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Is Massachusetts the Northeast's Next Fix-and-Flip Opportunity?

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Is Massachusetts the Northeast's Next Fix-and-Flip Opportunity?
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Fix-and-flip bridge loan activity across New England pulled back in Q1 2026, continuing a national trend of investor recalibration documented by ATTOM's 2025 Year-End Home Flipping Report. But underneath that regional contraction, Massachusetts may be showing signals worth a closer look. Kiavi bridge loan activity in the state's primary markets (Boston, Worcester, and Springfield) grew roughly 67% year-over-year in Q1 2026, according to Kiavi internal data, even as acquisition prices softened.

Key Takeaways

  • Median acquisition prices in Massachusetts primary markets (Boston, Worcester, Springfield) declined year-over-year in Q1 2026, according to Kiavi internal data, potentially widening entry windows for investors who have found the state difficult to access in prior cycles.
  • Kiavi bridge loan activity in Massachusetts primary markets grew approximately 67% year-over-year in Q1 2026, suggesting growing investor engagement in the state despite a broader regional pullback.
  • Massachusetts homes sold in a median of 32 days in March 2026, according to Redfin—the fastest pace among all tracked New England states—with 40.0% selling above list price, well ahead of the national average of 25.6%.
  • Worcester, Massachusetts ranked third nationally for projected combined home sale and price growth in 2026, according to Realtor.com's 2026 Top Housing Markets forecast, reflecting strengthening end-buyer demand that could support investor exit pricing.
  • New bridge borrowers grew from roughly 10% of Kiavi's Northeast bridge activity in Q1 2024 to approximately 34% in Q1 2026, per Kiavi internal data, suggesting an increase in first-time investor engagement across the region's markets.

A graphic stating 40% of Massachusetts homes sold above list price in March 2026 compared to 25.6% nationally.

What Does the Massachusetts Fix-and-Flip Market Look Like Right Now?

Massachusetts has long carried a reputation as a potentially high-barrier fix-and-flip market. Entry prices in and around Boston have historically made it difficult for newer investors to pencil deals, and competition from institutional and experienced buyers may have kept acquisition costs elevated across much of the state. The current data—drawn from both Kiavi's proprietary bridge loan activity and Redfin's March 2026 state-level housing metrics—may suggest that some of those conditions are shifting in ways that matter for investors.

Kiavi tracked bridge loan activity across three Massachusetts metros: Boston, Worcester, and Springfield. The Q1 2026 data for these markets shows a notable divergence from what a simple volume headline might suggest, and the Redfin trend data provides a useful lens for understanding the exit-side dynamics that make or break a flip.

Two pairs of metrics stand out.

  1. On the acquisition side: Median acquisition prices in Massachusetts primary markets declined year-over-year in Q1 2026, according to Kiavi internal data, while bridge loan activity in those markets grew approximately 67% over the same period. This suggests that real estate investors appear to be finding and committing to deals at a higher rate than a year ago—even as entry costs have softened.

  2. On the exit side: Redfin's March 2026 data shows Massachusetts homes selling in a median of 32 days—the fastest pace of any state in this dataset—with 40.0% of homes selling above list price. That combination of velocity and buyer competition could provide meaningful context for investors evaluating whether renovated properties can find buyers quickly and at or above ask.

Massachusetts Kiavi Bridge Loan Activity: Q1 2025 vs. Q1 2026

Metric

Q1 2025 vs. Q1 2026 Change

Bridge Loan Activity:
Primary Markets (Boston, Worcester, Springfield)

+~67% YoY

Bridge Loan Activity:
Secondary Markets (CT, NH, RI, ME, VT)

+~400% YoY (5x)

New Borrower Share:
All Kiavi NE Bridge Loans

Grew from ~10% (Q1 2024) to ~34% (Q1 2026)

Source: Kiavi Internal Analysis. Proprietary bridge loan data reflects Kiavi-funded transactions across Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, Q1 2024 through Q1 2026. Data pull: April 2026.

Massachusetts End-Buyer Market Context: March 2026

Metric

Massachusetts

National Average

Median Days on Market

32 days

55 days

% Homes Sold Above List Price

40.0%

25.6%

Median Sale Price YoY Change

+2.7%

+1.1%

Homes for Sale YoY Change

+4.3%

_

Source: Redfin state-level housing market data, March 2026.

For real estate investors actively evaluating Massachusetts deals, these metrics highlight several things to consider:

  1. Bridge loan activity in primary markets rose approximately 67%. The real estate investors currently transacting in Massachusetts appear to be moving with more frequency. That activity growth may reflect broader deal availability at more accessible price points.

