April 2026 Summit County Colorado Real Estate Market Town-by-Town Breakdown
Summit County Town-by-Town Breakdown
April 2026
Every month our six Summit County towns tell slightly different stories, and April 2026 was no exception. While the county as a whole saw solid activity, the action was far from evenly distributed. The condo and townhouse market in particular showed some sharp contrasts, with a few towns seeing a surge of buyer interest and others working through an overhang of inventory.
A quick note on single-family data: most individual towns recorded only one single-family sale in April, which makes any one-month price figure statistically unreliable. Breckenridge was the exception, with 14 single family closings, though a handful of luxury sales at the high end, a $10M sale and a $8.6M sale!, pushed its median well above typical levels. For single family context, year-to-date figures and trend direction are more telling than any single month.
Where the Action Was: Condo and Townhouse Hot Spots
Frisco stood out as the most active condo and townhouse market in April. Sales tripled compared to April 2025, and the median price climbed to $735,000, up 24% year over year. Buyers moved quickly too, with days on market dropping sharply from 30 days last April to just 9. Frisco has long been a value play relative to Breckenridge, and that relative affordability appears to be drawing buyers in.
Silverthorne had a strong month as well. T/C closings doubled year over year, and the median price jumped to $600,000, a 41% increase. Like Frisco, Silverthorne benefits from its location along I-70 and a growing local amenity base. A 41% median gain in one month should be read with some caution given the small sample size, but the direction is clearly positive.
Keystone also logged meaningful gains on the T/C side, with closings up 78% compared to last April. Keystone tends to attract second-home and investment buyers, and the pickup in activity suggests that segment of the market is engaging again after a quieter stretch.
Markets with More Patience Required
Breckenridge condos and townhouses tell a more cautious story. The median T/C price fell to $530,000, down 28% from April 2025, and active inventory grew by 26%. Days on market stretched to 58 days, more than double the county T/C average. Breckenridge T/C is clearly a buyer's market right now, with more options and less urgency than we have seen in recent years. Sellers here need realistic pricing to compete.
Dillon had a very quiet April on the T/C side. Only 3 sales closed, down from 14 a year ago, and days on market ballooned to 148. Months of supply hit 10.3, which is firmly in buyer territory. Dillon is a smaller market that can swing dramatically on low volume, but the inventory build-up is worth watching through the summer.
Single-Family: Reading the Signals Carefully
Outside of Breckenridge, single-family data for individual towns in April is essentially noise. Wildernest, Silverthorne, Keystone, Frisco, and Dillon each recorded just one SF closing, so any price figure reflects one transaction, not a trend. What we can say is that buyer interest in SF properties across Summit County remains present, and year-to-date volumes are generally tracking ahead of 2025. The full county SF picture is covered in the Summit County Market Summary.
Town Comparison Scorecard: April 2026
The condo market is bifurcating: Frisco, Silverthorne, and Keystone are rewarding buyers who move decisively, while Breckenridge and Dillon are giving patient buyers more room to negotiate.
Data: Altitude REALTORS area stats via CAR ShowingTime | Generated May 19, 2026
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