Adam Kelley | Broker · DRE #01905780

Real Estate Agent in San Diego, California.

Buy, sell, and invest with Adam Kelley. 15 years working across San Diego County, $200M+ in sales, and a clear-eyed understanding of a market that rewards preparation and punishes assumptions.
Sales Volume
$ 0 M+
Homes Closed
0 +
5-Star Reviews
0 +
Nationally
Top 0 %
Meet Your Agent

Adam Kelley

Broker · DRE #01905780

San Diego is one of those cities that nearly everyone wants to live in and almost nobody fully understands as a real estate market. The headline numbers only tell part of the story. The real picture is in the neighborhoods, where two properties a mile apart can behave like completely different markets, respond to different buyer pools, and require entirely different strategies to buy or sell effectively. After 15 years working across San Diego County, from the coast to North County to the inland valley communities, Adam brings ground-level knowledge to every transaction, including the details that do not show up in a Zillow estimate. You work directly with Adam from the first showing to the final signature, and you get an honest strategy built around your specific situation.

The Place

Why San Diego, CA?

This one almost writes itself, but the honest version is more interesting than the brochure version. Yes, San Diego has 70 miles of coastline. Yes, it gets roughly 266 sunny days per year. Yes, the weather is genuinely as good as advertised, an average high that runs between 66°F and 76°F year-round with almost no humidity and ocean breezes that moderate summer heat in ways that Phoenix and Las Vegas residents find almost impossible to believe. Those things are real and they matter.

But what actually sustains San Diego as a real estate market across economic cycles is not the beaches. It is the depth of the economy behind them. San Diego is home to one of the largest military presences of any city in the United States, including Naval Base San Diego, Naval Air Station North Island, and easy proximity to Camp Pendleton to the north. That military presence brings a year-round renter and buyer pool that most cities simply do not have. Alongside it, the biotech and life sciences corridor stretching from Sorrento Valley through the Torrey Pines Mesa has quietly become one of the largest research clusters in the world, drawing a high-income, highly educated professional workforce that sustains housing demand through economic cycles that affect other markets more severely.

For buyers arriving from Los Angeles, the Bay Area, or out of state, San Diego in 2026 is a more accessible market than it was two or three years ago. Prices have pulled back modestly from their 2022 and 2023 peaks. Inventory has improved. The panic buying of the pandemic era is completely gone. That combination of more supply, more time to make decisions, and pricing that is honest about current conditions creates a genuine opportunity window that did not exist 24 months ago. Understanding how to use it is the work worth doing.

Market Intelligence · April 2026

The San Diego Market, Right Now.

The headline number looks concerning if you read it wrong. The median sale price in San Diego is down 3.1% year-over-year as of April 2026, and that sounds bad on the surface. But here is the full picture: sales volume was up 14.8% year-over-year in the same period. More homes are selling. Buyers are actively purchasing. What has come down is the extreme pricing overshoot of the 2022 peak, not fundamental demand for San Diego real estate. This is a market that is rebalancing, not reversing. The distinction matters enormously for anyone deciding whether to buy, sell, or wait.

Median Sale Price

$950,000

▼ 3.1% year-over-year, rebalancing from 2022-2023 peak
Avg. Days on Market

26-28

Well-priced homes in the right neighborhoods still move in under two weeks
Sale-to-List Ratio

99%

Strong buyer demand, without the blind overbidding of prior years
MetricCurrent Data
Median Sale Price $950,000
Year-over-Year Change3.1% (rebalancing from peak)
Average Days on Market 26-28 days
Homes Sold (April 2026)2,513 (up 14.8% YoY)
Sale-to-List Ratio99%
Market Type

Competitive, normalizing

The neighborhood-by-neighborhood variation inside these citywide numbers is enormous. A $950K median across the entire city of San Diego is nearly meaningless as a decision-making tool. La Jolla Shores trades at a $2.4M median. Rancho Bernardo trades at $740K to $860K. Mira Mesa sits in the $850K to $950K range. Scripps Ranch runs $1.2M to $1.4M for single-family homes. The citywide figure tells you San Diego is expensive. It does not tell you where to look or what your money actually gets you. That is where local knowledge makes the real difference.

