St. Louis Business News June 2026: What It Means for Home Value
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What does St. Louis's biggest business week of 2026 mean for home values? St. Louis's June 2026 economic momentum — including Google's approved $15B data center, seven Fortune 500 companies, and a new London Heathrow flight — is directly contributing to tight housing inventory, rising sale prices, and seller-favorable conditions across the metro.
If you've been watching the news this week and wondering what any of it has to do with the value of your home — I want to connect those dots for you. Because the business headlines coming out of St. Louis this week are not just good news for the regional economy. They're a preview of what the housing market is going to keep doing.
Let's talk through what happened, what it means, and what you should be doing about it.
St. Louis Just Had One of Its Biggest Business Weeks in Years
1. Seven Fortune 500 Companies — For the Second Year in a Row
Fortune Magazine's 72nd annual Fortune 500 list dropped this week, and St. Louis held its ground. For the second consecutive year, seven companies headquartered in the St. Louis metro made the list: Centene (No. 25), Emerson Electric (No. 206), Reinsurance Group of America (No. 257), Edward Jones (No. 333), Graybar Electric (No. 378), Olin Corp (No. 410), and Ameren (No. 480).
Post-Food Consumer Products jumped 19 spots. Core & Main jumped 16. Reinsurance Group of America moved up 11. These aren't companies treading water — they're growing.
What does this mean for housing? Fortune 500 companies are employment anchors. They attract executives, retain corporate talent, and generate a steady flow of buyers who are relocating, moving up, or investing. That demand doesn't evaporate when inventory is tight — it competes harder for what's available.
2. Google's $15 Billion Data Center Gets the Green Light
This is the biggest one. On Monday, June 9, the Montgomery County Commission voted unanimously to approve tax incentives for Google's proposed data center — a project announced just a few weeks ago along Interstate 70, about an hour west of St. Louis. The headline number is $15 billion. But the full equipment investment over the life of the project could reach $87.5 billion, with an initial phase of $24.5 billion in equipment and $13.4 billion in real property improvements between 2026 and 2029. Construction is slated to begin as soon as late 2026.
This joins Amazon Web Services, which already has a data center project underway in the same county.
The I-70 corridor just became one of the most significant tech infrastructure zones in the Midwest — and it's sitting right at the edge of St. Charles County, one of the fastest-moving housing markets in the region.
3. The London Flight Is Already Generating Economic Returns
The British Airways nonstop service from St. Louis Lambert to London Heathrow launched April 19, 2026, and it's already reshaping the city's global profile. This month, Lufthansa also expanded its St. Louis–Frankfurt service from three days a week to five.
Industry benchmarks estimate that nonstop service to Europe can generate between $50 million and $100 million annually for a metro economy — through business travel, tourism, convention traffic, and trade relationships. The legal team at the St. Louis Economic Development Partnership that secured the London flight was recognized this week by the St. Louis Business Journal's 2026 Corporate Counsel Awards.
International connectivity is a corporate location signal. Companies choosing where to put regional headquarters and operations consider access to global hubs. St. Louis just checked a box it hadn't been able to check in over two decades.
4. Down Payment Assistance Just Got a Major Boost
For first-time buyers, this week brought some of the most practical news of the year. St. Louis relaunched a down payment assistance program offering up to $50,000 in forgivable, no-interest loans for first-time buyers in targeted neighborhoods — aimed at accelerating homeownership and redevelopment in areas that need investment.
If you or someone you know has the income to qualify for a mortgage but has been struggling to accumulate a down payment in a fast-moving market, this program is worth understanding in detail.
What the Market Looks Like Right Now
All of this economic momentum is playing out against a housing backdrop that already favors sellers and tests buyers.
The St. Louis metro is running at approximately 2.4 months of supply — less than half of what defines a balanced market. The region's housing costs remain about 21.2% below the national average, which continues to attract buyers relocating from higher-cost metros. And 30-year fixed mortgage rates were hovering around 6.40% as of late April 2026 — lower than a month prior, which has continued nudging buyers off the fence and into the market.
A 10% year-over-year appreciation rate has been reported for the metro in 2026. That's not a bubble — that's what happens when you have constrained supply meeting accelerating demand in a market that was already undervalued relative to the rest of the country.
What This Means If You're Thinking About Selling
The economic story and the market story are telling the same thing right now: buyer demand is real, it's being backed by genuine economic growth in this region, and inventory is not keeping pace.
Homes that are priced correctly and show well are not sitting. They're going under contract in days, often above asking price, because buyers know that what's available today may not be there next week.
If you've been waiting for "the right time" to list, I want you to understand what's behind this market — not just the surface numbers, but the structural reasons why St. Louis is performing the way it is. That's the conversation I'm built for.
What This Means If You're Buying
Buying in a market moving this quickly requires preparation — knowing your budget before you fall in love with a home, understanding what comparable properties are actually selling for (not what they're listed at), and having representation from someone who can move when you need to move.
The down payment assistance program is a genuine opportunity if you're in the right situation. And the economic growth story means buying in St. Louis right now is not a leap of faith — it's a data-backed decision.
FAQ
Is now a good time to sell a home in St. Louis? Based on current market data, yes. St. Louis is sitting at approximately 2.4 months of supply — well below a balanced market — and homes are selling quickly and above list price in St. Charles, St. Louis, and Jefferson Counties. Economic anchors including Fortune 500 employers, major tech infrastructure investment, and expanded international air travel are supporting continued demand.
What is the Google data center doing to the St. Louis real estate market? The Google $15 billion data center approved in Montgomery County, Missouri, is expected to create high-wage jobs and spur additional infrastructure investment along the I-70 corridor west of St. Louis. Projects of this scale typically generate housing demand over time as the workforce expands — particularly in communities with existing residential inventory near the project site.
How do I find out what my home is worth in St. Louis right now? The best way to understand your home's current value is through a comparative market analysis using recent closed sales in your specific area. I'm Cheryl Carosone with Campbell House and Home, and I do this for homeowners across St. Louis City, St. Louis County, St. Charles County, and Jefferson County. Reach out — I'll tell you what your home is worth based on real numbers, not estimates.
Ready to find out what this market means for your specific address?
DM me, call me, or reach out through my website. I'm Cheryl Carosone, REALTOR® with Campbell House and Home, and I serve buyers, sellers, and investors across the St. Louis area. The market is moving — let's make sure you're moving with intention.
Cheryl Carosone | Campbell House and Home | St. Louis, Missouri








