Median home price surpasses $2 million in these two Bay Area counties

As the spring housing market began heating up, the median home price blew past the $2 million mark in two Bay Area counties.

In Santa Clara County, the median home price hit $2 million for the first time — a record-breaking figure that surpasses even pandemic-era highs, April data from the California Association of Realtors shows. Meanwhile, in San Mateo County, the median sales price was $2.15 million — down from its peak of $2.4 million in April 2022, but up 9.1% from April 2023, when the median price was $1.97 million.

Across the nine-county Bay Area, prices were up 15.5% from last year, reaching a median sales price of $1.44 million. The median price climbed to $1.4 million in Alameda County, $940,000 in Contra Costa County, and $1.8 million in San Francisco.

Sales of previously-owned homes increased 23% from last year, as the spring selling season hit its peak, even with 30-year fixed mortgage rates hovering around 7%.

“Interest rates aren’t floating down to where buyers want them to be, even though they have been waiting and waiting and waiting,” said Janelle Boyenga, a real estate agent based in Los Gatos. “They’ve decided, how long can I wait for?”

In the East Bay, Amanda Piñero and Kenny Handel are weighing whether a bigger place would be worth giving up their pandemic-era interest rate.

In 2021, the couple, in their early 30s, moved from Austin, Texas, to Berkeley, where they bought a 720-square-foot condo. But space has been feeling tight lately, and they’ve started looking for a new place. On Saturday, they toured a 1,000 square foot home in the Rockridge neighborhood with a small backyard for their dog, Willie Nelson.

“I struggle to let go of our current interest rate,” Piñero said. “Trying to get anything else could make us house poor.”

Kenny Handel and Amanda Piñero stand outside of an open house they toured in Rockridge on May 25, 2024. They have been browsing for homes in the area for the last few months, but have been deterred by high interest rates.
Kenny Handel and Amanda Piñero stand outside of an open house they toured in Rockridge on May 25, 2024. They have been browsing for homes in the area for the last few months, but have been deterred by high interest rates. (Kate Talerico/Bay Area News Group) 

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