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Town of Taos / Canon
Town of Taos / Canon Neighborhood Market Snapshot
Week ending May 3, 2026
Key indicators
The Town of Taos / Canon market is active, but it is also carrying a lot of inventory. As of May 3, 2026, there were 75 active residential listings and 19 sales over the prior 12 s, putting the area at about 11.8 months of supply. That points to a slower, buyer-favorable market overall, even though there is still meaningful activity underneath the surface.
Demand
Buyer demand is present, but selective. Four residential properties sold in the most recent 4-week period, and 19 sold across the full 12-week window. That is one of the stronger activity counts in this comparison set, but the inventory pool is large enough that sales are not absorbing listings quickly.
Seller-side pressure
The seller side is where the pressure shows up. The median active listing has been on the market 113 days, and the upper end of the active inventory is much older, with the 75th percentile at 289 days. More than half of the active listings — 55% — have been on market for at least 90 days. That is a meaningful stale-inventory tail.
Pricing signal
The list-to-sale ratio reinforces the same story. Over the past 12 weeks, sold properties closed at about 90.7% of list price, which points eal negotiation and price adjustment. Buyers are still making deals, but they are not blindly accepting asking prices.
Property type signal
The type mix matters here. Single-family homes are carrying most of the market activity, with 40 active listings and 17 sales over the 12-week period. The single-family segment also ranks #1 of 6 for both competitiveness and stagnation, which is the key tension in this zone: it is one of the more active single-family markets, but it also has a large number of older listings sitting at the same time.
Attached housing signal
Condos and townhomes make up a sizable share of active inventory, with 29 active listings, but only 2 sales over the 12-week window. That sample is too thin for price commentary, but it does suggest that the strongest demand signal is coming from single-family homes rather than attached housing.
Bottom line
Town of Taos / Canon is not quiet, but it is crowded. Buyers are active, especially on the single-family side, yet the market is clearly separating well-positioned listings from those that are stale or overpriced. Sellers need to be disciplined on price and presentation, while buyers may have negotiating room on older inventory.
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Market snapshot based on MLS data available as of May 3, 2026. Small samples can move quickly, so these figures should be read as directional.