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Sacramento County has long played second fiddle to the Bay Area in California's real estate conversation — but that dynamic is shifting in ways that make the county one of the most revealing windows into what's happening to housing across the entire state. The region that houses the state capitol, three major medical institutions, and a growing tech-adjacent workforce is now grappling with a paradox: home prices that are genuinely cheap by California standards but increasingly out of reach by any rational income measure.
Sacramento built its modern identity partly as a pressure-release valve for Bay Area housing stress. During 2020–2022, remote workers fled San Francisco and San Jose in notable numbers, and Sacramento absorbed a meaningful share of that migration — a wave that pushed prices well above their historical norms. The hangover from that boom is visible in today's data: a -1.8% year-over-year price decline signals the market is correcting, but not dramatically. At a median of $545,000, Sacramento homes still trade at roughly 6.1x the county's median household income of $88,724 — well above the national benchmark of 4x, and a figure that would have seemed extraordinary for this market a decade ago.
What makes the price spread genuinely interesting is its width. The gap between the 10th percentile ($325,000) and 90th percentile ($888,000) reflects a county that contains multitudes: dense inner-city corridors in Sacramento proper, sprawling suburban tracts in Elk Grove and Rancho Cordova, and agricultural-fringe communities like Galt that operate in an almost entirely different market.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $545,000 | ~6.1x local median income vs. 4x national benchmark |
| Rent Burden Rate | 52.7% | far above the 30% healthy threshold |
| YoY Price Change | -1.8% | post-boom correction underway |
| Homeownership Rate | 58.6% | slightly above California's ~55% average |
The homeownership rate of 58.6% — modestly above the California average — masks a serious problem for the county's 41% who rent. A staggering 52.7% of renters are cost-burdened, spending more than 30% of income on housing, and over a quarter (26.6%) face severe rent burden. With a median rent of $1,702 and a per capita income of just under $42,000, the arithmetic simply doesn't work for a large share of Sacramento households. Child poverty at 15.9% — higher than the overall poverty rate of 12.6% — suggests these pressures are concentrating in families with the least flexibility to absorb them.
Sacramento's economic identity is anchored in state government employment, UC Davis Health, Sutter Health, and an expanding logistics sector clustered around the port and highway corridors. The 17.3% work-from-home rate — well above the national average — reflects the professional class that migrated here during the pandemic and stayed. Yet a 6.4% unemployment rate, notably higher than the national figure, points to structural underemployment in communities that didn't benefit from that same remote-work wave.
The educational profile is telling: only 21.4% of residents hold bachelor's degrees, compared to roughly 35% nationally, which partly explains the income ceiling the market is bumping against.
What makes Sacramento County unique in California's real estate market? Sacramento occupies a rare middle ground — expensive enough to reflect California's structural housing shortage, but affordable enough to attract buyers priced out of coastal metros. That positioning made it a pandemic-era boomtown, and the county is now working through a modest correction while demand from Bay Area transplants remains a persistent floor under prices.
Is Sacramento County a good place to buy a home right now? The -1.8% price decline and a vacancy rate of just 4.3% suggest a market that's cooling but not collapsing. For buyers, the correction offers modestly better entry points than the 2022 peak. For investors, the severe rent burden data (26.6% of renters in distress) signals real affordability risk that could dampen rental demand at higher price points.
Why is unemployment relatively high in Sacramento County despite strong income figures? Sacramento's economy is bifurcated. High-wage government, healthcare, and remote-knowledge-worker jobs pull median incomes up, while a large service and logistics workforce experiences more volatility. The 6.4% unemployment rate reflects that lower tier, even as the median household income of $88,724 — 18% above the national figure — suggests the professional segment is doing well.
Sacramento County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 532,415 properties in our database.
Properties in Sacramento County average $652,633, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $335 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Sacramento County are 34% lower than the California average.
| Metric | Sacramento County | California Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $652,633 | $986,377 | -34% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,946 | 1,806 | +8% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $335 | $546 | -39% |
| Properties | 532,415 | 14,445,346 | -96% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in Sacramento County, CA is $652,633, based on analysis of 532,415 properties in our database.
Our database includes 532,415 properties in Sacramento County, CA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Sacramento County, CA is $335. This is calculated from an average home price of $652,633 and average size of 1,946 square feet.
Homes in Sacramento County, CA average 1,946 square feet, with an average price of $652,633.
Sacramento 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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