Raleigh’s housing market has changed significantly over the past decade. The average home sale price in Raleigh, North Carolina, rose from $258,800 in 2016 to $456,448 by early 2026, per Houzeo’s real estate data report. This level of appreciation often happens if there’s corporate investment flowing in from other expensive cities.
As housing costs in NC increased in most tech hubs, such as San Francisco and Seattle, many companies moved to lower-cost regions. These costs increased labor expenses, as companies had to offer higher salaries or house employees near the workplace.
Many tech companies invested in engineering campuses rather than opening small satellite offices. Together, these economic shifts transformed Raleigh from a growing market into a new real estate hotspot.
Intel’s Effect on Columbus’s Real Estate Market
Columbus’ median home sale price sits at $251,239 as of May 2026, roughly 31% below the national average. The affordability gap is the first thing a coastal engineer notices when running relocation numbers. Intel’s $28 billion semiconductor campus in New Albany gave thousands of those engineers a concrete reason to run those numbers seriously.
The project is the largest single private-sector investment in Ohio’s history. It aims to create 3,000 direct jobs and 7,000 construction positions during the span of its development. Beyond that, it is expected to stimulate a large network of suppliers and supporting industries.
Real estate agents in Central Ohio received calls from investors in California, Oregon, and Arizona before construction crews had even cleared the site. That tells you something about how quickly the market moves here.
According to the Ohio Housing Finance Agency’s FY 2026 Housing Assessment, the Greater Columbus region needs 14,000 to 19,000 new homes every year. This is the shortfall that existed before Intel’s workforce had materialized.
Intel isn’t operating in isolation either. Google, Amazon, and Meta have all built data center operations in the region. Meanwhile, Anduril Industries plans to create more than 4,000 jobs near the Rickenbacker International Airport. Together, these investments might help the metro area add more than 102,000 jobs by 2030.
However, housing needs to pick up as thousands of new workers move into the region, putting upward pressure on home prices. Investors have recognized this imbalance early and have begun buying properties here to meet this requirement.
What 30 Years of Tech Migration Looks Like in Raleigh
To understand where exactly Columbus is headed, look at Raleigh. Three decades ago, the region began attracting investors from the tech, biotech, and research industries. What started as a gradual corporate expansion eventually transformed into one of the country’s largest real estate markets.
That transformation was driven by the steady growth of Research Triangle Park. The park has accommodated more than 375 companies that contribute billions of dollars to NC’s economy. Apple’s ongoing billion-dollar campus expansion is just the latest addition to a region that already runs major operations from Meta, Google, Cisco, and IBM.
North Carolina is projected to add 80,800 net jobs in 2026, while the state’s economy is expected to grow 3.0% for the year, according to a May 2026 state economic update. Raleigh home sales were up 11.0% from last year. This was the market’s largest annual increase, while inventory rose 20.3% over the same period.
Buyers have real choices, and prices are still moving upward. The market remains balanced in a way that benefits both buyers and sellers, which is something most coastal markets haven’t been able to achieve for years.
The average tech salary in the Raleigh metro now exceeds $151,000 per year. Many workers from San Francisco or Seattle, who often arrive here, have significant equity from the sale of a coastal property. That purchasing power gap is reflected directly in neighborhoods near the campuses where those workers are employed.
What This Tech Migration Means for Buyers and Investors
Both markets share a structural condition that tends to drive real estate returns over time. Durham-Chapel Hill saw a 14.8% jump in median rents from 2024 to 2025, placing it among the top mid-size metros for rent growth nationally, driven by exactly that kind of supply constraint against persistent demand.
Buyers entering Raleigh’s housing market are no longer working with abstract projections; they are tracking inventory, price movements, and neighborhood-level availability as corporate hiring expands across the region. This shift is already visible in active Raleigh listings on Houzeo, where pricing and supply conditions reflect how quickly demand is filtering into specific submarkets tied to Research Triangle employment corridors.
Columbus’s Intel anchor is still years from full operational capacity, and any meaningful shift in that project’s timeline would affect the housing market directly. Raleigh manages this risk better because its economy has diversified across healthcare, education, defense, and life sciences over thirty years of steady corporate migration. Columbus is actively moving in the same direction. But it takes time to develop that kind of resilience that protects a market through such risks.
The biggest opportunities in 2026 are not evenly distributed across the city. They exist in neighborhoods where job growth is outpacing new home construction. Smart buyers look beyond the numbers and focus on where the employers move alongside tight inventory. These areas are most likely to experience long-term sustainability. The gap is where the real estate opportunity actually lives in 2026 for almost every tech hub.