  2. End-buyer demand remains active relative to national norms. With Massachusetts homes selling in 32 days at a median and 40% selling above list price—compared to 55 days and 25.6% nationally, per Redfin—the exit-side conditions could matter for investors who are carefully evaluating whether completed renovations can find buyers quickly and at favorable pricing. Inventory is also up 4.3% year-over-year, which may point to more deal flow for investors sourcing acquisitions.

  3. New borrower share at approximately 34% and rising across the region. A growing share of Kiavi's bridge activity in the Northeast appears to be coming from first-time bridge loan borrowers. That could mean more variability in how deals are being priced by other buyers, which could make your own comp analysis more important, not less.

Kiavi Tip: If you're evaluating a fix-and-flip project in Massachusetts, Kiavi's Massachusetts investment property loans page covers how Kiavi funds deals in the state. To pressure-test your acquisition price, renovation budget, and after-repair value before committing, Kiavi's ARV Estimator could help you run the numbers in one place.

A text overlay on a city skyline stating 1 in 3 Kiavi NE bridge borrowers in Q1 2026 was a first-time borrower.

Who Is Buying in Massachusetts Right Now?

One of the more telling threads in Kiavi's data may be the steady rise in new bridge borrowers—investors with no recorded bridge loan transactions in the prior 36 months—as a share of total Kiavi Northeast bridge activity. This trend has moved consistently in one direction across the full two-year dataset.

Period

First-Time Borrower¹ Share— Kiavi NE Bridge Loans

Q1 2024

~10%

Q1 2025

~38%

Q1 2026

~34%

Source: Kiavi Internal Analysis. Proprietary bridge loan data reflects Kiavi-funded transactions across Massachusetts, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont, Q1 2024 through Q1 2026. Data pull: April 2026.

¹ A new bridge borrower is defined as any borrower who has not completed a flip loan transaction within the last 36 months.

From roughly 10% in Q1 2024 to approximately 34% in Q1 2026, Kiavi's Northeast bridge portfolio is reaching a meaningfully broader cohort of real estate investors than it was two years ago. The slight dip from Q1 2025's ~38% high may reflect normal quarter-to-quarter variability at the current data set size.

There are a few ways to read this. Real estate investors who were priced out of Massachusetts and surrounding states in prior cycles may now be finding entry points that work at lower acquisition levels. Investors from other markets may be exploring New England for the first time as competition cools. It could also potentially reflect that experienced real estate investors are using bridge products for the first time on projects they previously financed differently.

The broader market data may help explain the pull. Realtor.com's 2026 Top Housing Markets forecast ranked Worcester, Massachusetts third nationally for projected combined home sale and price growth in 2026—which may suggest that even as real estate investors are entering the market for the first time, the underlying end-buyer demand that determines exit viability could remain favorable. For real estate investors who have been watching Massachusetts from the sidelines, that combination may be worth tracking.

A text overlay on a Boston skyline background showing Massachusetts bridge loan activity up 67% YoY in Q1 2026.

How Do Surrounding New England Markets Stack Up?

Before drawing too strong a conclusion about Massachusetts specifically, it could be worth asking: is this just what every New England market looks like right now? The answer—across both Kiavi loan data and Redfin's March 2026 end-buyer metrics—is mostly no.

New England Redfin Housing Market Snapshot: March 2026

State

Median Sale Price

Price YoY

% Sold Above List

Median Days on Market

Inventory YoY

Massachusetts

$645,300

+2.7%

40.0%

32 days

+4.3%

Connecticut

$444,100

+5.4%

53.2%

45 days

-11.3%

Rhode Island

$535,300

+6.4%

41.8%

42 days

-6.1%

New Hampshire

$500,200

+0.2%

36.6%

53 days

+5.2%

Maine

$390,300

+7.2%

25.3%

67 days

+19.8%

Vermont

$437,800

+9.0%

17.4%

95 days

+15.8%

U.S. Average

$436,412

+1.1%

25.6%

55 days

Sources: Redfin Massachusetts, Redfin Connecticut, Redfin Rhode Island, Redfin New Hampshire, Redfin Maine, Redfin Vermont, and Redfin U.S. Housing Market. All data March 2026.

Read through a real estate investors lens, Massachusetts appears to occupy a distinctive position in this table. Its 32-day median days on market is the fastest in the region by a significant margin—10 days faster than Rhode Island (the next-closest), and more than 60 days faster than Vermont. That pace could matter for investors evaluating holding costs and refinance timelines.

