San Francisco, one of the most-expensive U.S. cities for housing, is starting to see prices fall for the first time since the depths of the pandemic.
The median house price in the city dropped 3% from a year earlier to $1.89 million in June, according to a report Thursday by brokerage Compass Inc., after cresting above a record $2 million in the previous three months. The latest price was still 20% above the level in March 2020, when Covid-19 lockdowns began.
“It’s probable, though not yet certain, that one of the longest, most dramatic real estate market upcycles in history — oddly enough, supercharged by a deadly, worldwide pandemic — peaked this past spring,” Patrick Carlisle, San Francisco Bay area market analyst for Compass, wrote in a note Thursday.
Home sales and price gains have
San Francisco has been hit particularly hard by a
In the broader Bay Area, including Silicon Valley and the East Bay, house prices rose 2% year over year in June to a median $1.43 million, Compass reported. It was the slowest growth since May 2020, when they were flat year over year.
In the intervening two years, Bay Area prices climbed at an annual double-digit pace, buoyed by a combination of record-low mortgage rates, soaring stock-investment wealth and demand for space by people working from home.
Bay Area homes are taking longer to sell and bidding wars are less intense, leading to a smaller share of sales above listing prices, Carlisle said in his report. But there’s unlikely to be a housing crash comparable to 2008, he said, because most owners today have affordable mortgages and won’t be forced to sell.
“A correction is not a crash,” he wrote.