62 The Housing Almanac
Annual Series · 1963–2024 · Compiled in U.S. Dollars & Units
Updated 26 April 2026
Metro Series · South · Rank #73

Home Price History in Greensboro

FHFA all-transactions House Price Index for the Greensboro-High Point, NC metropolitan statistical area — annual data, 1975 through 2025, rebased to 100 in the year 2000.

HPI (2025)FHFA
223
YoY changeFHFA
+3.4%
5-yr changeFHFA
+62%
Since 2000FHFA
+123%
50100150200250'75'80'85'90'95'00'05'10'15'20'25Greensboro HPINC state HPI

The Greensboro metropolitan area has FHFA House Price Index data running from 1975 through 2025. The index, rebased to 100 in the year 2000, stood at 30.4 in 1975 and 222.5 in 2025. Cumulative nominal appreciation since 2000: +122.5%.

The 2007–2011 housing crisis cut the Greensboro HPI by 10.2% peak-to-trough — from 119.5 in 2007 to 107.3 in 2012. For context, the U.S. national HPI fell roughly 24% over the same period, so Greensboro was meaningfully less affected than the national average.

The pandemic-era surge brought the Greensboro HPI from 131.6 in 2019 to 222.5 in 2025 — a cumulative +69.1% move in 6 years. Compared to the U.S. national HPI's roughly 50% gain over the same period, Greensboro appreciated noticeably faster the national rate.

Located in the South region of the United States, Greensboro is one of the 100 largest U.S. metropolitan statistical areas by population. Long-run housing appreciation in Greensboro reflects a combination of regional employment trends, in-migration patterns, and local supply constraints. The full year-by-year FHFA HPI for Greensboro is in the data table below.

To compare Greensboro to the national U.S. housing market, see the national median price history dashboard. Other metros in the South region: see the full metro index. For state-level data, see the state index.

Annual data — Greensboro

FHFA House Price Index, 2000=100. Annual data; not seasonally adjusted. Source: U.S. Federal Housing Finance Agency.

YearHPI (2000=100)YoY change
2025222.54+3.38%
2024215.26+6.65%
2023201.84+9.34%
2022184.60+19.51%
2021154.46+12.38%
2020137.44+4.44%
2019131.60+4.79%
2018125.59+5.24%
2017119.34+3.65%
2016115.14+3.21%
2015111.56+2.21%
2014109.15+0.75%
2013108.34+0.96%
2012107.31-1.85%
2011109.33-3.21%
2010112.96-3.86%
2009117.49-1.53%
2008119.32-0.15%
2007119.50+2.33%
2006116.78+3.05%
2005113.32+3.50%
2004109.49+2.58%
2003106.74+1.11%
2002105.57+1.96%
2001103.54+3.54%
2000100.00+4.61%
199995.59+3.31%
199892.53+3.05%
199789.79+4.60%
199685.84+3.42%
199583.00+4.22%
199479.64+2.73%
199377.52+1.32%
199276.51+1.86%
199175.11+1.87%
199073.73+1.01%
198972.99+2.11%
198871.48+5.19%
198767.95+6.07%
198664.06+4.57%
198561.26+7.55%
198456.96+9.66%
198351.94+1.84%
198251.00+6.21%
198148.02+5.65%
198045.45+4.77%
197943.38+9.71%
197839.54+13.65%
197734.79+9.27%
197631.84+4.77%
197530.39

Methodology

The FHFA House Price Index is a weighted, repeat-sales index that measures average price changes in repeat sales or refinancings on the same single-family properties. The all-transactions index incorporates both purchase mortgages and refinance appraisals; the index is calibrated to the South census region and rebased to 100 in the year 2000. Coverage begins in 1975 for Greensboro.

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