San Diego by Zip Code

92037

La Jolla and La Jolla Shores

La Jolla is in a category of its own. This is the most premium residential zip code in San Diego, home to some of the most sought-after coastal real estate anywhere on the West Coast. The median home price runs approximately $2.4M as of April 2026. Single-family homes with ocean views or walk-to-cove access regularly trade at $3M and well above. The UC San Diego campus and the Torrey Pines Research Mesa sit immediately adjacent, giving this zip a rare combination of coastal prestige and intellectual community character that almost no other American coastal city can match.

92109

Pacific Beach and Mission Beach

Pacific Beach is the most accessible coastal zip in San Diego and one of the most consistently in-demand. This is genuinely walkable beach living at a price point that professional buyers can reach, not just the ultra-high-net-worth market. Single-family homes near the water start in the high $1M range and climb considerably for oceanfront. Condos and smaller properties begin in the $700,000s to $800,000s. The year-round rental demand from UC San Diego graduate students, military personnel, and young professionals in the tech and biotech sectors makes Pacific Beach one of the stronger investment zip codes in the city.

92131

Scripps Ranch

Scripps Ranch is the zip code that comes up first in nearly every family relocation conversation in San Diego, and there is a simple reason for that: Poway Unified School District. Poway Unified is consistently rated one of the best public school systems in California, and Scripps Ranch sits squarely inside its boundaries. Median single-family home prices run $1.2M to $1.4M. The Miramar Lake area gives residents trail access that most city neighborhoods cannot offer. Once families get into Scripps Ranch, they tend to stay for the duration of their kids’ school years.

92130

Rancho Bernardo and North City

Rancho Bernardo represents one of the best value propositions within San Diego proper for family buyers. Median prices run in the $740K to $860K range depending on the specific community and property type, making it one of the more accessible zip codes for buyers who want a San Diego address with excellent Poway Unified schools and manageable commute access to the Sorrento Valley tech corridor. It is a genuine sleeper value that buyers from out of state consistently underestimate until they actually visit it.

92130

Carmel Valley and the Torrey Pines Corridor

This zip anchors the city’s technology and life sciences employment cluster. Carmel Mountain Ranch and Torrey Highlands both draw substantially from this corridor. Median prices run from the mid-$1M range to above $1.6M for newer construction on premium view lots. The buyer pool here skews heavily toward biotech and technology professionals working within five to ten minutes of their office, and the persistent employer demand in this corridor keeps residential values supported even when the broader San Diego market softens.

A Collection of Communities

San Diego Neighborhoods: The Complete Guide.

San Diego is genuinely one of the most neighborhood-diverse major cities in the entire country. You can live in a walkable beach community, a master-planned family suburb, a tech-corridor development, a hillside canyon estate, or a working agricultural valley, all within the same city limits. The ten neighborhoods below are the communities Adam works in most actively across San Diego. Here is the honest picture of each one.

La Jolla Shores Premium coastal

World-class setting · 92037
La Jolla Shores earns its reputation honestly. The beach here is exceptional: wide, calm, and walkable in a way that few San Diego beaches are, sitting in the sheltered arc between La Jolla Cove and the UC San Diego campus bluffs. Properties range from beachfront cottages that have held these lots for multiple generations to contemporary custom builds on the hillside above the cove. The median runs approximately $2.4M. The buyer pool is predominantly cash-heavy, highly qualified, and motivated by lifestyle above all else. When the right property comes to market here, it does not stay long, and buyers who are not financially prepared will lose it.

Pacific Beach Coastal energy

Beach access · Investment fundamentals · 92109
Pacific Beach is the neighborhood that never really gets old. It has been San Diego's most energetic coastal community for decades, and the steady stream of UC San Diego graduates, military personnel, and young professionals in the biotech and tech sectors gives it a vitality that quieter coastal communities simply cannot replicate. Buyers here get genuine beach access at a price point below La Jolla, with strong long-term appreciation and some of the best short-term and long-term rental demand in the city. Single-family homes a few blocks from the water start in the high $1M range. For investors, this neighborhood produces consistently strong yields on both the vacation rental and long-term rental side.

