The state inventory of homes available for sale is expanding following the historic contraction in the 2021 pandemic buying spree.

For-sale inventory in California’s largest metros averages 22% above a year earlier for December 2024, according to data from Zillow.

The number of properties entering the market as available for sale through October 2024 in most counties ranged from 26%-47% above a year earlier. Inventory levels nearly reached their August 2022 peak.

In early 2025, low-tier priced housing has the lowest level of inventory available for sale or rent. No surprise here, as mid- to high-tier pricing is out of range for most buyers.

In contrast, wealthy buyers are historically the first to taper acquiring property, setting up excess inventory and a price decline in high-tier priced housing. The wealthy experience a decline in their income before jobholders do, as profits from investments decline before growth in jobholder numbers slow, then peak and eventually drop.

Today’s high price levels asked by sellers and cyclically high mortgage rates force buyers reliant on mortgage funding to either wait until sellers reduce their price demands significantly or buy cheaper housing.

Compounding the drag on sales, mortgaged owners who purchased or refinanced in the past decade are unwilling to sell and upgrade when mortgage rates greatly exceed the rate on their present mortgage.

Further, the real estate recession underway since mid-2022, unless interrupted, will ripple across the economy and usher in job and property value losses, and place highly-leveraged property owners in the position of unconventional sellers.

The growth of inventory available for sale has consequences: prices of property begin to decline as sellers seek to attract a reduced number of willing buyers. Buyers, confronted with swelling choices and declining prices, initially tend to take a wait-and-see approach before they are willing to step up and acquire a property. This buyer retreat ends when buyers perceive prices have reached their bottom and sales activity indicates prices are on the rise.

Looking ahead, expect the for-sale inventory to increase in 2025 and beyond until the first drove of speculative buyers enters the market, not likely before mid-2027.

Chart update 2/05/25

Dec 2024Dec 2023Annual change
Los Angeles for sale inventory16,60012,900+27.9%
Riverside for sale inventory13,60010,700+27.1%
San Diego for sale inventory5,1003,700-37.6%
San Francisco for sale inventory4,9004,200+16.6%
San Jose for sale inventory1,2001,100+2.6%

At some point in 2025 or 2026, the entire real estate market will be firmly in the hands of buyers and tenants; users, not owners. As for real estate agents in property sales and leasing, a steady income from fees in 2025-2027 will require a pivot to owners and tenants willing and able to acquire a home when prices decline no further and stabilize.

With representation agreements mandated for agents assisting buyers (to earn a fee), buyer interaction with the gatekeepers is enhanced and confidence in acquiring property will rise to increase sale volume.

Home prices will likely bottom around 2027 as the current ripple effects of the pandemic stimulus and government chaos settle out. Expect the next upturn in pricing to arrive around 2027, maybe 2028. As always, a timeline is complicated by disruptions in jobs and attitudes brought on by abnormal shifts in economics and international relationships, and the vicissitudes of government action.

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The cure for the inventory shortage

California’s long-standing inventory imbalance and resulting housing crisis of low-tier availability has two reasonable bases for resolution:

  • decreased demand, via an increase in the number of occupants per existing dwelling or parcel of real estate
  • construction of residential units, enforced and funded by state programs for low-tier priced housing necessary to support the state’s economy

The years beyond 2025 will see a bit of both.

Residential construction is due to increase, soon.

Homeowner and rental vacancies are below normal rates for the present level of household income in California. This occupancy stress is due to local and state inability to permit new construction of housing units sufficient to house individuals employed in a community.

To that end, several pieces of new legislation since 2017 focus on the construction of more dwellings in communities in California. However, only a few inclusive communities willing to enforce long-term housing policy have addressed the permitting issue. Some coastal communities are being judicially forced to allow permits for additional low-tier housing.

Unless a community permits low-tier housing starts, the community will need rent control ordinances to house those families employed locally. It’s rather one or the other, as coastal communities have discovered.

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Legislative steps toward more affordable housing