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There's a version of Orange County that lives in the American imagination — sun-bleached freeways, Disneyland, Newport Beach yachts, the Anaheim Angels. The reality is considerably more complex. With 3.16 million residents packed into a coastal slab of Southern California at nearly 4,000 people per square mile, OC is simultaneously one of the wealthiest large counties in the United States and a place where the math of everyday life is quietly brutal for anyone who didn't buy in decades ago.
The headline number is a median home price of $1,175,000 — more than 3.5 times the national median home value. But the spread tells an even sharper story. The bottom tenth of sales start at $595,000, meaning even the county's most accessible homes sit nearly double the national benchmark. At the top end, the 90th percentile clears $2.6 million, a figure that wouldn't look out of place in Beverly Hills. This is not a monolithic luxury market — it's a county of profound housing range, from the dense apartment corridors of Santa Ana to the guard-gated hillside estates of Coto de Caza.
Households here earn a strong $113,702 at the median — 51% above the national figure — yet the price-to-income ratio still sits at roughly 10x, more than twice the traditional affordability benchmark of 4x income. That compression explains almost everything else in the data. Homeownership at 56.4% is respectable by California standards but masks enormous tension: renters are paying a median $2,352 per month, and a staggering 53.5% of renter households are rent-burdened — meaning they spend more than 30% of their income on housing. Nearly 28% are severely burdened, above 50%. These aren't low-income fringe cases; given the county's income profile, this is the professional middle class being squeezed.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $1,175,000 | 3.7x the national median home value |
| Rent Burden Rate | 53.5% | vs. 30% threshold considered affordable |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | ~10.3x | more than 2.5x the national benchmark of 4x |
| YoY Price Change | +0.8% | effectively flat — the boom has stalled |
That 0.8% year-over-year price change is worth pausing on. Orange County spent much of the 2020–2022 pandemic era posting double-digit appreciation as remote workers and equity-flush Angelenos poured across the county line. That era is over. Rising interest rates have essentially frozen the market in place — the county recorded just under 11,000 sales in the past 12 months against a base of nearly 1.14 million total housing units, implying an annual turnover rate of less than 1%. Sellers with sub-3% mortgages aren't moving. Buyers can't afford to at current rates. The result is a market that feels both expensive and paralyzed simultaneously.
The commute profile here is deeply car-dependent — 69.4% drive alone, and public transit accounts for a mere 1.2% of commute trips, a figure that reflects decades of infrastructure decisions that bet entirely on the freeway. Yet 16.6% now work from home, a pandemic-era shift that has proved stickier here than in many comparable markets, likely because OC's industry mix — technology, biomedical, finance, and professional services clustered around the Irvine Company's master-planned campuses — skews toward laptop-compatible work.
The median age of 39.1 and a population that is 15.8% over 65 suggest a county beginning to gray, a trend accelerated by the fact that younger residents increasingly cannot afford to plant roots. The median home was built in 1977 — this is not a place building its way out of the shortage.
What makes Orange County unique in the California real estate market? Orange County occupies a peculiar middle ground between Los Angeles and San Diego — less globally branded than LA, more urban than San Diego — yet it consistently commands premium prices driven by school district quality, coastal access, and a concentration of high-paying biotech and tech employers anchored by the Irvine corridor. Its master-planned communities give it unusual neighborhood consistency, which both stabilizes and elevates values compared to more chaotic urban markets.
Is Orange County actually affordable compared to Los Angeles? Marginally, but the gap is narrowing. Per-square-foot pricing at $681 is competitive with many LA submarkets, and the county's larger average home size (1,896 sq ft) means buyers often get more physical space. The real advantage has historically been schools and safety perception — but at median prices above $1.1 million, "relatively affordable" is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
Is now a good time to buy in Orange County? The flat price growth (+0.8% YoY) suggests the market isn't running away from buyers the way it was in 2021-22, but financing costs have replaced appreciation as the primary barrier. The lock-in effect — existing owners frozen in place by low-rate mortgages — means inventory stays thin, preventing meaningful price corrections. The window for buyers exists, but it's narrow and rate-dependent.
Orange County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 973,815 properties in our database.
The average home price of $1.5M positions Orange County as a premium real estate market.
At $708/sq ft, property values here are significantly above national averages.
Home prices in Orange County are 49% higher than the California average.
| Metric | Orange County | California Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $1,466,948 | $986,377 | +49% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 2,071 | 1,806 | +15% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $708 | $546 | +30% |
| Properties | 973,815 | 14,445,346 | -93% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Orange County, CA is $1,466,948, based on analysis of 973,815 properties in our database.
Our database includes 973,815 properties in Orange County, CA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Orange County, CA is $708. This is calculated from an average home price of $1,466,948 and average size of 2,071 square feet.
Homes in Orange County, CA average 2,071 square feet, with an average price of $1,466,948.
Orange County, CA is one of 58 counties in California with property data available. Browse other counties to compare market conditions and pricing.
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