Recent data from the Phoenix Planning and Development Department shows a 7% year-over-year increase in new single-family building permits issued across the Phoenix metropolitan area as of July 2025, with more than 18,000 permits year-to-date. This surge reflects sustained builder confidence, particularly in communities such as Eastmark (Mesa, DMB Associates), Vistancia (Peoria, Shea Homes), and Asante (Surprise, Lennar), where infrastructure investment is prominent. From a wealth management perspective, increased inventory may temper price escalation, influencing portfolio rebalancing and real estate trust strategies. Arizona’s property tax policy remains favorable for primary residences, although higher supply can moderate assessed value growth. No new restrictive legislation is pending, supporting future-proof stability. Smart-city features—such as solar-ready designs and reclaimed water landscaping—are increasingly standard in these communities.

Glendale’s sports-entertainment district saw an 11% YOY lift in adjacent residential value according to Zillow’s geotagged ZHVI data. Peoria, meanwhile, has over $280M in civic improvements planned through 2027, including water reclamation and public safety facilities. These developments are backed by stable fiscal regimes and leverage municipal bonds rated AA or higher. For wealth planning, the increase in asset-backed public improvements enhances property value resilience and offsets exposure to rising insurance premiums. Both cities are scaling sustainability integration via parks expansion and smart traffic systems.
According to the latest ARMLS STAT report, the median sales price in Phoenix rose 3.7% year-over-year in May 2025, reaching $472,000, while active inventory remains 12% lower than last spring. This reflects sustained equity retention for wealth portfolios. Homeowners should note property tax valuations will likely adjust upward, reinforcing the importance of homestead exemptions. Legislative discourse continues around reassessment caps. These stable fundamentals support conservative wealth preservation strategies and align with energy-efficient building code adoption trends citywide.
Both Sedona and Prescott see ~48–50% of luxury sales executed in cash, reflecting investor confidence and reduced financing risk. Sedona’s tighter licensing and fee structures limit rental income potential but reduce oversupply risk—supporting value stability. Prescott has not adopted similar STR restrictions, which may favor rental flexibility but carry market perception risk. Continued allocation of municipal funding toward wildfire mitigation, defensible-space mapping, and enhanced water infrastructure boosts insurability and fortifies long-term equity. Favorable primary-residence tax assessments, combined with limited new levies and no major state tax shifts, support portfolio viability. Regulatory clarity around rentals ensures better forecasting of net yields and compliance cost structures. Both communities are prioritizing environmental resilience and infrastructural sustainability—key criteria in modern wealth preservation and generational asset transfer strategies.
Institutional investors accounted for just 7.5% of all single-family home purchases across metro Phoenix in Q1 2025, down from 8.2% in Q1 2024, continuing a two-year trend of retreat. This decline places Phoenix below the Arizona statewide institutional buying average of 6.9%, according to CoreLogic data cited by Axios. Analysts point to cooling rental growth, high home prices, and rising financing costs as the primary deterrents. For wealth management portfolios, this shift opens local markets to individual buyers and boutique investment groups, while signaling a slowdown in large-scale yield-seeking capital inflows. Tax implications may emerge as local municipalities shift attention to small-owner tax base strategies. Legislatively, the pullback reduces pressure on regulatory caps that had been under informal consideration. From a stability lens, reduced institutional dominance supports more organic pricing dynamics. The trend also aligns with long-term smart-city initiatives favoring diversified ownership, community resilience, and less speculative neighborhood structuring.
As of June 2025, the ARMLS Market Watch reports that active residential listings in Maricopa County have increased 24.1% year-over-year, reaching 17,785 homes. Meanwhile, new contract activity has declined by 11.6% over the same period, signaling demand-side hesitation. The Cromford Market Index has dropped below 110 for Phoenix proper, indicating a gradual shift toward a buyer-favorable balance. From a wealth management lens, this softening may ease entry for cash-heavy buyers looking for longer-term rental yield or multigenerational holds. On the tax side, flatter appreciation could dampen future assessed value hikes. No new legislation is directly constraining inventory, though permitting cycles remain sluggish in outer submarkets. Lower buyer urgency stabilizes values for those with low leverage, and increased inventory supports more efficient smart-city land use over time.
Recent City of Phoenix data show that, over the past 12 months, Phoenix issued more than 18,400 residential building permits, a figure outpacing all other Arizona metros. This robust permit velocity—tracked daily and via FRED—reflects a renewed builder confidence, with a 7-day rolling issuance often exceeding 350 permits. Wealth managers see this as a signal of future asset expansion, while increased supply may buffer property tax bases and ease affordability concerns over time. City leadership’s push for green infrastructure and digital permitting aligns with smart-city trends, supporting both long-term value stability and ESG investment mandates.
Gilbert and Queen Creek report among the highest absorption rates for new masterplanned homes, with inventory turnover times remaining below the metro average at approximately 36 days on market. Recent offerings from builders like Fulton Homes and Toll Brothers are met with strong buyer interest, often from households relocating for quality-of-life and tax-efficiency reasons.



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Exploring Arizona’s Unique Land Ownership Laws: What Every Future Homeowner, Investor, And Relocating Professional Needs To KnowArizona’s real estate market is unlike any other in the American Southwest. While rapid population growth and migration trends have made Phoenix, Scottsdale, Mesa, and Tucson some of the fastestNice to meet you! I’m Katrina Golikova, and I believe you landed here for a reason.
I help my clients to reach their real estate goals through thriving creative solutions and love to share my knowledge.

