California Real Estate Market Analysis - May 2026
The rate environment is the central story for national housing. The 30-year fixed rate fell nearly half a point year-over-year, from 6.76% to 6.30%, and that improvement has translated into measurably higher purchase application volume. However, the path has been volatile — rates spiked to 6.95% in January 2026 and have been choppy since, driven by a gasoline-linked CPI surprise in March (3.3% YoY) and ongoing geopolitical pressures keeping oil prices elevated.
The Federal Reserve held its benchmark rate at 3.50%-3.75% in April 2026 and remains firmly on hold, signaling that rate cuts are unlikely before clear and sustained evidence of CPI returning toward the 2% target. NAR revised its full-year 2026 sales forecast down to 4% growth from a prior, more optimistic projection.
| Region | Typical Value | YoY Change | 1-yr Forecast | Median DOM | Affordability |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bay Area | $1,094,000 | +0.8% | +0.8% | 29 days | 23% |
| Los Angeles | $900,000 | -1.2% | +1.5% | 31 days | ~17% |
| San Diego | $913,286 | -2.6% | +2.1% | 32 days | 15% |
| Sacramento | $566,303 | flat | +0.2% | 35+ days | ~28% |
| Inland Empire | $574,669 | -2.5% | +2.3% | 33 days | ~25% |
| Central Valley | ~$520,000 | flat | +0.5% | 40+ days | ~30% |
Bay Area: Prices are stabilizing after years of volatility, with affordability at 23% — tight but slightly better than San Diego (15%) or Orange County (9%). Tech sector recovery and AI-driven employment are beginning to revive luxury demand in Marin and Santa Clara. San Mateo County remains an outlier, where the median home requires income exceeding $500,000 annually.
Southern California: The region saw the most visible softening entering 2026, with all three major metros posting year-over-year price declines at the end of 2025. Los Angeles wildfires (January 2025) continue to affect the insurance and inventory landscape for affected communities. The Inland Empire's relative affordability is supporting steady buyer migration from coastal markets.
Sacramento & Central Valley: These markets continue to benefit from coastal spillover demand. Affordability rates near 28-30% are the highest in the state, and days on market above 35 give buyers meaningful negotiating room that simply doesn't exist in coastal metros.
Based on income qualification analysis — California LAO, Q1 2026
Foreclosure activity is rising from the historic lows of the pandemic era, but context matters enormously: Q1 2026 filings remain at roughly one-eighth of the 2009-2011 crisis peak. REO completions rose 45% year over year nationally, which means more distressed inventory will enter the pipeline in 2026. California, as a non-judicial foreclosure state, moves through the process faster than judicial states — NOD-to-REO timelines average around eight months, meaning Q1 NOD filings will become late 2026 REO properties.
California's rental market is bifurcating. Coastal tech markets (SF, San Jose, Cupertino) remain firm to strengthening, driven by the AI-sector employment surge and return-to-office trends compressing vacancy. Los Angeles is showing modest softening, with average apartment rents declining 0.42% year over year to $2,742/month (RentCafe, April 2026).
AB 1482's statewide rent cap for covered units is set at 6.3% for August 2025 through July 2026 in the SF-Oakland-Hayward metro, reflecting the 1.3% regional CPI plus the statutory 5% base.
Nationally, housing starts surged in March 2026 to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1,502,000 units, up 10.8% from February and 10.8% above March 2025. Single-family starts came in at 1,032,000 units. This is a positive supply signal, though California-specific permit data through January 2026 (FRED/Census) remains below what the state needs to close its structural housing deficit.
The most consequential supply-side development is legislative. AB 130's expanded CEQA infill exemptions, the new private plan-checker pathway under AB 253, and mandatory 10-business-day inspection timelines under AB 1308 collectively reduce permitting friction that historically added 18-36 months to project timelines in California cities.
AB 130 & SB 131 (eff. Jan 1, 2026): Expanded exemptions for qualifying infill and housing projects; shortened agency review timelines; capped public hearings; limits on administrative record scope in litigation. First major CEQA reform in a decade.
AB 976 permanently ends owner-occupancy requirements for new ADUs. AB 434 mandates pre-approved ADU plans in all cities. SB 1211 allows up to 8 ADUs on multifamily lots. ADUs can now be sold as separate condos under AB 1033 in participating cities.
Effective July 1, 2026: Overrides local height and density limits near major transit stops in 8 counties (SF, Alameda, San Mateo, Santa Clara, Sacramento, LA, Orange, San Diego). Ministerial approval available for qualifying projects meeting labor and affordability standards.
- April CPI report — path to Fed rate cuts
- NAR April existing home sales (May 11)
- NAR April pending sales index (May 19)
- C.A.R. March 2026 closed sales release
- Census Bureau March 2026 permits (May 21)
- CA NOD filings — LA & Bay Area county recorders
- Freddie Mac weekly PMMS — rate trajectory
- ATTOM Q1 distressed property pipeline update
About North Coast Financial, Inc.
North Coast Financial has experience funding hard money loans across California since 1981. With over $1 billion in loans funded, we have a ground-level view of how California real estate markets shift across cycles, rate environments, and regional conditions.
This monthly analysis is written for borrowers, investors, brokers, and fiduciaries who need a clear picture of where the California market stands today. We focus on the data that matters most to real estate transactions: price trends, inventory, days on market, and lending conditions.
North Coast Financial is a direct hard money lender based in Oceanside, CA. We lend on residential and commercial real estate statewide, with loan approvals available the same day and funding within 7 days for business purpose scenarios. Questions about a specific deal? Call (760) 722-2991 or email contact@northcoastfinancialinc.com.





