Ozark’s housing market cooled a bit in May 2026 after a hot April. Fewer homes sold than a year ago, pending sales dropped, and the average time on market stretched out. The headline numbers look softer — but it’s still a seller’s market, and the year-to-date picture remains positive.
Here’s the May read on Christian County’s flagship community and what it means if you’re thinking about buying or selling in Ozark right now.
The TL;DR
Ozark is still on the sellers’ side — about 2.95 months of inventory, well under the six months that signals balance. But the gap loosened from April. Sales dropped 19% from May 2025, pendings fell 24%, and the average time on market stretched to 86 days (vs. 71 a year ago).
Prices held steady: the median sale price stayed at $340,000 (flat year-over-year). The market hasn’t turned — it’s catching its breath after a strong spring. Year-to-date, sales are still up 8.8% versus 2025.
Absorption rate: 2.95 months. Anything under 6 months is a seller’s market; under 3 months is strong seller territory. Ozark just barely sits in strong-seller territory this month — loosened slightly but still very much favoring sellers, especially in the $250K–$400K core.
Where the action really is: the $250K–$400K core
About two thirds of Ozark’s May sales were between $200,000 and $500,000. The $300K–$400K core slowed compared with a busy April 2025, while higher-end activity above $400K stayed firm and the very top end ($900K+) saw new sales that weren’t there last May.
| Price band | May 2025 sold | May 2026 sold | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| $200K – $250K | 8 | 6 | −25% |
| $250K – $300K | 11 | 10 | −9% |
| $300K – $400K | 23 | 16 | −30% |
| $400K – $500K | 3 | 5 | +67% |
| $500K – $600K | 7 | 4 | −43% |
| $600K – $700K | 5 | 3 | −40% |
| $900K – $1M | 0 | 3 | New activity |
| $1M – $1.5M | 1 | 1 | Flat |
Source: regional MLS, May 2026 vs. May 2025, residential sold listings, Ozark (Christian County), MO.
What buyers should know right now
- This is a better moment to be a buyer in Ozark than April was. Sales softened, pending sales dropped, and average days on market stretched out — that means more leverage at the negotiating table.
- The $300K–$400K band has the most breathing room right now. If that’s your range, you’ll find more choices and a bit less competition than earlier this spring.
- Even so, get fully pre-approved. The median home still sold in about three weeks, so good buys still move quickly.
- Using a VA or USDA loan? Ozark has eligible options and Zac is an Air Force veteran who’s used his own VA loan and can help you map it out.
What sellers should know right now
- Don’t read May as a turning point. Year-to-date sales are still up 8.8% and prices held steady — this is a normal monthly fluctuation, not a market shift.
- Pricing discipline matters more this month than last. With buyers more selective, overpricing risks a long sit. The 86-day average DOM is a clear warning to anchor list price honestly.
- The $250K–$400K core still has the most buyers. Prep, photos, and a sharp price are what turn interest into offers.
- Curious what your home would realistically sell for this month? Get a real, agent-reviewed number before you list (see below) or check our Ozark seller page.
Year-to-date trends (Jan–May 2026 vs. 2025)
The numbers above are the citywide Ozark picture. What matters to you is what your specific home, in your specific neighborhood, is worth this month. Get a real, agent-reviewed valuation, not a Zillow estimate.
Get My Free Home Value →Or call Zac directly at 417-413-4305 for a 10-minute market conversation.
What this means for the rest of 2026
May is one month, and one month doesn’t define the year. The underlying demand drivers in Ozark — great schools, Christian County’s growth, the easy Springfield commute — haven’t changed. Expect more measured activity through early summer, with prices holding firm and quality listings continuing to move within a few weeks.
The bigger picture
Year-to-date, Ozark sales are up 8.8% over 2025 and inventory is gently growing (+6.7%). That’s a healthy combination: more activity overall plus a bit more choice for buyers. The May cool-down is more buyer-friendly than April was, without flipping the market.
For sellers, that’s a green light to list with realistic pricing. For buyers, it’s the best window in months for Ozark — especially in that $300K–$400K core. Either way, knowing the real numbers beats guessing, and that’s what these monthly updates are for.
Figures reflect residential for-sale activity in Ozark (Christian County), MO for May 2026 compared with May 2025, based on regional MLS summary data. Market data is provided for general information and is not a guarantee of future results or a substitute for professional or financial advice.
