Bangkok Post

Pricey California market? In 2021, it got pricier.

- CANDACE JACKSON

The real estate market in California mostly mirrored the national trends in 2021, with home prices increasing by double digits in the more affordable, outlying suburbs and in smaller metro areas like Riverside and Sacramento. In urban markets like San Francisco, the increases were more modest — at least by 2021 standards.

As for home prices overall, they far outpaced the national median price. In October, the median sale price of a single-family home in California was $798,440, up 12.3% from the year before, according to informatio­n from the California Department of Finance — more than twice the national median sale price of $353,900 reported in November by the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

Jeff Tucker, a senior economist with Zillow, said the Bay Area’s housing market was one of the state’s coolest in 2021, with home values rising sharply but at a lower rate than statewide values.

By Zillow’s calculatio­ns, he said, the city of San Francisco saw the “typical” home value increase by 9.3%, to $1.53 million, from November 2020 to November 2021, compared with a statewide increase of 20%.

“But it’s like a fractal,” Tucker said. “You zoom in and the pattern reasserts itself,” with the national trend of more affordable outlying areas seeing the most significan­t price growth.

The East Bay, for example, which includes Berkeley, Oakland and the surroundin­g suburbs, saw stronger price growth.

“Oakland was the market that saw the biggest increase in demand,” said Daryl Fairweathe­r, the chief economist for Redfin. “Everyone was leaving the city and going across the bridge.”

The median sale price of a singlefami­ly home in Alameda County, which includes Oakland and Berkeley, was $1.3 million in November 2021 — up 24%, from $1.05 million, in November 2020, according to data from the California Associatio­n of Realtors. In San Francisco, by comparison, the median sale price for a single-family home was $1.9 million, an increase of 12%, from $1.67 million, a year before.

“It was crazy all year long,” said Daniel Stea, a broker and lawyer who owns Stea Realty Group and works in Oakland and Berkeley.

“That is, with the exception of a brief slowdown in June,’’ he said, “when bidding-war fatigue seemed to set in and some buyers may have headed out of town, post-vaccinatio­n.’’

But demand picked up sharply later in the summer, Stea added, with movein ready homes that had work-fromhome space and backyards often getting a dozen or more offers.

Sacramento was one of the most indemand destinatio­ns for buyers seeking bigger homes at relatively affordable prices.

The “typical” value of a single-family home there in 2021 was $472,000, according to Zillow’s estimate — up 22.3% from 2020, but still far less than the statewide average.

“The area has newer and bigger homes than its coastal neighbor to the west,” Tucker said, referring to San Francisco. “That’s a good example we saw of the trend in a lot of the country.”

Los Angeles also saw strong price growth. In November, the median sale price of a single-family home there was $810,000, according to informatio­n from Redfin, up from $730,000 the previous year — an 11% increase that reflected a mix of larger price increases in more affordable areas and smaller ones in already pricey places like Santa Monica, Fairweathe­r said.

Still, the luxury market soared in affluent enclaves like Montecito, near Santa Barbara, which made headlines in 2020 when Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, bought a $19.9 million home there.

In 2021, it continued to attract wealthy buyers, and the average sale price increased by 43% over the prior

year, to $6.46 million, said Martha J. Mosier, the president of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServic­es California Properties.

Her explanatio­n? “More and more executives no longer have to remain in LA or in San Francisco.”

“Inventory in most of the state remains low, with the number of active listings down more than 30%,’’ said Danielle Hale, the chief economist at Realtor.com.

San Francisco and Los Angeles saw listings increase slightly, year over year, she said, “but because buyers are pretty active, those homes are being snapped up quickly.”

So what’s in store for California in 2022?

“A lot of these California markets are going to see home prices grow half as fast as they did in 2021,” Hale said. “That should be a relief for buyers.” ©2022 THE

 ?? THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mandeep Bansal plays with his children outside their home in the Sacramento suburb of El Dorado Hills, California in this file photo. Sacramento was one of the state’s most in-demand destinatio­ns in 2021 for buyers seeking bigger homes at relatively affordable prices.
THE NEW YORK TIMES Mandeep Bansal plays with his children outside their home in the Sacramento suburb of El Dorado Hills, California in this file photo. Sacramento was one of the state’s most in-demand destinatio­ns in 2021 for buyers seeking bigger homes at relatively affordable prices.

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