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Almost 1 in 10 homes are worth $1 million or more

By
Alena Botros
Alena Botros
Former staff writer
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By
Alena Botros
Alena Botros
Former staff writer
Down Arrow Button Icon
August 16, 2024, 3:25 PM ET
California is the land of million-dollar homes.
California is the land of million-dollar homes.Fortune

Millionaires and million-dollar homes are on the rise. Almost one in 10 homes in the country is valued at $1 million dollars or more. It’s the greatest share on record in history, higher than last year, and more than double than before the pandemic, according to an analysis from Redfin. 

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So which state holds the most million-dollar homes? None other than California. And “pricey California metros are gaining million-dollar homes faster than anywhere else in the U.S.,” the analysis states. So not only does California already have more seven-figure homes than anywhere else in the country, it’s seeing them proliferate faster. They rose the most in Anaheim, San Diego, and Los Angeles, where the shares of homes worth $1 million or more are roughly 59%, 43%, and 39% respectively. “Those places are gaining seven-figure homes fast because the median home price in each of those metros is around $1 million, meaning there were a lot of homes poised to jump over the million-dollar mark,” Redfin said. 

In San Francisco and San Jose, around 80% of homes are worth at least a million. Let that sit. Redfin doesn’t necessarily concentrate on why that is, apart from pointing to median sale prices—but we know these opulent, stunning coastal cities struggle to build more homes; they are prime examples of California’s housing crisis, and it’s shutting typical people out. “The people who are buying without hesitating are in tech and work at Google, Apple, Facebook, or a similar company,” a Bay Area–based Redfin agent said in the analysis. 

And it isn’t only California. Million-dollar-plus homes are everywhere; some 47 out of 50 of the most populous metropolitan areas saw their share of million-dollar homes swell in the past year. The three that didn’t were Austin, Indianapolis, and Houston; in the former they actually fell, whereas in the latter two they remained unchanged. The two Texas cities are known for building more homes to meet demand, and that’s pushing home prices down, or in the very least, keeping them from continuing to soar.

Home prices rose substantially throughout the pandemic, and in the last year, they’ve continued to rise, albeit slower. All the while, prices for luxury homes are increasing even faster. “Prices of luxury homes rising has an outsized impact on the share of homes worth at least $1 million because a major portion of them have long been on the cusp of hitting the million-dollar mark, and just did,” the analysis read. 

In typical housing cycles, when mortgage rates shoot up (as they have in the aftermath of the pandemic) and demand softens and sales weaken, home prices fall. Redfin chief executive Glenn Kelman said himself, in a prior interview with Fortune, that he’s never seen anything like this. “I was the CEO during the Great Financial Crisis,” he said. “Sales volume went down but prices did too.” But we have a supply problem: There aren’t enough homes, and a lot of people who have below-market mortgage rates don’t want to sell. Inventory has improved, but it hasn’t caught up to pre-pandemic levels. It’s a killer combination that happens to be rough for anyone who wants to buy a home, and kind of fantastic for anyone who already owns one. 

Still, as Redfin points out, there are metros where million-dollar homes are close to none, such as Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, and Kansas City. But that's only four metropolitan areas out of 50 where less than 1% of homes have a seven-figure tag, so I don’t know how much comfort that’ll bring. Not to mention starter homes are on the decline.

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About the Author
By Alena BotrosFormer staff writer
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Alena Botros is a former reporter at Fortune, where she primarily covered real estate.

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