Rancho Bernardo Master-planned

Poway Unified · Value in North City · 92127/92128
Rancho Bernardo is the best-kept value secret in San Diego proper, and buyers who look past the brochure and actually spend time here tend to agree. It is a fully built-out master-planned community in the northern part of the city, complete with golf courses, parks, shopping, excellent infrastructure, and a Poway Unified School District assignment that is a primary driver of housing demand. Families who cannot reach the pricing of Scripps Ranch or Carmel Mountain Ranch consistently discover that Rancho Bernardo delivers the same school district at a meaningfully lower cost of entry, with median prices in the $740K to $860K range.

Carmel Mountain Ranch Master-planned family community

Poway Unified · 92128
Carmel Mountain Ranch is the kind of neighborhood families research for months and then commit to for the duration of their children's school years. It is a well-maintained master-planned community with excellent parks, hiking access, and one of the strongest school assignments in San Diego County through Poway Unified. Residents get award-winning elementary, middle, and high school options without the full premium pricing of Del Mar or coastal La Jolla. Median home prices sit around $1.35M. Properties in solid condition and priced accurately for their specific school zone and street tend to move with multiple offers.

Scripps Ranch San Diego's most consistent family neighborhood

Poway Unified · 92131
Ask San Diego families where they want to live and Scripps Ranch comes up more consistently than almost anywhere else in the city. The combination of genuinely excellent schools, walkable streets, the Miramar Lake trail system, and a community character that larger city zip codes simply cannot manufacture has earned it that reputation over decades. Scripps Ranch High School is one of the top-rated public high schools in San Diego County. Median prices run $1.2M to $1.4M for single-family homes. When a well-priced home here comes to market, the offers arrive quickly. Buyers who are not prepared to move will lose to buyers who are.

Mira Mesa Central location

Value-oriented families and professionals · 92126
Mira Mesa is consistently underestimated by buyers who start their search with the marquee neighborhoods, and that is precisely what makes it one of the better value opportunities in the city. It sits in a genuinely central location with fast access to the Sorrento Valley tech corridor, UC San Diego, and the I-15 and I-805 freeways. Median home values hover in the $850K to $950K range, meaningfully below comparable family neighborhoods in Scripps Ranch or Carmel Mountain Ranch. The schools are solid. The community is established and well-maintained. The price-to-value ratio is genuinely strong for buyers with a long-term hold perspective.

Torrey Highlands Newer construction

Canyon and preserve views · 92130
Torrey Highlands is built into the rolling canyon terrain of northwest San Diego, and the views it offers, canyon and preserve panoramas that the coastal flat neighborhoods simply cannot provide, have made it a consistent draw for biotech and technology professionals who want newer construction without leaving the city. Proximity to the Torrey Pines research corridor and clean freeway access to the broader Sorrento Valley employment cluster make the commute math work exceptionally well for life sciences professionals. Prices start in the mid-$1M range and climb toward $2M for larger homes on premium view lots.

Del Mar Heights Coastal adjacent

Premium without the full coastal price · 92130
Del Mar Heights sits at the intersection of coastal proximity and inland practicality, which is a rare and genuinely valuable combination in San Diego. It is immediately east of Del Mar proper, giving residents real proximity to Del Mar beaches, the Del Mar Fairgrounds, the racetrack, and the coastal lifestyle, without bearing the full price of sitting directly on the water. The neighborhood draws a mix of families, professionals, and second-home buyers who want coastal adjacency with more usable space than beachfront communities provide. Prices range from the high $1M range to above $2.5M for newer construction with genuine ocean views.

Sorrento Valley Tech employment hub

Professional buyer market · 92121
Sorrento Valley is the geographic anchor of San Diego's technology and biotech employment corridor, and the residential communities immediately adjacent to it carry a persistent premium that reflects one simple reality: people who work here want to live near here. For buyers who work in this corridor and are tired of driving across the city, paying a premium for proximity to their employer is a rational decision. Investment buyers also find strong fundamentals here, with a highly qualified renter pool anchored by technology and life sciences professionals, consistently low vacancy rates, and rental demand that holds up well through broader market cycles.

