A new report shows home flippers are seeing the smallest profits since the Great Recession.

Let that sink in.

Not “down a little.”
Not “cooling.”

Back to 2008-level returns.

Here’s what the data actually says:

  • Median gross profit dropped to about $66K (from ~$77K)
  • ROI fell to roughly 25.5% — lowest since 2008
  • Total flips declined, with activity slowing across most U.S. markets

So what changed?

This is where most people get it wrong.

It’s not “the market is bad.”

It’s this:

👉 Acquisition costs are too high
👉 Interest rates are still elevated
👉 Margins are getting squeezed from both sides

Investors aren’t failing because demand disappeared.

They’re failing because:

The spread between buy price and sell price is shrinking.


Translation for agents, lenders, and investors:

This is no longer a “HGTV market.”

This is a data market.

  • You can’t overpay and “fix your way out of it”
  • You can’t rely on appreciation to bail you out
  • You can’t assume buyers will pay a premium for cosmetic upgrades

What actually works now?

The edge has shifted:

✅ Better deal sourcing (not MLS scraps)
✅ Tighter underwriting BEFORE the purchase
✅ Predictive analysis (who’s likely to sell, not just what sold)
✅ Understanding micro-markets, not “Phoenix as a whole”


The real takeaway (and this is the part nobody wants to say):

The easy money is gone.

And that’s a good thing.

Because markets like this separate:

  • People who analyze deals
    from
  • People who hope deals work

If you’re still approaching this like 2021…
you’re already behind.


Don’t take my word for it. Read the study yourself:
https://www.cnbc.com/2026/03/24/home-flippers-see-smallest-profits-since-great-recession-data-firm-says.html


#RealEstate #DataAnalytics #HousingMarket #NhanceData #PropTech #RealEstateInvesting #PhoenixRealEstate

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