Its 40.0% sold-above-list rate, while below Connecticut's 53.2%, significantly outpaces the national average and suggests end-buyer competition that could support exit pricing. And its +4.3% inventory growth—unlike Connecticut and Rhode Island, which saw inventory fall—may signal more deal flow for investors sourcing acquisitions in the coming quarters.

A quick note on each state for real estate investors evaluating the broader region:

  • Connecticut (Hartford, New Haven, Bridgeport). Connecticut's end-buyer market appears to be the most competitive in the region by Redfin's March 2026 metrics, with 53.2% of homes selling above list price and inventory down 11.3% year-over-year—a combination that could make it harder for investors to source acquisitions at favorable prices even as flipped properties may move quickly.

  • Rhode Island (Providence). Rhode Island's Redfin data for March 2026 shows 41.8% of homes sold above list price—the second-highest in the region—a favorable exit signal. But inventory fell 6.1% year-over-year and median days on market (42 days) is considerably slower than Massachusetts. For investors who prioritize deal flow and exit speed, the Rhode Island data may suggest a more constrained sourcing environment even with strong buyer demand.

  • New Hampshire (Manchester, Nashua). New Hampshire's Redfin data shows 36.6% of homes sold above list in March 2026, but with only +0.2% median price appreciation year-over-year, the market may be approaching a ceiling on seller pricing power—which could compress investor margins on the exit side. Inventory rose 5.2%, suggesting some improvement in deal availability.

  • Maine (Portland). Maine had the second-longest median days on market in the region at 67 days in March 2026 per Redfin, and only 25.3% of homes sold above list price—a pattern that could extend holding periods and compress exit margins for investors. Inventory grew 19.8% year-over-year, which could mean more supply for sourcing but potentially more competition on the resale side as well.

  • Vermont (Burlington). Vermont's March 2026 Redfin data reflects the most challenging exit environment in the region: a 95-day median days on market, only 17.4% of homes selling above list price, and inventory up 15.8% year-over-year. For real estate investors evaluating a flip timeline, Vermont's velocity metrics would potentially require very careful hold-cost modeling relative to the other states in this dataset.

Kiavi Tip: If you are evaluating a deal in any of these surrounding markets, Kiavi's guide to hard money lending covers how bridge financing works across different project types and price points.

Text over a Massachusetts investment property building stating 71% of flippers plan to increase acquisitions in 2026.

Is Now a Good Time to Invest in Massachusetts Real Estate?

The case for paying attention to Massachusetts right now may come down to a combination that does not show up often in the same market at the same time: softening acquisition prices, rising Kiavi bridge loan activity, growing inventory for deal sourcing, and end-buyer velocity that appears to remain well ahead of national norms.

Kiavi's bridge loan data shows primary market activity up approximately 67% year-over-year in Q1 2026—even as broader regional transaction volume pulled back.

Redfin's March 2026 data shows Massachusetts homes selling in 32 days at the median with 40.0% going above list price, both significantly ahead of national benchmarks. And inventory grew 4.3% year-over-year, potentially creating more sourcing opportunities for investors willing to move quickly.

According to Kiavi's February 2026 Investor Pulse, 71% of flippers surveyed in the JBREC and Kiavi Q4 2025 Fix-and-Flip Survey planned to increase acquisitions in 2026—the highest share ever recorded. That intent has not yet fully shown up in Q1 Kiavi transaction counts, potentially due to seasonal patterns and the public records lag built into the data. Q2 and Q3 could tell a clearer story.

For real estate investors evaluating Massachusetts now, the question worth considering is whether the current entry window—lower acquisition prices, faster end-buyer absorption than most of the country, less competition from other investors, and a potentially growing pool of first-time buyers in Worcester and Springfield—could hold long enough to act on before that broader activity picks back up.

Massachusetts vs. the Region and Nation: Investor-Relevant Metrics, Q1/March 2026

Metric

Massachusetts

New England
Region Avg.

National

Median Days on Market

~32 days

~56 days

55 days

% Homes Sold Above List

~40.0%

~35.7%

25.6%

Median Sale Price YoY Change

+2.7%

+5.2%

+1.1%

Sources: Redfin Massachusetts, Redfin Connecticut, Redfin Rhode Island, Redfin New Hampshire, Redfin Maine, Redfin Vermont, and Redfin U.S. Housing Market, March 2026.