San Pasqual Valley Agricultural land

Rural estates · Zoo Safari Park proximity · 92025
San Pasqual Valley is one of the last working agricultural valleys within San Diego County, sitting at the boundary between the city and the eastern reaches of Escondido. This is where buyers looking for horse properties, agricultural parcels, and genuine rural privacy within San Diego County find their options. The San Diego Zoo Safari Park is the valley's most prominent landmark, but the residents here are drawn by something quieter: the space, working farms, equestrian trails, and a pace of life that the rest of the city simply cannot offer. If you have been searching for acreage in San Diego and keep coming up empty, this is where to look.
Decide With Confidence

Which San Diego Neighborhood Is Right for You?

Best for Families Prioritizing Schools Poway Unified access
family infrastructure, community character
Scripps Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, and Rancho Bernardo are the three neighborhoods that come up first in every school-focused family conversation. All three are served by Poway Unified School District, consistently one of the highest-rated public school systems in all of California. Rancho Bernardo delivers the same school district assignment at the most accessible price point of the three.
Best for Coastal Lifestyle Beach access
walkable community, ocean proximity
La Jolla Shores is the answer for buyers who want the finest coastal living San Diego offers, with the budget to match. Pacific Beach is the answer for buyers who want genuine beach access at a more realistic price point, with strong investment upside and year-round community energy that quieter coastal neighborhoods cannot replicate.
Best for Tech and Biotech Professionals
Sorrento Valley and Torrey Pines corridor access
Torrey Highlands and communities adjacent to Sorrento Valley give technology and life sciences professionals the shortest commute times to the major employer clusters while offering newer construction and better value than coastal alternatives. Carmel Mountain Ranch is a strong family-oriented secondary option for professionals in this category.
Best Value Within the City Most accessible San Diego pricing
strong long-term fundamentals
Mira Mesa and Rancho Bernardo consistently deliver the most home for the money within San Diego city limits. Both offer solid schools, established community infrastructure, and central freeway access at price points well below the city's coastal and premium family neighborhoods.
Best for Luxury and Premium Residential Custom homes
ocean views, estate properties
La Jolla Shores for coastal prestige. Del Mar Heights for coastal adjacency with more usable space. Torrey Highlands for canyon views and newer construction at somewhat more accessible premium price points.
Best for Rural and Agricultural Living Land
horse properties, open space within city limits
San Pasqual Valley is the only genuine answer. No other area within San Diego's city limits offers the agricultural land, equestrian use capability, and rural privacy that this valley provides.
Best Relative Value Maximum quality of life per dollar spent
city address included
Mira Mesa and Rancho Bernardo offer what is arguably the best quality-of-life-per-dollar ratio within San Diego city limits. Both carry the San Diego address, excellent community infrastructure, solid schools, and central location at median prices well below the city average.
San Diego School Districts

What Every Buyer Needs to Know.

School assignment in San Diego requires more careful research than in almost any other California city, because the city is served by multiple school districts with dramatically different performance levels, and neighborhood boundaries do not always align in ways that are obvious. Getting this right before you make an offer is not a nice-to-have. It is a fundamental part of the purchase decision, and it can mean the difference between access to one of the state’s best public school systems and an assignment that may not meet your family’s needs.

Two districts dominate the conversation for the San Diego neighborhoods Adam works across:

Poway Unified School District (K-12)
Poway Unified is consistently rated among the top two or three public school districts in all of San Diego County. By most meaningful measures, it is the best large district in the entire region. It serves Rancho Bernardo, Scripps Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, and Torrey Highlands. The district's high schools, including Scripps Ranch High School, Rancho Bernardo High School, and Del Norte High School, rank consistently among the top public high schools in California on college readiness, AP course participation, and graduation outcomes.

The Poway Unified assignment is a genuine and measurable price driver across the entire northern San Diego corridor. Buyers who place significant value on schools should confirm exact attendance zone before anything else in their search, because the boundaries differ block by block in some communities and are not always what the neighborhood name suggests.

