Four Lexington homes closed in late June, ranging from $860,000 to $2.85 million — a spread that captures just how wide the town's real estate market can swing in a single week.

A newly built 6-bedroom, 6-bath home at 132 Adams St. sold June 26 for $2,850,000, just weeks after hitting the market. The 5,230-square-foot property was listed by Lori Talanian of William Raveis Real Estate.

18 Robinson Rd., a 5,752-square-foot new-construction Colonial in the Turning Mill neighborhood, sold June 25 for $2,800,000 — but only after spending roughly a year on the market, an unusually long stretch in a town where homes typically sell in weeks. First listed at $3,150,000, it was relisted twice and ultimately closed about 14% below its original asking price.

98 Blossomcrest Rd., a 3-bedroom contemporary on a dead-end street, sold June 22 for $1,450,000.

52 Ivan St., a 3-bedroom, 2-bath home at 1,344 square feet, closed for $860,000 — more than double the $395,000 national median reported for May.

June saw 121 homes sell in Lexington, up 48% from a year earlier, with a median sale price of $2,328,000. Homes are taking a bit longer to sell — 38 days on average, up from 30 — and active listings have climbed 57% year-over-year to 99. Still, homes are selling at 101.2% of list price on average, meaning sellers haven't lost their edge yet.

The trend isn't just local. Pending home sales across the Northeast rose 8.7% month-over-month in May, the strongest gain of any U.S. region. NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun called it "an indication of pent-up housing demand and consumers' acceptance of above-6% mortgage rates as the new normal."