Statistical Tables | | After Quiet, Data Deluge

Trends at a Glance
(Single-family Homes)
  Nov 25 Oct 25 Nov 24
Home Sales: 181 264 200
Median Price: $1,490,000 $1,499,000 $1,563,500
Price: $2,167,433 $2,236,538 $2,068,730
SP/LP: 98.6% 98.9% 106.4%
Days on Market: 25 24 29
(Lofts/Townhomes/TIC)
  Nov 25 Oct 25 Nov 24
Condo Sales: 206 301 208
Median Price: $1,130,000 $1,149,000 $1,120,000
Average Price: $1,317,052 $1,310,239 $1,284,629
SP/LP: 99.3% 95.9% 98.5%
Days on Market: 56 46 65

Home Prices Mixed, Sales Up in December

The median sales price for single-family, re-sale homes was down 8.6% year-over-year.

The average sales price for single-family, re-sale homes was down 2.4% month-over-month. Year-over-year, it was up 20.2%.

Sales of single-family, re-sale homes rose 19.2% year-over-year. There were 149 homes sold in San Francisco last month. The average since 2000 is 214.

The median sales price for condos/lofts was up 4.7% year-over-year.

The average sales price was up 8.3% year-over-year.

Sales of condos/lofts rose 18.5% year-over-year. There were 192 condos/lofts sold last month. The average since 2000 is 230.

The sales price to list price ratio, or what buyers are paying over what sellers are asking, fell from 98.6% to 98.5% for homes. The ratio for condos/townhomes fell from 99.3% to 97.2%.

Average days on market, or the time from when a property is listed to when it goes into contract, was 28 for homes and 68 for condos/lofts. 

Momentum Statistics

Sales momentum…
for homes rose from +4.3 to +4.8. Sales momentum for condos/lofts was up 0.9 of a point to +15.3.

Pricing momentum…
for single-family homes fell 1.2 points to -3.6. Pricing momentum for condos/lofts was flat at –4.4.

Our momentum statistics are based on 12-month moving averages to eliminate monthly and seasonal variations.

If you are planning on selling your property, call me for a free comparative market analysis. 

We calculate…

momentum by using a 12-month moving average to eliminate seasonality. By comparing this year's 12-month moving average to last year's, we get a percentage showing market momentum.  

In the chart below…

the blue area shows momentum for home sales while the red line shows momentum for pending sales of single-family, re-sale homes. The purple line shows momentum for the average price.

As you can see, pricing momentum has an inverse relationship to sales momentum.

The graph below shows the median and average prices plus unit sales for homes.

Remember, the real estate market is a matter of neighborhoods and houses. No two are the same. For complete information on a particular neighborhood or property, call me.

P.S. The FHA requires all condo projects to be re-certified before they will make a loan. To find out if the condo project you're interested in is eligible, go here: https://entp.hud.gov/idapp/html/condlook.cfm.

The graph below shows the median and average prices plus unit sales for condos/lofts.

The real estate market is very hard to generalize. It is a market made up of many micro markets. For complete information on a particular neighborhood or property, call me.

If I can help you devise a strategy, call or click the buying or selling link in the menu to the left.

Monthly Statistics

Complete monthly sales statistics for San Francisco are below. Monthly graphs are available for each area in the city.

December Sales Statistics
(Single-family Homes)
  Prices Unit     Yearly Change Monthly Change
  Median Average Sales DOM SP/LP Median Average Sales Median Average Sales
San Francisco $1,398,000 $2,115,309 149 28 98.5% -8.6% 20.2% 19.2% -6.2% -2.4% -17.7%
D1: Northwest $2,227,500 $2,270,888 10 32 118.2% 23.6% 8.7% 25.0% 4.6% -14.9% -44.4%
D2: Central West $1,695,000 $1,708,120 25 18 126.3% 7.3% 7.5% 13.6% -0.8% -4.1% -28.6%
D3: Southwest $1,275,000 $1,454,583 12 30 113.1% -9.7% 2.6% 100.0% -3.8% -3.5% 20.0%
D4: Twin Peaks $1,817,500 $1,945,759 26 14 114.7% 13.6% 15.4% 36.8% -18.9% -17.2% 0.0%
D5: Central $3,487,500 $3,917,250 16 27 103.4% 48.9% 57.3% 14.3% 34.3% 15.4% -38.5%
D6: Central North $0 $0 0 0 0.0% n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a
D7: North $5,997,000 $6,712,400 10 44 94.4% 23.6% 33.7% 100.0% 11.1% -8.4% 25.0%
D8: Northeast $11,300,000 $11,300,000 1 44 90.4% 242.4% 23.3% -66.7% 167.5% 148.6% -66.7%
D9: Central East $1,580,000 $1,824,647 17 54 106.9% 1.8% 12.3% -15.0% -4.2% 2.3% -10.5%
D10: Southeast $975,000 $1,018,691 33 37 108.8% -8.5% -9.2% -13.2% -5.8% -4.7% 0.0%

