Detroit’s Housing Market Is Being Snapped Up by Small Landlords Hunting for Bargains

by The Realtor.com Team

Investors continue to play an outsized role in the U.S. housing market, even as sales cool and mortgage rates remain elevated.

While large institutional buyers once defined this trend, the latest Realtor.com® investor report shows that momentum has shifted toward small landlords—often local, buy-and-hold investors—who are proving especially resilient.

Nowhere is that more apparent than in Detroit, Michigan, where deeply discounted purchase prices are helping small investors carve out strong opportunities despite broader market headwinds.

Affordable markets keep investors active—and Michigan stands out

Among the 50 largest U.S. metros, investor activity remains concentrated in affordable regions, particularly across the Midwest and South. While Memphis, St. Louis, and Kansas City post the highest investor buyer shares, Detroit stands out for a different reason: the depth of the discount investors are securing relative to typical buyers.

In the Detroit-Warren-Dearborn metro, investors accounted for 10.6% of home purchases in Q2 2025, essentially flat year over year. What sets Detroit apart is pricing. The median investor purchase price was $106,000, compared with $252,000 for the overall median sale—an eye-popping 58.0% discount. That gap is the widest among the 50 largest metros tracked, underscoring how strongly investors are targeting entry-level and undervalued housing stock in the region.

At the state level, Michigan homes for sale mirror this strategy. Investors in Michigan bought homes at a median price of $118,000 in Q2, compared with a statewide median of $252,000, a 53.1% discount. This places Michigan among the states where investors pay the least relative to market norms, signaling a clear focus on affordability and long-term rental income rather than short-term appreciation.

These dynamics favor independent landlords, in particular. Nationally, small investors—defined as those owning fewer properties—made up 62.5% of all investor purchases in Q2 2025, the second-highest share on record. Detroit’s low entry prices align squarely with this group’s strategy, allowing smaller landlords to compete and scale without the capital intensity required in higher-priced metros.

Nationally, investors hold steady as small buyers gain ground

Across the U.S., investor activity has remained remarkably steady amid a cooler housing market. Investors purchased 10.8% of all homes sold in Q2 2025, up slightly from a year earlier even as the total number of transactions declined. This increase in share reflects a market where traditional buyers have pulled back faster than investors, according to Realtor.com® analysis of small investors buying homes.

Buying activity among investors dipped modestly year over year, but selling slowed even more. Investor home sales fell 4.1% in Q2, leaving investors as net buyers once again. In the first half of 2025, investors bought roughly 41,000 more homes than they sold, widening the gap from last year and continuing a long-running trend that has added pressure to for-sale inventory.

The composition of investor demand is also shifting. Large investors accounted for just 20.1% of investor purchases in Q2, while small investors reached their highest share since 2007. Elevated borrowing costs and slower price growth appear to be dampening appetite among larger players, while smaller landlords remain active in markets where rents can support lower-priced acquisitions. This shift is explored further in Realtor.com® coverage of small landlords shaping the affordable housing market.

Regionally, the Midwest continues to attract investors thanks to its combination of modest home prices and steady rental demand. Rental vacancy rates are higher in the Midwest than in coastal regions, yet affordability and solid rent-to-price ratios keep the region appealing. Detroit exemplifies this balance, with older housing stock and long-established rental markets supporting income-oriented strategies.

This article was produced with editorial input from Dina Sartore-Bodo and Gabriella Iannetta.

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Fred Dinca

Fred Dinca

Realtor® | License ID: 0995708101

+1(318) 408-1008

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