Investors are snapping up an ever-growing share of single-family homes, and it’s the smallest investors leading the way.
It's also the highest share of investor purchases in more than five years, according to the report. Overall, investors own roughly 20% of the 86 million single-family homes in the country.
The development comes as analysts in some pandemic-era real estate hotspots have
seen a shift in how properties are changing hands in their markets. In some markets, that shift actually means fewer investors are purchasing and more buyers are planning to occupy the homes.
"Interestingly, while the percentage of single-family homes purchased by investors rose to a five-year high, the actual number of homes purchased during the second quarter of 2025 was 16,000 fewer than a year ago," said BatchData Co-Founder and Chief Innovation Officer Ivo Draginov, in a statement. "So the relatively high percentage of home purchases by investors is at least partly due to overall home sales being weaker in Q2 2025 than they were in Q2 2024."
Most of the investors buying properties are relatively smaller operations, with 87% of single-family homes owned by investors with one to five properties. The largest investors, those owning 1,000 or more properties, account for about 2% of all investor-owned homes.
The study also found that the largest investors are in the process of selling off their inventory, with the second quarter being the sixth quarter in a row when large investors sold more homes than they bought.
The states with the highest percentage of single-family homes owned by investors are essentially in tourist hotspots, with Maine at 31%, Montana at 31%, Alaska at 27% and Hawaii at 26%. Other states with higher-than-average percentages of investor-owned homes include highly affordable and landlord-friendly Arkansas, Mississippi and West Virginia, as well as states that have benefited from recent population migration, including Idaho, Vermont and Wyoming.
While investors seek out low prices, the average purchase price of $455,481 is the highest recorded by BatchData and far higher than the average of $389,562 in the second quarter of 2024.
Residential real estate market dynamics change
Some types of investors are feeling a squeeze. Home flippers, for example, are seeing their profits shrink dramatically, plummeting to the lowest point in years.
Gross profit, the difference between what a flipper paid for a property and what they sold it for, also has dropped. The typical flipped home netted $65,300 in the second quarter, about 4% less than the first quarter and 13.6% less than the second quarter of 2024.
The culprit? High home prices that push flippers to buy in at a higher cost, squeezing margins and trimming profits.
About 7.4% of homes sold in the second quarter were sold by flippers, according to ATTOM, down from 8.3% in the first quarter and slightly lower than the 7.5% of homes sold in the second quarter of 2024. But as flippers scour the housing market for deals, they also are competing with homebuyers looking for affordable properties, said ATTOM CEO Rob Barber
Home prices nationally have grown rapidly since the onset of the Covid-19 pandemic. In the second quarter of 2020, the median sale price for U.S. homes was $317,100,
according to data compiled by the Federal Reserve. By the second quarter of 2022, that number was $437,700, up 38%. It dropped to $410,800 in the first quarter of 2025, but that's still up nearly 30% from the early days of the pandemic five years ago.