Read together, Massachusetts may offer a combination the other New England states may not: relatively accessible entry prices, proven end-buyer demand, and improving deal availability—all at a market velocity that could reduce holding-cost risk for investors with a clear renovation plan.

Final Thoughts

Massachusetts may not be the first market real estate investors reach for when they are scanning for fix-and-flip opportunities, but the current data—from both Kiavi's proprietary bridge loan activity and Redfin's March 2026 housing metrics—may suggest conditions are more favorable than the state's reputation may imply.

Acquisition prices appear to have softened. Bridge loan activity in primary markets is growing. End-buyer velocity appears to be the fastest in the region. And newer real estate investors are entering the market at a pace not seen in the two-year Kiavi dataset. That combination does not guarantee returns—no data set does. But it may suggest that the conditions that have historically made Massachusetts harder to crack are shifting in a way that rewards real estate investors who are paying attention right now.

If Massachusetts is on your radar, Kiavi's Massachusetts page may be the right place to start. You can explore how Kiavi funds fix-and-flip projects across Boston, Worcester, Springfield, and surrounding areas, and price out your next deal to see what the numbers could look like.

A teal-tinted aerial view of the Boston skyline with "FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs)" in bold white text.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) About Massachusetts Fix-and-Flip Markets

 

Is Massachusetts a good market for fix-and-flip investing in 2026?

Massachusetts may offer more accessible entry points for fix-and-flip investors in 2026 than it has in recent years. Kiavi's proprietary bridge loan data shows median acquisition prices declining year-over-year in Q1 2026, and Kiavi bridge loan activity in the state's primary markets grew approximately 67% year-over-year over the same period, according to Kiavi internal data. Redfin's March 2026 data adds end-buyer context: Massachusetts homes sold in a median of 32 days with 40.0% going above list price—well ahead of the national average—suggesting that renovated properties may find buyers relatively quickly. That said, conditions vary significantly by city and neighborhood, and regional figures should not substitute for local due diligence on specific properties and submarkets.

Which Massachusetts cities are most relevant for fix-and-flip investors?

Kiavi's proprietary data covers three Massachusetts metros: Boston, Worcester, and Springfield. Boston tends to carry the highest acquisition and exit prices. Worcester and Springfield may offer more accessible entry points in Q2 2026 with different buyer demand profiles, and Worcester was ranked third nationally for projected combined home sale and price growth in 2026 by Realtor.com—a potentially favorable signal for investors evaluating exit pricing there. All three require city- and neighborhood-level research before drawing deal-specific conclusions.

How does Massachusetts compare to other New England states for fix-and-flip investors?

When looking at exit-side metrics from Redfin's March 2026 data, Massachusetts had the fastest end-buyer absorption in the region at 32 median days on market—significantly ahead of Rhode Island (42 days), Connecticut (45 days), New Hampshire (53 days), Maine (67 days), and Vermont (95 days). Its 40.0% sold-above-list rate also outpaces the national average of 25.6%. On the acquisition side, Kiavi data shows median prices softening year-over-year and inventory growing 4.3%, potentially offering more sourcing opportunities than states like Connecticut and Rhode Island where inventory declined. Together, these metrics may make Massachusetts the most compelling combination of deal availability and exit-side velocity in the current New England dataset.

Can Kiavi fund bridge loans in Massachusetts and the broader New England region?

Yes—Kiavi does provide bridge loan financing for fix-and-flip projects in Massachusetts and across New England, including Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, Vermont, and Maine. Specific eligibility and terms may vary based on the property, project scope, and borrower profile. Investors can find out what they qualify for online 24/7* by pricing out a deal at kiavi.com/investment-property-loans-in-massachusetts.

*Note: 24/7 access refers to Kiavi's automated online pricing and pre-qualification tools. Results generated by these tools are estimates for informational purposes and do not constitute a final loan commitment from Kiavi. All loans are subject to full underwriting and final approval.

 


Additional Resources

 

Disclosures

Loans are for real estate investment purposes only and are not for personal, family, or household use. All loans are subject to Kiavi's standard underwriting, credit approval, and property valuation. Not all applicants will qualify. Final loan terms are contingent on several qualification factors, including credit history, income, investment experience, and the selected loan term.

This information is provided for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or investment advice. While Kiavi strives for accuracy, market data is subject to change without notice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Loans are made or arranged pursuant to a California Financing Law license. For full state licensing and additional state-specific disclosures, please visit https://www.kiavi.com/legal/disclosures.

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