Bay Area housing market: May 2026 weekly snapshot

Bay Area housing market: May 2026 weekly snapshot

SF median sale price hit $1.67M in March — 19% up year-over-year — while the 30-year mortgage rate ticked back to 6.51%. California's statewide median crossed $900K for the first time. FAIR Plan insurance rates rise 30% in October. A rundown of where the Bay Area market stands this week.

Real Estate Market Weekly
May 28, 2026 · 10:51 AM
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The Bay Area is flashing two contradictory signals this week. San Francisco's median sale price hit $1.67 million in March — homes routinely close 15% above asking and go under contract in 14 days. Meanwhile, the 30-year fixed rate ticked back up to 6.51% on May 21, undercutting some of the momentum. For buyers already stretched to the edge of qualification, a 15-basis-point jump in a single week is not a rounding error.

Median sale price

San Francisco's median sale price reached $1,687,500 in March 2026, a 19% jump from a year earlier 1. That figure is 282% above the national median. Zillow's home value index, which smooths transaction noise, puts the city at $1,369,171 as of April 30, up 6.0% year-over-year 2. The gap between those two numbers reflects a mix of measurement method and timing rather than genuine contradictions — Redfin counts closed transactions, Zillow models estimated values.
Across the bay in San Jose, the March median was $1,489,000, up a quieter 0.6% year-over-year, with homes selling in about 10 days 3. South Bay competition (Redfin score: 57 out of 100) is notably softer than San Francisco's 91 — a meaningful divergence given that the two markets are often lumped together in Bay Area summaries.
At the statewide level, California's April median closed at $914,810 — the first time the number has crossed $900,000 — with C.A.R. noting that the milestone mostly reflects higher-priced homes making up a larger share of April closings rather than broad value appreciation 4.
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Active inventory and competition

San Francisco sold 488 homes in March, up from 472 a year ago 1. The average home closed at 113.7% of its list price — 6.9 percentage points higher than the same period last year. Hot properties went 30% over ask. Those numbers imply tight inventory: when buyers routinely bid well above listing, supply is not keeping pace with demand.
Single-family building permits fell to an 8-month low in April, according to C.A.R.'s latest data 4. Fewer permits today means fewer completions in 12-18 months, which gives the inventory picture an unflattering forward trajectory.
Colorful Victorian houses with San Francisco skyline behind them
Colorful Victorian houses with San Francisco skyline behind them
San Francisco's Victorian housing stock, where supply constraints are structural as well as cyclical.

Mortgage rate impact

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.51% for the week ending May 21, 2026 — up from 6.36% the prior week 5. The 15-year fixed moved to 5.85%, also up 14 basis points week-over-week.
The year-ago comparison is more favorable: the same benchmark sat at 6.86% in May 2025, so on a 12-month view rates have actually improved. But for a $1.4 million Bay Area purchase with 20% down, the difference between 6.36% and 6.51% adds roughly $130 per month to the mortgage payment. At this price tier, a single week's rate move is enough to push some buyers back to the sidelines.
California's April sales rebound — the first year-over-year gain in 2026 — came despite elevated rates. C.A.R. attributed the improvement largely to the luxury end ($2M+), where buyers are less sensitive to rate moves because they lean on larger equity or cash 4. Entry-level and mid-market buyers have not shared in the same bounce.

Policy and insurance watch

The most consequential cost story developing this week is insurance. California's FAIR Plan — the state's insurer of last resort for homeowners who can't secure private coverage — will raise premiums by nearly 30% in October 2026, the steepest increase in years 4. The Bay Area is not the highest-risk wildfire zone in the state, but as private carriers continue to exit California or tighten underwriting, the pool of FAIR Plan customers grows and so does the financial exposure passed to all California homeowners through assessment provisions.
A new metric surfaced in C.A.R.'s data this week: the Listing-Income Alignment Score, which maps listings by price tier against local median incomes. Results for major California metros show significant misalignment — available inventory is skewed toward higher price bands than local wage levels can comfortably support. The Bay Area, already carrying the highest price-to-income ratio of the three cities this channel tracks, is not an outlier in this analysis so much as the extreme case it has always been.
On the construction side, the combination of low permits and the FAIR Plan rate hike adds pressure to housing supply from two directions simultaneously: developers face higher insurance costs during construction and operation, and buyers face higher ongoing costs once they own, both of which constrain the economic logic of building at scale.

Data sourced from Freddie Mac PMMS (week ending May 21, 2026), Zillow ZHVI (updated April 30, 2026), Redfin market trend pages for San Francisco and San Jose (March 2026 close data), and C.A.R. Market Minute Write-Up (published May 25, 2026).

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