U.S. house prices rose 1.1% in April, according to a closely-watched price gauge released Tuesday.

The S&P/Case-Shiller 20-City Index showed a stronger pace of growth in the three months ending in April. March’s reading was 0.9% higher. Compared to the same period a year ago, prices rose 5.4%, down from 5.5% in March.

But there was a stark divide between cities, as usual. Super-hot metros like Portland, Seattle and Denver continue to see double-digit annual price gains, while home prices in older cities like New York and Washington rose only about 2%.

Metro Monthly change 12-month change Atlanta 1.3% 6.5% Boston 1.5% 5.7% Charlotte 1.7% 5.0% Chicago 2.0% 3.1% Cleveland 1.0% 2.9% Dallas 1.3% 8.6% Denver 1.4% 9.5% Detroit 1.3% 5.7% Las Vegas 0.6% 5.7% Los Angeles 0.8% 5.9% Miami 1.1% 6.4% Minneapolis 1.9% 4.8% New York 0.3% 2.6% Phoenix 0.7% 5.5% Portland 1.7% 12.3% San Diego 0.8% 6.3% San Francisco 1.5% 7.8% Seattle 2.1% 10.7% Tampa 0.9% 7.8% Washington 1.8% 1.9%

Still, home prices have been resilient despite some economic and financial market uncertainty and the dearth of inventory in the housing market, which has pushed prices out of reach of many buyers.

No city had a monthly decline, and before seasonal adjustment, all but six had stronger monthly increases in April than in March. While national prices are still about 11% lower than bubble-era highs, seven cities are notching new highs.