Why Jobs Matter More Than You Think for California Home Prices

California, USAMon May 25 2026
California’s housing market moves in strange ways. One big reason? Jobs. When work is easy to find, home prices usually climb. But when jobs dry up, so do price gains—sometimes they even drop. Looking back to 1990, the best years for job growth in California saw home prices jump nearly 8% a year. During the worst years—when companies cut staff—homes barely moved in value. The same pattern shows up nationwide. Strong hiring means higher prices, weak hiring means slower growth. The lesson? Paychecks drive housing demand more than people realize. But here’s the twist: more homes hit the market when jobs get shaky. Last year, U. S. listings jumped 33% compared to recent years. In California, it was even higher—36% more homes for sale. And guess what? Prices cooled down fast in places with the biggest market surges. The states where prices fell the most also saw the biggest jumps in listings. More choices mean sellers can’t push prices as high.
The real question is why homeowners list their houses when jobs are scarce. Are they worried about their own paychecks? Or are they just trying to sell before prices fall further? Either way, shaky employment often leads to more homes on the market—and softer prices. Mortgage rates add another layer. When rates drop, people assume it’s good for buyers. But history says otherwise. Big rate cuts usually happen when the economy struggles. Those years saw weak job growth and slow price gains. Fast-rising rates, on the other hand, often come with strong hiring and big price jumps. The takeaway? Cheap loans don’t always mean happy buyers. Timing matters more than people think.
https://localnews.ai/article/why-jobs-matter-more-than-you-think-for-california-home-prices-258c6e00

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