Poway Unified School District: (858) 521-2800 · pusd.org

San Diego Unified School District (K-12)
San Diego Unified is one of the largest school districts in California, serving most of the city including Pacific Beach, La Jolla Shores, Mira Mesa, and communities adjacent to Sorrento Valley. School performance within San Diego Unified varies considerably by neighborhood. La Jolla schools within the district are among the highest performers in California. Schools in Pacific Beach and the coastal communities perform strongly. Quality becomes more variable across the broader district boundaries, which makes neighborhood-specific research essential for any family buying within the San Diego Unified zone.

An extensive network of charter and private school options exists across the city for families who want alternatives to their assigned neighborhood school.

San Diego Unified School District: (619) 725-8000 · sandiegounified.org
Important: Attendance boundaries in both districts are subject to change and must be verified directly with the relevant district office before any purchase decision is based on school access. Adam confirms school zone assignments for every family buyer client before an offer is prepared.
For Buyers

Buying a Home in San Diego: What You Need to Know.

Buying in San Diego is a more nuanced process than most buyers expect, particularly for those arriving from out of state or from markets where real estate is more straightforward. The city is large, the neighborhoods genuinely differ from each other in meaningful ways, and the range of property types and price points is wider than almost any other major California city. Here are four things every San Diego buyer should understand before making an offer.

The Neighborhood Decision Is More Important Than the Budget Number

San Diego contains multitudes. A $1.1M budget gets you a modest coastal condo, a solid family home in a central neighborhood, a strong north-city property, or a well-located planned community townhome depending entirely on what you prioritize. There is no single right answer for a $1.1M San Diego buyer, and generic advice will not serve you well in a city this diverse. Understanding the trade-offs you are making, and what you are getting in return for them, is the work worth doing before you tour your first home. Adam starts every buyer relationship with the right questions, before a single property is viewed.

Poway Unified Assignment Drives Real, Measurable Premiums

Homes inside Poway Unified School District boundaries carry a measurable price premium over comparable homes just outside those boundaries. That premium is real, it is persistent, and it has historically been worth paying for families who intend to stay five or more years. Buyers who place high value on schools should prioritize confirming district assignment in Rancho Bernardo, Scripps Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, and Torrey Highlands before any other factor in their search. The boundaries are not always intuitive and can change, so verification directly with the district before submitting any offer is essential.

VA Loan Opportunities for Military Buyers

San Diego has the largest concentration of active-duty military personnel of any city in the United States. If you are an active-duty service member, veteran, or surviving spouse, VA loan financing is one of the strongest purchase tools available in a market with a $950K median price. Zero down payment, no private mortgage insurance, and competitive interest rates make VA loans genuinely powerful here. Adam works regularly with military buyers across San Diego County and is fully familiar with the VA loan process. Additional detail on military buyer resources, including guidance for buyers near Camp Pendleton, is on the Oceanside area page.

Preparation and Pre-Approval Still Separate Winners from Losers

The San Diego market is not the frenzy of 2021 and 2022. But it is still a competitive market where well-priced homes in the Poway Unified zone and correctly priced properties near the coast attract multiple offers and go under contract quickly. Buyers without a fully underwritten pre-approval letter, not just a pre-qualification, lose competitive offers consistently. Adam connects every buyer client with preferred lenders for full underwriting clearance before the first offer is ever written.
For Sellers

Selling Your San Diego Home in 2026.

The San Diego seller market in 2026 is honest and functional, and that is a different thing than the irrational seller’s market of 2021 and 2022. That distinction matters because the strategies that worked in those peak years, pricing high to see what sticks, minimal preparation because buyers will overlook anything, now actively hurt sellers. Today’s buyer has more listings to compare, more time to think, and is not operating from the fear of missing out that drove the pandemic era. Sellers who understand this and prepare accordingly do very well. Sellers who are still approaching it like 2022 are sitting on the market and ultimately closing for less than a correctly positioned home would have achieved in the first week.

Best Time to Sell in San Diego

March through June is the strongest selling window across most San Diego neighborhoods, aligned with the California spring buying season. The sweet spot is listing in late January or February, capturing peak buyer demand before the market fills with competing spring inventory. Early listings get full buyer attention. Late spring listings compete against each other.

