Top Mega Teams in Colorado – Ranked by Sides

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Rank – State SidesTeam NameCompanyLocationSidesProfile
1Be OneCompassDenver, CO 449.2View Profile
2Elite Home PartnersKeller WilliamsDenver, CO 391.0View Profile
3Kittle TeamKittle Real EstateFort Collins, CO 358.0View Profile
4iMPACT GroupYour Castle Real EstateArvada, CO 331.0View Profile
5The Fletcher Team & AssociateseXp RealtyMonument, CO 286.0View Profile
6Griffith Home TeamRE/MAX ProfessionalsThornton, CO 275.0View Profile
7The Dixon GroupKeller WilliamsAurora, CO 241.7View Profile
8Elevated Living GroupCompassDenver, CO 140.0View Profile
9Baird GroupLPT RealtyGreenwood Village, CO 131.0View Profile
10Homes of Expansion NetworkKeller WilliamsColorado Springs, CO 128.0View Profile
11Mile High LifestylesCompassDenver, CO 96.5View Profile

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2023 Colorado Housing Market Summary

Colorado started 2023 with a total of 9,214 single-family homes on the market, with a median home price of $598,832 and an average price per square foot of $353. By the end of the year, inventory had increased to 9,982 homes on the market (+8%), with a median home price of $625,000 (+4%) and an average price per square foot of $388 (+9%).

At the start of 2023, the median days on market (DOM) was 77 days – by the end of the year, median DOM had increased to 84 days. Colorado started the year with 39% of homes taking a price cut (for reference, 35% is the national average for price reductions in a ‘normal’ year.) By the end of the year, about 35% of Colorado homes for sale had taken a price cut.

Finally, Altos’ proprietary Market Action Index (MAI) shows that Colorado started 2023 as a strong seller’s market, with an MAI score of 45; by the end of the year, the MAI had dropped to 38 – a slight seller’s advantage.

This market summary is powered by Altos Research – click here to run a free report for your area.

Housing Market News

An open letter to President-Elect Trump: A market in crisis 

Nov 22, 2024By

As the rest of the country waits, debates, and predicts an economic recession, the United States housing market has been languishing in a historic one for nearly 3 years. Economists and market participants love airplane analogies (soft landing, no landing) so I’ll dust off my epaulets and declare the state of housing a “crash landing.” 

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