Saturday, June 06, 2026

Is June Really the Hottest NH Sales Month? Six Years of Data Says Not Quite.

Is June Really the Hottest NH Sales Month? Six Years of Data Says Not Quite.

Every spring the trade press repeats the same line: June is the hottest month for residential real estate sales. Buyer's agents in New England get asked some version of this from clients every week, and most of us nod along because the conventional wisdom is also approximately true at the national level.

It's not that simple in New Hampshire.

We pulled six years of NH closed residential sales from Monadnock Cyber's PropertyFX engine (2020 through 2025) and ran the monthly distribution. June does land in the top tier — but it's not the leader, and it isn't alone up there [1].

What the six-year pattern actually shows

The chart above plots NH closed residential sales by calendar month, summed across the six-year window. Five months sit at or above 46 closings: May (53), June (57), August (53), November (46), and December (59). The single highest month is not June. It's December.

The conventional "June is the hottest sales month" story collapses two things buyers and the press routinely confuse:

  • The contract peak happens in spring — March, April, May — when buyers start looking and put homes under contract.
  • The closing peak happens roughly 30 to 60 days later, which puts a lot of those contracts into the June column.

That's why "June" gets the credit nationally. But in NH, our data shows a second peak in late fall and early winter — October, November, and December cluster within four closings of June. The pattern isn't one hot summer month. It's a two-peak year.

Why NH looks different

NH's late-year cluster has a couple of plausible drivers — the in-migration pattern from Massachusetts and the Boston metro area runs a different calendar than national first-time-buyer cycles, and tax-positioning closes in November and December bunch up here in a way they don't everywhere. We're not asserting causation from a six-year closed-sales record; we're noting that the seasonal shape of NH sales is materially different from the national "spring market" headline.

What this means for buyer's agents

Three practical reads:

  1. Don't telegraph "wait for spring" as if it's the only buying window. NH clients who get pushed past November because the agent is reading the national calendar are missing one of the year's two peak periods. The Dec/Nov/Oct cluster is real.
  2. Pricing and competition in the summer cluster (May–August) and the fall cluster (Oct–Dec) move differently. Summer carries first-time-buyer urgency and competing-bid pressure; the late-year cluster skews toward more deliberate buyers and harder negotiating room.
  3. July is the soft month, not winter. July (36 closings in the six-year window) is the visible mid-summer dip — buyers and sellers traveling, schools out. If a client wants less competition without going full off-season, July is the under-the-radar slot.

2026 update

Through May 2026, Monadnock Cyber's NH closed-sales record shows the year still ramping into the summer cluster, with full-month numbers consistent with the historical shape [1]. We'll have a clearer read on whether 2026 continues the two-peak pattern when October and November data lands. The conventional wisdom we'd push back on: "June will be the peak." On six years of NH data, that's not what we'd bet on.

Closing

The "spring market" story is a useful shorthand at the national level. In New Hampshire, it's incomplete. Buyer's agents working clients in NH have more than one window per year to surface a deal — and the late-year window is materially under-discussed in the trade press.

Monadnock Cyber · Real Estate Intelligence

Questions or want the full Hotsheet read on the city-level distribution: sales@monadnockcyber.ai. The weekly Hotsheet is by-invitation right now while we finish the subscriber rollout — Kathy MacKinnon (kmackinnon@monadnockcyber.ai), licensed across all NH categories, handles the current-edition requests directly.


Sources

[1] Monadnock Cyber, PropertyFX valuation engine — New Hampshire closed-sales record, calendar years 2020 through 2025. Six-year monthly distribution as plotted: Jan 32, Feb 18, Mar 22, Apr 27, May 53, Jun 57, Jul 36, Aug 53, Sep 42, Oct 47, Nov 46, Dec 59. 2026 partial-year totals through May 2026 referenced in the "2026 update" section above. propertyfx.ai

[2] National Association of REALTORS®, "2024 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers." Industry-canonical longitudinal survey of U.S. home buyer behavior referenced for the national "spring market" / June-peak conventional wisdom contrasted in this analysis. nar.realtor

Analytic Note

The judgments "NH has a two-peak year rather than a single June peak," "don't telegraph 'wait for spring' to NH buyers," and the plausible-driver discussion of MA in-migration and tax-positioning closes are the author's analytic assessments based on the six-year closed-sales distribution in [1]. The numeric facts in the chart and the source paragraphs above are the empirical record; the per-audience guidance is interpretation. Monthly counts shift as new data ingests; this is a point-in-time read against the 2020–2025 window.

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