The coastal communities and Del Mar Heights see meaningful year-round activity from out-of-state and international buyers who do not follow California seasonal patterns. A well-prepared coastal property can sell effectively in any calendar month. Inland family neighborhoods, where the school-year calendar shapes buyer timing more directly, are more sensitive to the spring window. Fall is softer for them, though a correctly priced home will always find a buyer.

What Sellers Need to Do Before Listing

The San Diego buyer in 2026 is well-informed and has seen enough properties to identify deferred maintenance immediately. Pre-listing preparation is not optional if you want to maximize your result. The things that matter most: a pre-listing inspection that finds issues before buyers use them as leverage, professional photography and, for properties with views or meaningful outdoor space, aerial drone footage, accurate pricing based on actual comparable sales in your specific neighborhood and price tier, and a complete California disclosure package assembled and ready before the property goes live.

Adam builds a specific marketing strategy for every San Diego listing based on the property type and the buyer most likely to purchase it. A north-city single-family home in the Poway Unified zone targets a different buyer with different motivations than a coastal property or a family home in a planned community. The plan follows the buyer, not a template.

Why People Move Here

Why Relocate to San Diego: The Honest Case.

People relocate to San Diego from Los Angeles, the Bay Area, Seattle, Austin, New York, Chicago, Phoenix, and across the country every year. The reasons they give in those first conversations are remarkably consistent. Here are the five that come up most often.
The Climate Is Not Hype
San Diego averages 266 sunny days a year. The average high runs between 66°F and 76°F year-round. There is almost no humidity. It almost never gets truly hot. It almost never gets cold. For buyers coming from the Midwest, the Northeast, or the Pacific Northwest, the shift is genuinely transformative in ways that are difficult to fully communicate to someone who has not lived through a proper winter. Long-time San Diego residents still appreciate the weather. That does not happen in most cities.
One of the Most Resilient Economies in the Western United States
The military, biotech, technology, healthcare, and tourism sectors collectively make San Diego one of the most diversified and recession-resistant urban economies in America. More than 700 biotech and life sciences companies operate here. UC San Diego anchors one of the most productive research ecosystems in the world. The United States Navy's Pacific Fleet is headquartered here. This is not a single-industry city, and that structural diversity is a meaningful reason why San Diego's housing market tends to rebalance rather than collapse when economic conditions shift.
Seventy Miles of Pacific Coastline
From the La Jolla cove area in the north to the Silver Strand in the south, the coast here is genuinely exceptional. The water is swimmable for much of the year. The waves are surfable. The beaches are accessible in a way that many California coastal cities are not. For buyers who have priced beachside living in Los Angeles or the Bay Area and found it financially impossible, San Diego consistently delivers comparable coast access at a lower price point, with more actual usable beach per capita.
A Major City That Remains Livable
San Diego has the beaches, the restaurants, the professional sports, the career opportunities, and the cultural infrastructure of a significant American city. It does not have the density, the commute times, or the cost structure of Los Angeles or San Francisco. Balboa Park puts 1,200 acres of museums, gardens, and walking paths at the geographic center of the city. The food scene is genuinely excellent and increasingly recognized nationally. Tijuana is 20 minutes south, adding a cross-border cultural dimension that no other American city can replicate. All of it is more accessible than comparable amenities in larger West Coast cities.
A Military Community That Strengthens the Market
San Diego has the largest concentration of active-duty military of any city in the country. Naval Base San Diego, Naval Air Station North Island, Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, and the proximity of Camp Pendleton to the north create a persistent year-round housing demand across rental and purchase markets. Military families on PCS orders bring predictable, reliable demand in every season, and that demand stabilizes the San Diego market through economic cycles that affect other cities more severely.
An Honest Comparison

San Diego vs. Other Major Cities.

