Wisconsin housing market

The median home value in Wisconsin is $340K as of May 2026, up 5.2% over the past year. Explore the Wisconsin home-price trend, 12-month outlook, and every county below.

Median home value

$340K

as of May 2026

1-year change

+5.2%

year-over-year

12-month outlook

Mixed signals

See the Wisconsin forecast →

Wisconsin home-value trend

Updated May 2026

Typical home value (Zillow ZHVI), last 10 years, vs. the U.S..

Wisconsin median home value over time

DateTypical home value
Jul 2016$175K
Jul 2018$198K
Jun 2020$222K
Jun 2022$282K
May 2024$310K
May 2026$340K

Wisconsin home prices by county

Browse all 72 counties in Wisconsin. Each shows home values, a 12-month forecast, crash and climate risk, property tax, and cap rate.

Top movers in Wisconsin

The Wisconsin counties drawing the most new residents on the latest IRS county-to-county migration data. See where people are moving from and to in each.

See where people are moving nationwide →

Wisconsin housing market FAQ

What is the median home price in Wisconsin?

The median home value in Wisconsin is $340K as of May 2026, up 5.2% over the past year. Curb Report tracks Wisconsin home values monthly from Zillow's home value index, with a county-by-county breakdown.

Is now a good time to buy a home in Wisconsin?

Curb Report's 12-month price forecast for Wisconsin currently points to mixed signals. Weigh it against the Wisconsin home-price trend and each county's outlook below before you buy.

Will the Wisconsin housing market crash?

Wisconsin's housing crash risk is currently moderate, based on how prices compare with local fundamentals and the 2008 baseline. Elevated risk doesn't predict a crash; it flags where the downside is larger if conditions turn. See the county-by-county crash-risk breakdown on Curb Report.

How much have home values changed in Wisconsin?

Wisconsin home values are up 5.2% over the past year, with the typical home now worth $340K. Explore the full 10-year Wisconsin home-value trend above.

Explore other state housing markets