotá are running 15–20% below their expected delivery price, and developers are now structuring USD payment plans specifically to attract diaspora and international buyers who want to lock in current dollar rates. This is sophisticated. The developers are hedging against their own currency risk while giving USD buyers a structural discount. Both sides of the trade make sense — which is when you move.

The risk is real and worth naming: 2026 is an electoral year in Colombia, and political uncertainty creates sentiment volatility even when fundamentals are solid. The Petro administration's policies have created friction in some commercial real estate sectors. That said, residential demand in the Medellín and Bogotá submarkets described here is structural — driven by internal migration, urbanization rates, and a growing middle class, not by political cycles. Así es la cosa: the Colombian market rewards those who understand both the macro sentiment and the micro geography. Don't buy Colombia because it's "cheap." Buy it because you know the block, you've run the comps, and you've talked to someone who closed a deal there in the last 90 days.

AI Pricing Tools Are Making Bad Comps Worse

Automated Valuation Models — Zillow's Zestimate, Redfin Estimate, and their increasingly sophisticated successors — are being used by uninformed buyers as transaction gospel. This is a structural problem that is getting worse, not better, as these tools become more prominent in the consumer experience and more algorithmically confident in their own outputs. Confidence is not accuracy. This needs to be said plainly.

The core flaw is architectural: AVMs are trained on transaction data that lags market reality by 60–90 days in fast-moving micro-markets. In NWA's Bentonville/Rogers corridor, where multi-offer situations are closing 8–12% above list price, Zestimate is consistently showing values that are below actual contract prices — in some cases by that same 8–12% margin. A buyer who anchors to the Zestimate is not just leaving money on the table; they're building their investment thesis on a foundation that doesn't reflect the present. They will lose the offer. Then they'll wonder why.

In Medellín, the situation is even more nuanced: there is no equivalent AVM infrastructure. Local agents set prices based on network knowledge — what sold on that block in the last 45 days, what the developer upstairs is asking, what a foreign buyer recently paid. This is both a risk and an opportunity. The risk: without algorithmic checks, pricing can be inconsistent and agent-interest-driven. The opportunity: an informed buyer with recent, network-sourced comp data has a genuine edge over the algorithmic approach that doesn't exist yet.

The AVM Gap in Practice

NWA: Zestimate 8–12% below actual contract prices in Bentonville/Rogers
Medellín: No AVM equivalent — agent network data is the only real comp source
Data lag: 60–90 days in fast-moving micro-markets

The thesis here is simple: human intelligence — boots-on-ground, network-driven, relationship-sourced — still has a 6–12 month edge over algorithmic pricing in emerging and emerging-adjacent markets. The algorithm knows yesterday. You need to know tomorrow. And the only way to know tomorrow is to be in the conversation with the people who are closing deals today.

A Deal Anatomy: How a Bentonville Buy Pencils in 2026

Let's put numbers to the thesis. This is a generalized deal structure based on real comparable transactions in the Rogers, Arkansas submarket of NWA — close enough to Bentonville to benefit from the demand floor, far enough to find inventory that doesn't require a bidding war to win.

Deal Structure — Rogers AR (NWA Submarket)

Property: 3BR/2BA · 1,850 sq ft · Rogers AR
Purchase price: $312,000
Down (20%): $62,400  ·  Loan: $249,600 @ 6.4%
PITI: ~$1,560/mo  ·  Rental comps: $1,900–2,100/mo
Monthly cash flow: ~$300–400 after expenses
5-yr equity (5–6% appreciation): ~$85,000 gain
5-yr cash flow total: ~$21,000
Total return on $62,400 capital: ~$106,000

The rental market tightness is key to this pencil. Bentonville's vacancy rate sits at 3.2% — near historic lows — and rental demand is being driven by Walmart and Tyson employees, Crystal Bridges cultural workers, and the steady inflow of remote workers who want to test the market before buying. The $1,900–2,100 rental range on a 3BR/2BA in Rogers is not an optimistic projection. It's where leases are clearing right now.

The appreciation assumption is deliberately conservative. NWA ran at 8.3% YoY in 2025. We're modeling 5–6% going forward — accounting for some normalization as rates remain elevated and the pool of qualified buyers stays constrained. Even at that haircut, the five-year return picture is compelling: roughly $106,000 in combined equity gain and cash flow against $62,400 in capital deployed. That's a 1.7x multiple on capital in five years — not glamorous by venture standards, but structurally sound in a market with real demand anchors.

The conclusion is not that NWA is a home run. It's that NWA is a reliable double in a market with structural demand, institutional validation, and a cultural narrative that continues to attract talent and capital. In a year where many markets are still sorting out their post-pandemic identity, that reliability is the asset. "Not a home run. A reliable double in a market with structural demand. That's the NWA thesis."

Data Signals Division Scan period: Feb 15 – Mar 4, 2026

The Shelf Is Talking. Are You Listening?

🔍 🟢 BULLISH

Search Volume

"Bentonville AR homes for sale"
+34% MoM (Google Trends)

Search velocity is a leading indicator — transaction data catches up 60–90 days later.

📊 🟡 WATCH

Listing Velocity

NWA new listings: 847 in Feb vs 612 in Jan

Days on market trending DOWN

18 days avg (Bentonville core)

📉 Mixed 🟡

Price Reduction Rate

NWA: 11% of listings reduced (low)

Tampa Bay coastal: 28% reduced (elevated)

Colombia/Medellín: No digital shelf equivalent — agent network data only

🏘️ NWA 🟢 · Tampa 🟡

Rental Demand Index

Bentonville vacancy: 3.2% (near historic low)

Tampa Bay vacancy: 7.8% (normalizing post-pandemic)

Tight rental supply in NWA supports cash flow thesis.

📱 🟢 BULLISH

Social Signal

TikTok #NWArealestate: +67% impressions in Feb

Instagram: Crystal Bridges location tags +22% YoY

Cultural temperature: HIGH

💵 🟢 USD Buyers

Currency Signal

COP/USD: 4,180 (Feb 28)

30-day trend: Stable → slight USD weakening

Implication: Mild tailwind for USD buyers in Colombia

Quick Hits & Further Reading

The Voices Behind This Edition

JCE
Juan Camilo Echeverri
Executive Broker · Habloft Global
📍 Wesley Chapel, FL

Juan Echeverri works at the intersection of innovation and discipline. In retail, he spent a decade identifying gaps — bringing new food products to market, developing emerging categories, and navigating national distribution with Walmart and Sam's Club. That instinct for pattern recognition carried into real estate. For the past nine years, he has helped clients grow portfolios across Northwest Arkansas, with more than $25M in transactions. His work focuses less on closings and more on positioning — timing entries, structuring leverage, and understanding how infrastructure and migration reshape value over time. Alongside brokerage, he continues building: a new bakery project rooted in food and craft, and Xtatik, an evolving vision centered on asset strategy, innovation, and disciplined expansion. He believes markets reward those who see the gap before it becomes obvious. IN-KluSo exists in that same space: where culture, capital, and creativity converge.

CO
Camilo Osorio
Brand Strategist & Visual Identity Expert
📍 Madrid, Spain

Graduate of Universidad de Madrid in Design, with academic roots in Colombia and Peru. Applies brand intelligence methodology to real estate market reading — because before data speaks, culture whispers.