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Louisville investment sales rebound after two years of declines

Number of transactions rose above market’s 10-year average
In late 2025, The Connor Group sold Highland Station, a 197-unit multifamily property in Louisville, Kentucky, for $46.3 million. (CoStar)
In late 2025, The Connor Group sold Highland Station, a 197-unit multifamily property in Louisville, Kentucky, for $46.3 million. (CoStar)
CoStar Analytics
February 27, 2026 | 9:30 P.M.

Louisville’s investment market is entering 2026 in a stronger position after a meaningful rebound in deal activity last year. Transactions rose in a landscape shaped by easing rate volatility, improving liquidity and more predictable lending conditions. Those shifts helped bring sidelined capital back into the market and pushed sales higher after two years of steep declines.

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News | Louisville investment sales rebound after two years of declines