Marin County, CA
Property Data

Explore accurate parcel and ownership records,
directly sourced from county assessors.

Total Properties

103,448

Average Home Price

$1,762,760

Average Square Feet

2,200

Price per Sq Ft

$786

ZIP Codesby Total Properties

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Total Properties
5613,105

DistributionTotal Properties

Property

Total Properties

103,448

Median Home Price

$1,395,000

Average Home Price

$1,762,760

Average Square Feet

2,200

Price per Sq Ft

$786

Recent Sales (12mo)

1,734

YoY Price Change

-2.3%

Sales Velocity

85.1%

Marin County, California: Wealth, Wilderness, and a Widening Gap

Directly across the Golden Gate Bridge from San Francisco, Marin County has long occupied a peculiar place in the American imagination — a landscape of redwood forests, coastal headlands, and some of the most expensive real estate on earth. The data confirms the mythology, but it also reveals contradictions that a simple "wealthy suburb" narrative can't contain.

A Price Floor That Would Be a Ceiling Elsewhere

At a median home price of $1,420,000, Marin isn't just expensive relative to California — it's operating in a different economic atmosphere entirely. The bottom 10% of sales still clear $615,000, meaning even Marin's most accessible homes would rank as luxury product in most American metros. At $794 per square foot, buyers are paying a premium not just for space but for geography: Tiburon peninsulas, Mill Valley canyons, and Sausalito hillsides are genuinely irreplaceable. The year-over-year gain of 7.0% on an already stratospheric base means the county added roughly $99,000 in median value in a single year — more than the entire national median household income.

The Inequality Hiding Behind the Affluence

Marin's Gini coefficient of 0.523 is striking. For context, the U.S. as a whole typically registers around 0.49 — already high among developed nations. Marin's score suggests income inequality more severe than the national average, despite (or perhaps because of) its extraordinary wealth concentration. A per capita income of $90,408 coexists with a child poverty rate of 8.8% and nearly 28% of renters paying more than half their income in rent. This is the hidden Marin: service workers, teachers, and essential employees squeezed into the 36% of housing that rents, many of them severely rent-burdened in a county where median rent hits $2,584.

Key Statistics

StatValueContext
Median Home Value$1,390,0004.3x the California state average
Rent Burden Rate52.5%vs. 30% threshold considered sustainable
Gini Index0.523higher inequality than the U.S. national average
Work From Home27.9%nearly double the national rate of ~15%

Age, Remote Work, and the Quiet Suburb Effect

With a median age of 47.3 — well above California's 37 — and 23.3% of residents over 65, Marin skews older than virtually any comparable affluent county. This is partly a story of long-term homeowners who bought decades ago and stayed, insulated by Prop 13 protections. The 27.9% work-from-home rate (which surged post-pandemic) has deepened this effect: high-earning remote workers from San Francisco tech firms discovered they no longer needed to commute daily, and Marin's already-scarce inventory tightened further. The 7.7% vacancy rate — modest in absolute terms but representing mostly second homes and seasonal properties — reflects a market where housing simply doesn't turn over.


FAQ

What makes Marin County unique in California's real estate market? Marin combines hard geographic constraints (mountains, parkland, and bay) with extreme wealth concentration and strict development limits, creating one of the lowest-supply, highest-demand housing markets in the state. Unlike Silicon Valley suburbs, growth here is structurally capped — over 80% of Marin's land is protected open space, meaning the existing housing stock is effectively finite.

Is Marin County affordable for renters? Barely, and only with significant financial strain. With median rent at $2,584 and over half of renters classified as rent-burdened, the county presents a stark affordability paradox: it is one of America's wealthiest counties by income, yet renting here consumes an outsized share of most renters' earnings. Nearly 28% of renter households fall into severe rent burden territory, spending more than 50% of income on housing.

Why are home prices still rising in Marin despite high interest rates? Supply remains the dominant factor. With limited buildable land, a politically engaged homeowner base resistant to new development, and strong demand from wealthy remote workers, the forces that might cool other markets simply have less leverage here. The 7.0% year-over-year gain reflects a market where scarcity outweighs affordability constraints for the buyers who can participate.

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