This California county is No. 1 is US for home-price gains

“How expensive?” tracks measurements of California’s totally unaffordable housing market.

The pain: Orange County’s home-price appreciation topped a ranking of 30 major US markets.

The source: My trusty spreadsheet reviewed the November home-price report by First American Data & Analytics, which covers 30 US metro areas, including six in California. Not only does the report track one-year price swings, it also slices markets into three price groupings – the costliest luxury houses, more-affordable starter homes and mid-range-priced residences.

The pinch

Not only was Orange County’s 7.7% overall gain No. 1 nationally, it also had the highest mid-range price gains (10.2%) and luxury gains (8.1%).

The only less-painful news for local house hunters was the milder 4.9% increase in starter-home prices. Yet that was still eighth-highest among the 30 big US markets.

Orange County’s mix of weather, ocean and high-paying jobs – plus limited new-home development – has made it an ultra-competitive place to try to buy a home. And the rare house hunters who can afford to buy seem eager to pay up.

How unaffordable is it?

Well, back in 2024’s first quarter, a house hunter would have to make $349,200 annually to comfortably buy the county’s $1.37 million median-priced, existing single-family home, according to stats from the California Association of Realtors.

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Pressure points

Here is how First American calculated pricing in five other California markets, where house hunters are less willing to pay up …

San Diego: Prices rose 3.7% in a year overall (No. 10 of the 30). That came from 1.7% starter-home gains (No. 17), 2.8% mid-range gains (No. 16), and 5.8% luxury gains (No. 7).

Inland Empire: Up 2.4% overall (No. 16) – from 1.8% starter gains (No. 16), 3.6% mid-range gains (No. 13), and 3.5% luxury gains (No. 17).

Sacramento: Up 1.9% overall (No. 18) – from 2% starter gains (No. 15), 2.9% mid-range gains (No. 15), and 1.6% luxury gains (No. 24).

Los Angeles County: Up 1.4% overall (No. 22) – from 3.1% starter gains (No. 12), 1.8% mid-range gains (No. 21), and 1.8% luxury gains (No. 22).

Alameda and Contra Costa counties: Off 0.3% overall (No. 29) – from 0.9% starter losses (No. 28), 4.5% mid-range losses (No. 30), and 2.4% luxury gains (No. 19).

Bottom line

Want a bargain? Consider Florida.

November’s biggest one-year loser among the 30 metros was Tampa, where prices were off 3.3% overall.

And among the states, Florida’s 1.3% decline over 12 months was the nation’s second-largest drop. Only South Dakota’s 4.4% dip was worse.

By First American’s math, California was No. 44 for price gains, up only 2.5%. That’s just ahead of No. 45 Texas at 2.4%. Nationally, prices rose 3.9%.

The biggest gains in the past year were found in Wyoming, up 12.3%, Maine, up 9.7%, and Connecticut, up 9.5%.

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Jonathan Lansner is the business columnist for the Southern California News Group. He can be reached at jlansner@scng.com

 

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