San Diego’s outlook for 2026 reflects a market still defined by structural undersupply, but the more immediate story for builders is demand. While population growth is slowing, local household formation is expected to outpace the broader region and state, continuing to provide a foundation for housing demand even in a slower environment.
The challenge is that baseline demand is colliding with rising cost pressures and macro uncertainty. Mortgage rates remain elevated, consumer confidence is weak, and buyer hesitation is causing slower sales performance.
On the ground, demand has been uneven. Annual contract sales declined year over year through most of 2025, finding a bottom in the summer months. More recently, contract activity has increased by 7.5% since December, indicating modest forward momentum despite ongoing headwinds. Over that period, detached products experienced higher demand and rebounded faster than attached products.
Even so, the tone from builders remains cautious. Zonda’s proprietary survey data shows that demand is increasingly characterized as slower-than-expected and, in some cases, concerning. Buyers are still active, but they are more hesitant, more price sensitive, and more selective than in prior cycles.
Pricing Data
In response, builders are adjusting pricing and incentives to maintain absorption. Base offering prices in San Diego have declined 4.2% since December, with both attached and detached products seeing downward adjustments. Builders have used minor price cuts and mortgage rate buydowns to keep buyers engaged.

The composition of demand is also evolving. Attached housing continues to play a critical role in maintaining transaction volume, as it offers a more attainable entry point than detached homes. This shift is helping sustain activity even as consumer confidence remains weak.
San Diego Forecast
Looking ahead, San Diego’s demand outlook is best described as cautiously stabilizing. The buyer pool remains, supported by household formation and long-term demographic trends, but near-term performance will depend heavily on consumer confidence.
Communities with multiple product lines and stronger amenities are capturing a disproportionate share of buyers, highlighting the importance of product mix and community positioning in today’s environment as it continues to rebound.
The insights in this article were taken from a recent Zonda Advisory presentation in San Diego.
