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Home price relief evaporates for San Francisco Bay Area homebuyers

After a grueling downturn, home prices in California’s Bay Area are finally rebounding — to the chagrin of buyers still in the market.

The median house price in the area gained 5% in August to $1.26 million versus a year earlier at $1.2 million. According to the latest data from Compass, this marked the first time in 13 months that the price didn’t decline.

The upward trend is expected to continue and the speedy rebound means that local homebuyers may face a competitive market once again, especially without many listings to choose from — unless they opt for downtown condos.

"San Francisco as a market or the peninsula as a whole is pretty brutal," Ben Lo, a Bay Area-based millennial who started house hunting after getting engaged in July, told Yahoo Finance. "It is not just the highest price, but you needed to remove contingencies on inspections, you needed to pay all cash, there's just so much more to it in San Francisco.”

For just over a year, buyers got a break, while sellers lost hundreds of thousands of dollars in equity as the market digested higher mortgage rates and widespread tech layoffs.

That’s largely over.

"I expect that all Bay Area Counties will have a positive year-over-year appreciation rate in the coming few months," Patrick Carlisle, chief market analyst for the San Francisco Bay Area at Compass, wrote to Yahoo Finance, "Five of the nine [counties] turned positive in August, the rest should turn positive very soon."

The nine counties in the Bay Area include San Francisco, Santa Clara, Alameda, San Mateo, Contra Costa, Napa, Marin, Solano, and Sonoma. The five counties with positive annual growth were Santa Clara, Alameda, Contra Costa, Sonoma, and Napa.

"Painted Ladies" near Alamo Square in San Francisco.
"Painted Ladies" near Alamo Square in San Francisco. · Steve Proehl via Getty Images

Limited desirable inventory

Like the national housing market, limited inventory largely contributed to the price rebound in the Bay Area.

"Buyer demand rebounded in 2023 from the deep low point of late 2022," Carlisle wrote in his market report. "Along with the substantial decline in new listings, this has created an imbalance in supply and demand, leading to faster sales, more multiple offers, and more sales over asking price.”

For instance, Santa Clara, with a population of nearly 2 million and the heart of Silicon Valley, had 1,190 active and coming-soon listings as of Sept. 1. As the biggest county in the Bay Area by resident count, Santa Clara's available homes for sale in September declined by 28% year over year and 40.5% over the last four years.

"I've had a couple of $3-$4 million buyers looking for months," Jennifer Rosdail, a KW agent based in San Francisco, said of her clients searching in Marin County, north of San Francisco. "They don't even go look at houses because nothing comes on the market for them."


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