Lake Forest Park Market Pulse
Four indicators that tell you where the Lake Forest Park residential market is heading — sourced directly from NWMLS and refreshed monthly.
A headline number rarely tells the whole story.
Scroll down for the complete view — every chart, every data point, three full years of context. Because the difference between a good decision and a great one is almost always in the trendline beneath the number.
See all graphs & dataSource: Northwest Multiple Listing Service® via InfoSparks (ShowingTime). Residential sales, Lake Forest Park segment. Reported figures are NWMLS data and are not guaranteed. Equal Housing Opportunity. Matthew Konsmo · Coldwell Banker Danforth.
May 2026 — Matthew’s Analysis of the Lake Forest Park Market
In May 2026, the median sales price across Lake Forest Park residential came in at $1.03M, down 18.3% from the month prior, while the median price per square foot stood at $473. Year over year the median is down 13.9%, a signal of some give in pricing power in this market.
On the supply side, Lake Forest Park saw 16 new listings come to market in May 2026, against 16 homes for sale at month end. Active inventory is up 60.0% from a year ago, giving buyers a wider field of choices than they had last year. At roughly 1.5 months of supply, that points to a seller-favored balance by the conventional rule of thumb (under three months favors sellers, over six favors buyers).
Demand stayed active: 16 pending sales and 16 closings in May 2026. The median home took about 7 days to sell — a fast pace that rewards prepared buyers. Sellers are realizing about 99.7% of their original list price — very close to their original asking price.
Taken together, the ten indicators describe a seller-leaning Lake Forest Park market. Pricing has softened modestly year over year, while inventory and pace are the levers worth watching month to month. For a buyer or seller weighing a move, the right read is rarely a single headline number — it is the direction these series are trending together, which is exactly what the full charts below lay out.
Source: Northwest Multiple Listing Service® via InfoSparks (ShowingTime). Residential sales, Lake Forest Park segment. Analysis by Matthew Konsmo · Coldwell Banker Danforth. Figures are NWMLS data and are not guaranteed.
Lake Forest Park Housing Market Trends & Residential Sales Data
Thinking about buying or selling a Residential home in Lake Forest Park? This page tracks the Lake Forest Park real estate market using live Northwest Multiple Listing Service (NWMLS) data—updated monthly with median sale prices, days on market, closed sales, and inventory levels.
Because Lake Forest Park is a small, heavily wooded residential city in King County at the north end of Lake Washington—almost entirely single-family, with large lots, a strong tree canopy, and some waterfront at its southern edge—it sees relatively limited inventory, and individual sales can carry meaningful weight in the monthly data. Reading the numbers in that context is essential. Whether you are timing a purchase or preparing to list, the data below provides a clear, objective look at current market conditions.
Exploring the broader north-end market? See our guides for nearby Shoreline, Kenmore and Bothell.
Why Direct Comps Reign Supreme
While median and average prices are useful for identifying broad market shifts, they are often too “macro” when you are trying to value a specific front door. To find the true market value of a Lake Forest Park home, nothing beats a direct comparable (comp).
Contact Matthew for a Comparable Market Analysis on your home >
Direct comps account for the critical nuances that broader statistics completely ignore:
Hyper-Locality Matters
Lake Forest Park packs a lot of variation into a small, wooded footprint. Homes at the north end of Lake Washington—or with deeded access through a community like Sheridan Beach—command premiums an interior lot can’t match, often well beyond 5% to 10%. The city’s “city in the trees” character and tree-canopy protections shape what can be built and how lots are valued, and ravine, creek, and greenbelt parcels carry their own considerations. It’s also split across school districts, with most of the city in Shoreline and part in Northshore. A blanket average can’t see these lines; a direct comp reflects the reality of the specific lot and setting.
Accounting for Quality and Finishes
Broad data points can’t distinguish between builder-grade finishes and high-end custom upgrades. Whether a home features standard laminate or custom mitered-edge quartz, direct comps allow for “line-item” adjustments. Lake Forest Park is largely a mid-century market on generous wooded lots, so two similar homes can diverge widely once one has been fully updated—and lot usability, slope, and tree retention factor in too. Line-item adjustments ensure the premium investments made in a home’s interior are actually reflected in its valuation.
The “Vibe” Factor
Statistics often treat square footage as equal, but buyers don’t. A 1960s rambler tucked under mature trees and a 2026 modern build on a comparable lot might share the exact same footprint, yet they appeal to entirely different buyer pools. Using direct comps ensures you’re comparing “apples to apples” by matching the architectural style, character, and lifestyle appeal of a property.
The Bottom Line: If you want to know what a home is worth in today’s market, look past the ZIP code averages and focus on the three or four most similar properties that have closed nearby. That’s where the real data lives. Get the facts behind your home’s value. Contact me for a personalized CMA based on your Lake Forest Park property’s specific characteristics and current market data.