San Diego vs.
Los Angeles
This is the comparison that comes up most often from California residents considering a move, and the answer is almost always the same. Los Angeles is larger, more congested, and harder to navigate in almost every way. Commute times in LA are materially worse. Traffic is considerably worse. The weather is broadly similar but less consistent, with more inland heat and more significant weather variation than San Diego's coast-moderated climate. San Diego's median home price is lower than Los Angeles proper and dramatically lower than the Westside LA communities that San Diego most resembles in character. The trade-off is career opportunities in specific industries: entertainment, certain finance sectors, and some technology companies have a stronger LA presence. For the majority of buyer profiles, including families, military households, biotech professionals, and lifestyle-focused relocators, San Diego wins that comparison cleanly.
San Diego vs.
Orange County
Orange County is the closest lifestyle comparison to coastal and family-oriented San Diego neighborhoods, and it is a genuinely close call in some categories. Irvine's school system is exceptional. Newport Beach's coastline is world-class. But the price premium for equivalent housing in the most comparable Orange County communities is meaningful, and the commute many Orange County residents make to Los Angeles employment adds time and cost that San Diego residents simply do not face. Buyers comparing the Poway Unified family communities in north San Diego to Irvine or Lake Forest find comparable school quality in a stronger lifestyle setting at a similar or lower price point. For buyers whose employment is specifically anchored in South Orange County, the comparison is genuinely close. For everyone else, San Diego makes more sense.
San Diego vs.
San Francisco Bay Area
San Francisco is in a different price category entirely for most buyer types. The Bay Area's median home price is meaningfully higher than San Diego's across comparable neighborhoods, the weather is objectively less desirable by most measures, and the cost of living beyond housing is also higher. San Diego's biotech and technology corridor offers competitive compensation for qualified professionals with substantially lower housing costs. For Bay Area workers who have the option to work remotely or who are considering a career move to the life sciences sector, San Diego has drawn a consistent and growing stream of relocating households over the past several years, and the financial comparison is not particularly close in most scenarios.
Investment Perspective

San Diego as an Investment Market.

San Diego is one of the most reliable long-term real estate investment markets in the United States, and that assessment has held across multiple economic cycles. The structural arguments are permanent: the coastline does not expand, the military presence is not going anywhere, the biotech sector is growing not shrinking, and the population of people who want to live here keeps growing while the supply of developable land keeps shrinking. Those fundamentals do not change regardless of interest rate movements or short-term pricing noise.

Short-Term Vacation Rental Market

The vacation rental market in San Diego is among the strongest in California. The coastal strip from the La Jolla cove area through Pacific Beach in particular produces exceptional short-term rental income for properties in the right specific location. San Diego’s year-round tourism, its major convention center, its military visitor traffic, and its consistent climate support occupancy rates that seasonal beach markets cannot match. Buyers considering vacation rental investment should verify current City of San Diego short-term rental permit requirements before any purchase, as the city actively regulates this category.

Long-Term Rental Income from Military and Professional Renters

The vacation rental market in San Diego is among the strongest in California. The coastal strip from the La Jolla cove area through Pacific Beach in particular produces exceptional short-term rental income for properties in the right specific location. San Diego’s year-round tourism, its major convention center, its military visitor traffic, and its consistent climate support occupancy rates that seasonal beach markets cannot match. Buyers considering vacation rental investment should verify current City of San Diego short-term rental permit requirements before any purchase, as the city actively regulates this category.

ADU Development Opportunities

California’s ADU legislation has opened genuine investment opportunities across established San Diego neighborhoods. Many larger lots in central and established inland neighborhoods have the zoning and lot dimensions to support accessory dwelling unit construction. With average San Diego rents above $3,000 per month citywide, the income potential from a well-executed ADU substantially improves the investment economics on properties that otherwise look thin on a straight cap rate calculation. Adam evaluates ADU feasibility for every investor client as part of the initial property analysis.

San Diego home prices are expected to return to modest appreciation in the 2-4% range through the second half of 2026 as the current rebalancing cycle completes and underlying demand fundamentals reassert themselves. The medium and long-term investment thesis for San Diego residential real estate remains as strong as it has ever been.

Client Voices

What Clients Say.

Frequently Asked

San Diego Real Estate. FAQ.

What is the median home price in San Diego in 2026?

The median sale price in San Diego as of April 2026 is approximately $950,000, down 3.1% from the same period last year according to Redfin MLS data. That year-over-year decline reflects a market rebalancing from its 2022 and 2023 peak, not a fundamental shift in demand. Sales volume was up 14.8% year-over-year in April 2026, which shows buyers are active and engaged. Prices vary dramatically by neighborhood, from the mid-$800,000s in north city communities to $2.4M and above in La Jolla.