December Sales Statistics
(Condos/TICs/Co-ops/Lofts)
  Prices Unit     Yearly Change Monthly Change
  Median Average Sales DOM SP/LP Median Average Sales Median Average Sales
San Francisco $1,095,000 $1,392,940 192 68 97.2% 4.7% 8.3% 18.5% -3.1% 5.8% -6.8%
D1: Northwest $1,475,000 $1,412,625 8 51 105.7% 5.4% 10.0% 60.0% 3.4% 1.9% -42.9%
D2: Central West $457,596 $457,596 2 84 100.0% -75.0% -75.0% 0.0% -64.8% -64.6% -50.0%
D3: Southwest $1,010,000 $983,125 4 48 111.1% 90.6% 32.6% 33.3% 13.5% 10.5% 100.0%
D4: Twin Peaks $547,500 $547,500 2 244 94.6% -20.4% -20.4% 0.0% -58.7% -58.7% 100.0%
D5: Central $1,500,000 $1,497,320 25 44 104.2% 12.1% 15.4% 4.2% 0.0% -0.6% -13.8%
D6: Central North $1,275,000 $1,340,655 20 56 102.9% 7.8% 15.6% 66.7% 6.9% 5.6% -16.7%
D7: North $1,627,500 $2,822,381 22 54 94.9% 20.6% 88.6% 15.8% -16.3% 36.4% -15.4%
D8: Northeast $900,000 $1,228,281 41 81 97.9% -2.7% -1.7% 32.3% -10.4% 4.1% -10.9%
D9: Central East $912,500 $1,087,397 62 76 100.5% -3.9% -22.4% 17.0% 1.4% -9.8% 12.7%
D10: Southeast $781,200 $864,567 6 76 99.5% 5.6% 15.3% -45.5% 10.0% 20.1% 20.0%

After Quiet, Data Deluge

January 2, 2026 -- The hustle and bustle of the holiday season is coming to a close, and the quiet which pervades financial markets over this time each year is also complete. The streams of data which track various components of the economy aren't fully back to normal as yet, and the coming month will reveal a lot about how things ended the year. As the government remained partially shuttered through nearly mid-November, data from December will be the first that has no direct shutdown distortion since back in September.

The first full week of January seems to be a time when changes in trends for interest rates often begin. Not only does the quiet holiday trading in financial markets return to normal, it's also the start of both a new quarter and new calendar year, and so there's usually also some re-setting of investment positions and strategies. As well, to start the month and year, there's a fresh slug of new economic data to help investors monitor any changes in momentum or existing trends.

We expect to see some pickup in home sales this year (see HSH's Annual Outlook for 2026 for a discussion) and it would appear that the recent trend is supportive of that. In the last few months, the Pending Home Sales Index from the National Association of Realtors has trended upward, and November's measure of signed contracts to buy existing homes rose by another 3.3%. The current value of this index is the highest it has been dating back to February 2023, and there have been gains in each of the last four months. While lower mortgage rates have helped lift sales, it's not solely about rates, since there was a 4.2% increase in this index way back in August, when 30-year FRMs still averaged better than 6.5%. Lower rates have helped improve sales, but so has more homes available to buy, rising incomes and flattening home price increases.

Mortgage rates start 2026 as low as they have been since October 3, 2024. If they should hang around such levels for a while after the holiday fog clears, some additional potential homebuyers are likely to take notice. More attractive noise would be made if rates could manage to decline about eight more basis points from this week's level, as this would put them at more than a three-year low (September 15, 2022). After that, headline-worthy "lowest since" comparisons will become hard to come by, as even a decline that cracks the 6% mark at some point will still only improve the historical reference by a single week.

It's worth noting that much of the decline in mortgage rates has come from the narrowing in spreads, which have currently reached their smallest gap since March 2022 at just 202 basis points last week. Looking over time, on an annual basis, the average yield on the 10-year Treasury for 2023 was 3.96% and the average spread to conforming 30-year FRMs was 285 basis points. For 2024, it was 4.21% and 251 basis points, and for 2025, 4.29% and 230. On average, and for a variety of reasons, the influential yield on the 10-year Treasury actually has been rising in the aggregate but the spread to mortgage rates shrinking, with the 55 basis point decline in spreads in the last few years overcoming the 33-point rise in yield over this stretch of time. Of course, such broad comparisons don't tell us all that much, but if nothing else it is a clear reminder that there are other forces at work in setting mortgage rates beyond Treasury yields and Fed policy moves.