Property details·Santa Maria, Santa Barbara County, California·103-750-022
1536 Heatherwood Lane
Santa Maria, CA 93455
Santa Barbara County
103-750-022
34.864280, -120.403668
| Category | Amount | Year |
|---|---|---|
| Tax value | $5,592.02 | 2026 |
| Assessed value | $407,039 | 2026 |
Values reflect public tax roll data as of the year shown.
County context
There's a reason people call Santa Barbara the "American Riviera" — and the housing market makes sure you never forget it. With a median home price of $876,000 and an average that clears $1.54 million, the gap between those two figures alone tells a story worth examining. When your mean is nearly double your median, you have a market shaped by exceptional outliers — the Montecito estates, the Hope Ranch compounds, the ocean-view properties that routinely trade north of $3.4 million. These aren't just luxury homes; they're distorting the entire landscape of what it means to live here.
At first glance, Santa Barbara County looks upper-middle-class comfortable. The median household income of $95,977 is well above the national figure of $75,149. But that comfort evaporates quickly when you apply it to housing costs. The median home price of $876,000 implies a price-to-income ratio exceeding 9x — more than double the 4x national benchmark considered affordable. That figure places the county squarely alongside coastal Los Angeles and San Francisco as one of the most strained housing markets in the country, not just the state.
What makes this especially striking is the rent burden data. A remarkable 53.8% of renters spend more than 30% of their income on housing — the national definition of being rent-burdened — and more than a quarter (28.3%) are severely rent-burdened, exceeding 50%. With median rent at $2,050 and nearly half the county renting, this is not a peripheral problem. It's systemic.
The Gini Index of 0.491 — where 0 is perfect equality and 1 is total concentration — places Santa Barbara County among California's most unequal. This is the fingerprint of a bifurcated economy: UCSB and Cottage Health anchor a professional class, agriculture and hospitality employ a large service workforce, and the ultra-wealthy drawn by Montecito's climate and cachet (think Oprah, Harry and Meghan) sit at the top of the income distribution. The result is a 13.8% poverty rate and a 15.2% child poverty rate that coexist, almost absurdly, with $3.45 million price points at the 90th percentile.
The 17.9% of residents without a high school diploma — combined with 9.4% limited English — reflects the county's substantial agricultural labor base, particularly in the Santa Maria and Lompoc valleys. This population faces the housing crisis most acutely.
| Stat | Value | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Median Home Price | $876,000 | 9x+ county median income |
| Rent Burden Rate | 53.8% | Nearly 2x the 30% threshold |
| YoY Price Change | +9.2% | Accelerating well above inflation |
| Gini Index | 0.491 | Among California's most unequal counties |
Annual price appreciation of 9.2% sounds like good news for homeowners — and it is, for the 52.9% who own. But in a county where home values already strain credibility relative to incomes, that appreciation pace is compounding the lock-out effect for first-time buyers. With only 1,454 sales recorded in the past 12 months against nearly 160,000 housing units, turnover is minimal. People who get in, stay in.
The 12.5% work-from-home rate — above the national average — hints at a post-pandemic dynamic accelerating pressure from outside. Remote workers with Bay Area or tech-sector salaries can outbid local earners without blinking, a pattern well-documented in similarly desirable coastal markets.
What makes Santa Barbara County unique? The county combines some of California's most extreme wealth concentration — anchored by Montecito, one of the most expensive ZIP codes in the U.S. — with a large agricultural and service workforce that faces genuine housing deprivation. It's not just an expensive place; it's a place where extreme affluence and working poverty share the same geography, expressed clearly in both the Gini index and the rent burden statistics.
Is Santa Barbara County affordable to rent in? For most renters, no. More than half spend beyond the affordability threshold, and over 28% are severely rent-burdened — meaning rent consumes more than half their income. At $2,050 median rent, a household would need roughly $82,000 annually just to keep housing costs below 30% of income, a bar many county workers in hospitality, agriculture, and retail cannot reach.
Why are home prices rising so fast in Santa Barbara County? A combination of constrained supply (geography limits buildable land between the mountains and coast), high demand from remote workers and wealthy buyers relocating from more expensive metros, and low inventory turnover has created a structural imbalance. The 9.2% year-over-year price gain reflects a market where demand keeps finding ways to exceed supply.
Santa Maria has 43,058 properties in our comprehensive database.
Properties in Santa Maria average $646,257, reflecting a competitive market.
The price per square foot of $396 reflects strong property valuations in this area.
Home prices in Santa Maria are 56% lower than the Santa Barbara County average.
| Metric | Santa Maria | Santa Barbara County | vs County |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Price | $646,257 | $1,467,279 | -56% |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,632 | 1,717 | -5% |
| Price/Sq Ft | $396 | $855 | -54% |
| Properties | 43,058 | 161,340 | -73% |
Other parcels within a few hundred meters of this one.
The average home price in Santa Maria, CA is $646,257, based on analysis of 43,058 properties in our database.
Our database includes 43,058 properties in Santa Maria, CA, providing comprehensive market coverage.
The average price per square foot in Santa Maria, CA is $396. This is calculated from an average home price of $646,257 and average size of 1,632 square feet.
Homes in Santa Maria, CA average 1,632 square feet, with an average price of $646,257.
Santa Maria, CA is one of many cities in Santa Barbara County, CA with property data available. Browse other cities in the county to compare market conditions and pricing.
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