Ventura County’s housing market in Q1 2026 showed resilience with signs of moderation and gradual balancing. Sales volume was steady but not explosive, prices held relatively firm with modest year-over-year gains in many segments, and inventory began to rebuild slightly—shifting the market toward more selective, negotiation-friendly conditions compared to the ultra-competitive post-pandemic years.
• Closed Sales: Approximately 1,211 countywide across all property types. Activity accelerated month-over-month, with buyers returning more actively in February and March after a slower January.
• Median Sale Price (All Types): Around $880,000–$900,000. Single-family homes (SFR) median was higher, near $955,000. Some monthly snapshots showed medians in the $857,000–$900,000 range, with slight year-over-year increases (e.g., +3.3% in one January report).
• Median Days on Market: 35 days overall for Q1, though it varied monthly (e.g., 44 days in March, longer in winter months). Homes in desirable areas or well-priced properties often sold faster (as low as 23 days in spots like Camarillo).
• Sale-to-List Ratio: Strong at 98.8%, indicating homes still largely sold close to asking price when priced appropriately.
• Price per Square Foot: Around $512–$540.
• Inventory Trends: Active listings rose modestly (e.g., over 1,200 in March), with some reports noting an 8–10% uptick early in the quarter. Months of supply reached levels like 3.4 in February—the highest in years—signaling a shift away from extreme seller dominance. Pending sales fluctuated but showed rebounds (e.g., +10% in February, +20% from Feb to March).
City/Submarket Highlights (approximate Q1 or recent monthly medians):
• Camarillo: Strong performance with median sale ~$984,250, 106 homes sold, and fast 23 days on market—described as high-volume, seller-friendly.
• Ventura: Median around $859,000–$905,000; some softening noted (e.g., -2% YoY in one March snapshot).
• Thousand Oaks / Westlake Village: Higher-end areas often exceeded $1M median, with pockets of stability or modest gains.
• Oxnard / Simi Valley: More affordable entry points, with medians in the $800,000s and varied YoY changes.
Overall, the market was not crashing but becoming more balanced. Well-priced, turnkey homes in popular areas attracted competition, while others required negotiation or updates. Mortgage rates hovering around 6% continued to influence buyer selectivity.
Commercial and Industrial Segments
• Industrial Market: Mixed signals. Direct vacancy rose to 5.0% (up 120 bps YoY), with availability at 6.5%. However, Q1 saw positive net absorption (+64.7K SF), a rebound from prior negative trends. Leasing activity totaled ~474K SF (down slightly YoY), driven by small-bay users. Asking lease rates held steady at ~$1.28/SF/month. No major new supply delivered.
• Office Market (combined with San Fernando Valley): Tight vacancy (~20.2% regionally, but strong tenant retention in Ventura areas). Positive net absorption led the broader LA region in some metrics, with steady asking rents around $2.69/SF/month.
Broader Context and Outlook
• Affordability Challenges: California-wide, home prices remained far above national averages, with Ventura reflecting coastal premiums. Inventory growth helped slightly, but sales stayed below pre-pandemic peaks due to rates and pricing.
• Key Drivers: Limited new housing supply, strong local appeal (beaches, lifestyle), and equity-rich buyers (often move-up or downsizing homeowners) supported the market. Early 2026 saw some “reversal” months with rising inventory and softer demand, but spring momentum picked up.
• Looking Ahead: Analysts described 2026 as a year of stable, competitive conditions with modest price growth potential (3–5% in well-located areas) if inventory continues loosening without a flood. Buyers benefit from more choices and negotiation room; sellers succeed with realistic pricing and preparation.
This is a snapshot—local conditions vary by neighborhood, property condition, and price point (e.g., sub-$1M vs. luxury segments differ). For the most current personalized insights, check sources like the California Association of Realtors, local MLS data, or consult a Ventura County real estate professional.
Data compiled from Q1 2026 reports; real estate markets shift quickly, so verify with fresh listings for specific decisions. If you’d like deeper dives into a specific city, forecasts, or comparisons to Q1 2025, let us know!