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There's a number buried in San Mateo County's data that stops you cold: a Gini coefficient of 0.496. That figure — where 0 means perfect equality and 1 means one person owns everything — places this narrow peninsula strip between San Francisco and Silicon Valley among the most economically unequal places in the United States. Yet the county's poverty rate is just 6.5%, well below national norms. This is the central paradox of San Mateo County: it is simultaneously one of America's wealthiest places and one of its most economically bifurcated.
The county's median household income of $156,000 is more than double the national figure. But income alone doesn't capture the real story. The per capita income of roughly $82,000 masks an enormous spread between a Daly City service worker and a Menlo Park venture capitalist whose firm sits three minutes from the Stanford Research Park. Both live in San Mateo County.
At a median home price of $1.6 million against a — already exceptional — median income of $156,000, the price-to-income ratio lands at roughly 10x. The national benchmark is 4x. This isn't an affordability gap; it's an affordability chasm.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Value | $1,494,500 | 4.7x California state average |
| Price-to-Income Ratio | ~10x | vs. 4x national benchmark |
| Severe Rent Burden | 24.7% | 1 in 4 renters paying >50% of income on housing |
| YoY Price Change | +5.7% | adding ~$85K to median value in one year |
The spread between the bottom tenth and top tenth of home prices — $760,000 to $3.75 million — tells you that even the "cheap" end of this market requires a down payment most American families couldn't accumulate in a lifetime. And yet homes are appreciating at 5.7% annually, meaning that gap widens every year.
What's kept prices from complete freefall during higher interest-rate environments is the fundamental scarcity question: 285,558 total housing units for a county wedged between the bay and the coastal hills, with strict zoning that has historically favored single-family homes (55.3% of stock). The median year built of 1960 tells you that most of this county was built before the tech industry existed, and relatively little has been added since.
Nearly 22% of employed residents work from home — a legacy of the pandemic that has calcified into permanent tech-sector culture. Yet 57.6% still drive alone to work, feeding the 101 corridor's legendary congestion. Public transit use at 6.4% is respectable by California suburban standards, but reflects a Caltrain system that serves the peninsula spine well while leaving eastern and coastal communities underserved.
The 9.7% of residents with limited English proficiency, combined with 9.7% who lack a high school diploma, represents a workforce cohort that is largely invisible in county-level income averages but very present in the service economy keeping Palo Alto restaurants, Redwood City warehouses, and Burlingame hotels running.
What makes San Mateo County unique? San Mateo County sits at the geographic and economic heart of the global technology industry — home to Facebook (Meta) in Menlo Park, Genentech's headquarters in South San Francisco, and dozens of major venture capital firms along Sand Hill Road. This concentration of high-value employers has pushed residential real estate to levels that rival Manhattan while the physical landscape remains suburban. The result is a county where a $2 million home on a 6,000-square-foot lot is ordinary, and where inequality rivals developing-world metropolises despite near-universal broadband access and a 3.9% uninsured rate.
Is renting in San Mateo County financially viable? At a median rent of $2,893 per month, renting requires an annual income of roughly $116,000 just to clear the standard 30% rent-burden threshold — a salary that would be considered excellent almost anywhere else in America. Nearly 25% of renters are severely rent-burdened, spending more than half their income on housing. For many service and healthcare workers, this means long commutes from San Jose or the East Bay, or multi-family household arrangements that don't appear in single-household income data.
Why are home prices rising when interest rates have been high? Supply constraints are the dominant force. The county added very little new housing stock in recent years relative to job growth, and wealthy cash buyers or those with significant equity from previous sales are less sensitive to mortgage rate increases. When inventory is this thin and buyer incomes this high, conventional rate-driven affordability logic breaks down — prices rise because the people competing for these homes largely don't need favorable financing.
San Mateo County is one of the largest real estate markets with over 248,141 properties in our database.
The average home price of $2.0M positions San Mateo County as a premium real estate market.
At $1035/sq ft, property values here are significantly above national averages.
Home prices in San Mateo County are 106% higher than the California average.
| Metric | San Mateo County | California Avg | vs State |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $2,029,031 | $986,377 | +106% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,961 | 1,806 | +9% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $1035 | $546 | +90% |
| Properties | 248,141 | 14,445,346 | -98% |
Based on property sales data from the last 18 months
The average home price in San Mateo County, CA is $2,029,031, based on analysis of 248,141 properties in our database.
Our database includes 248,141 properties in San Mateo County, CA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in San Mateo County, CA is $1035. This is calculated from an average home price of $2,029,031 and average size of 1,961 square feet.
Homes in San Mateo County, CA average 1,961 square feet, with an average price of $2,029,031.
San Mateo 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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