The future of the Hamptons is uncertain as prices plummet and luxury buyers head north
  1. east hamptons home
    east hamptons home

    (Sotheby's)

    Average home prices fell in the Hamptons in 2016.

  2. Meanwhile, farther north in the Hudson Valley, the luxury home market is moving quickly.

  3. Some wealthy people are trading their Hamptons mansions for rustic homes in the Hudson Valley and the Catskills.

  4. Tourism in the area is also booming.

The Hamptons have long been a weekend playground for New York City's wealthiest and most fashionable.

But thanks to a softening real-estate market and the growing appeal of more affordable destinations, that could be about to change.

The various hamlets of Long Island's East End are certainly still a haven for celebrities and Wall Streeters, as well as an older set of travelers, but there are some signs that the attention of potential second-home buyers could be shifting north.

Collapsing prices in the Hamptons

la dune southampton
la dune southampton

(A Southampton home that was originally on the market for $145 million. Current price is available upon request.Sotheby's International Realty)

The Hamptons have a tony reputation for a reason. Though each of its hamlets has its own flavor, the Hamptons are known for their large, shingle-style homes with ocean views and proximity to fundraisers and other events wealthy neighbors throw throughout the summer. Finance professionals have long chosen to buy second homes here.

And while the Hamptons will continue to be a destination for a particular kind of homebuyer, the housing market endured a slight slump in 2016, which some have attributed to the falling profits, bonuses, and headcounts seen on Wall Street last year.

The end of 2016 was particularly challenging for the Hamptons luxury real-estate market, according to several brokerages that released reports after the fourth quarter. Data from the luxury real-estate company Brown Harris Stevens showed that average home prices had fallen by 23.1% in the fourth quarter year-over-year.

"This was really due to the election," Aspasia Comnas, executive managing director of Brown Harris Stevens of the Hamptons, told Business Insider. "We're a secondary-home market, and if our buyers or sellers feel at all uncertain about what their economic future will look like — and with a change in administration, there was no way but for there to be a change in the economy — buyers and sellers hold back."

At the luxury end of the Hamptons market, the median sales price fell 29.5%, to $5.85 million, year-on-year, according to the real-estate appraisal firm Miller Samuel. But this did not deter developers from putting more homes up for sale, as inventory increased 21% in the same period.

"Activity started picking up again in December and in January, so I'm guessing the market is making a recovery," Comnas said.