 Yes, with a long-term perspective and the right strategy for the sub-market. San Diego has structural demand drivers that are among the most durable of any American city: a coastline that cannot be expanded, a military presence that generates consistent year-round housing demand, a growing biotech sector, and a climate and lifestyle that keeps pulling high-income earners toward the city. Investors targeting short-term vacation rentals in coastal neighborhoods, long-term rentals in central family communities, or ADU development on established lots find strong fundamentals across all three approaches.

The base property tax rate in California is 1% of assessed value. Additional county and special assessments bring the effective rate to approximately 1.1-1.25% for most San Diego properties. Some master-planned communities, particularly newer developments in the Carmel Mountain Ranch and Torrey Highlands areas, carry Mello-Roos Community Facilities District assessments that add to the annual cost of ownership. Adam reviews the full annual tax picture for every property before any offer is submitted on behalf of a buyer client.

Scripps Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, and Rancho Bernardo are the most consistent answers. All three are served by Poway Unified School District, which is widely regarded as the best large public school district in San Diego County. For families who want coastal proximity combined with strong schools, Del Mar Heights is worth serious consideration, with access to Del Mar Union elementary schools feeding into the highly regarded Torrey Pines High School pipeline.

The current average days on market in San Diego runs approximately 26 to 28 days citywide as of April 2026. Correctly priced homes in the Poway Unified zone and well-presented coastal properties regularly go under contract in 10 to 14 days. Properties priced above recent comparable sales in any neighborhood can sit 45 to 60 days or longer before reductions are required. Pricing precision relative to your specific neighborhood and street is the single most important variable in any San Diego selling timeline.

September through November typically gives buyers the best negotiating position, as spring competition has cleared while serious buyers remain active. That said, the San Diego market is functional and relatively balanced year-round in 2026, and the best time to buy is always when you are financially prepared and have found a property that genuinely fits your criteria. Waiting for the perfect season in a market with 26-28 day average selling times typically costs more in opportunity than it gains in negotiating leverage. Learn more about San Diego homes for sale across every neighborhood and price range.

March through June is the strongest selling window for most San Diego neighborhoods. Listing in late January or early February positions your home in front of peak spring buyer demand before the market fills with competing inventory. Coastal properties see strong activity year-round from out-of-state buyers. Inland family neighborhoods are more sensitive to the spring window but a correctly priced, well-prepared home will attract buyers in any month.

The neighborhoods Adam works in across San Diego are split primarily between two districts. Rancho Bernardo, Scripps Ranch, Carmel Mountain Ranch, and Torrey Highlands are served by Poway Unified, one of the highest-rated districts in California. Pacific Beach, La Jolla Shores, Mira Mesa, and Sorrento Valley communities are served by San Diego Unified. Zone assignments must be confirmed with the relevant district before any purchase decision based on school access.

Absolutely, and for qualifying buyers it is one of the best tools available in a market at this price level. VA loans allow eligible buyers to purchase with zero down payment and no PMI at competitive interest rates, which makes a genuine difference in a city with a $950K median home price. Adam works with VA buyers across San Diego County regularly and is fully familiar with the process. Review the frequently asked questions page for additional detail on financing options.

Look for someone with verifiable, recent transaction history across the specific neighborhoods you are targeting. San Diego is too large and too diverse for a city-wide generalist to serve you well in a specific sub-market. The difference between north city pricing and La Jolla pricing, or between a central family neighborhood and a coastal community buyer profile, is significant and agents who treat the entire city as a single market will miss those distinctions. Adam has worked across San Diego County for over 15 years with more than $200M in transactions. More detail is on the about Adam Kelley page.

North County · San Diego
Areas Served
Inside Carlsbad
Neighborhoods
San Diego Deserves a Straight Answer

Ready to buy, sell, or find out what your San Diego home is worth right now?

Not an estimate range. Not an algorithm. A real number based on actual comparable sales in your specific neighborhood, delivered by an agent who will be honest with you even when the honest answer is not the one you were hoping to hear. Adam personally manages every transaction and every client relationship, with no hand-offs.