Ventura County Real Estate Market Update (January 2026): Prices, Inventory & Trends

Last Updated
January 3, 2026 • Snapshot includes active/pending conditions as of early January; month-over-month compares December 2025 vs January 2026
Ventura County real estate market update (January 2026) covering prices, inventory, and trends

A data-driven look at Ventura County home prices, inventory, days on market, and negotiation leverage—plus city-by-city highlights and a 30–90 day plan for buyers and sellers.

January is a transition month in the Ventura County housing market. New listings typically pick up after the holidays, buyer urgency normalizes, and negotiations become more sensitive to pricing, condition, and financing terms. This market update is designed to help you translate the numbers into decisions—whether you’re watching from the sidelines, actively shopping, or considering a sale in the next 30–90 days.

How to use this update: Start with the Snapshot and the month-over-month comparison to understand direction. Then jump to the buyer or seller checklist based on your timeline. If you want micro-market context, explore Ventura County neighborhoods and the city pages linked below.

Snapshot: Ventura County Market at a Glance

The Ventura County real estate market in January 2026 is best described as active, competitive in pockets, and increasingly selective. Buyers are responding to two forces at once: (1) slightly higher mortgage rates impacting affordability, and (2) a meaningful post-holiday lift in available inventory. Sellers are still benefiting from strong long-term demand, but the market is rewarding homes that are priced correctly and presented well.

Active Listings
892
New-year listings expanded choices across multiple price bands, especially single-family homes.
Months of Supply
2.4 months
Still relatively tight overall, but leverage varies widely by city, neighborhood, and condition.
Pending Sales
387
A practical read on demand; pendings often foreshadow next month’s closed trend.
Median Sale Price
$860,000
A countywide anchor point; interpret alongside $/sqft and sales mix changes.
Median Days on Market
38
Timing is stretching modestly in rate-sensitive segments and premium pricing pockets.
Median Sale-to-List
98.9%
Near-ask closings overall, with stronger results concentrated in turnkey inventory.

Quick read on negotiation leverage

At a 2.4-month supply, Ventura County remains below the level typically associated with a broad “buyer’s market.” That said, leverage is increasingly home-by-home. Buyers have more room when a property is dated, priced aggressively, or competing with newer inventory. Sellers maintain advantage when a home is turnkey, well-positioned within a neighborhood, and aligned with the most active price bands.

Where to go deeper: Start with the Ventura County real estate hub, then drill down into neighborhoods to compare competition at the street level.

Compare Ventura County dynamics to Los Angeles County real estate for cross-market opportunities, or review our first-time homebuyer guide for comprehensive planning.

Month-over-month comparison: What changed from December 2025

Understanding market direction requires comparing sequential months, not just year-over-year snapshots. Here’s what shifted from December 2025 to January 2026:

Median Price Change
-1.2%
From $871,000 (Dec) to $860,000 (Jan) — seasonal adjustment is typical.
Inventory Change
+8.4%
From 823 active (Dec) to 892 active (Jan) — new-year listings added options.
DOM Change
+5 days
From 33 days (Dec) to 38 days (Jan) — mild cooling and more choice for buyers.
Metric December 2025 January 2026 Change
Median Price $871,000 $860,000 -1.2%
Active Listings 823 892 +8.4%
Median DOM 33 days 38 days +5 days
Sale-to-List 99.2% 98.9% -0.3%
Avg 30-Yr Rate 6.72% 6.89% +0.17%

What this means: January showed typical post-holiday patterns—inventory expanded as new listings hit the market, pricing softened modestly as the sales mix normalized, and days on market increased as buyers became more selective. The practical outcome is that buyers gained choice while sellers gained clarity: the homes that are aligned with the market are still moving, and the homes that aren’t tend to sit long enough to invite negotiations.

For deeper context on broader market forces, see our 2026 Southern California housing forecast and explore the Ventura County real estate hub for city and neighborhood drill-downs.

Prices: Median price + price per sqft + what’s driving it

The headline number most people track is the countywide median sale price. In January 2026, the Ventura County median sale price was $860,000. That is down 1.2% from December’s $871,000, which is consistent with seasonal patterns and a broader “reset” after year-end urgency. The more stable lens (and the one buyers tend to feel immediately) is price per square foot and how it behaves across neighborhoods.

In practical terms, a monthly median change can reflect: (1) a shift in which cities had more closings, (2) a shift between single-family and attached housing, (3) the proportion of updated vs dated inventory closing, and (4) fewer (or more) higher-end transactions in markets like Thousand Oaks and Moorpark. If you want a more apples-to-apples view, compare similar model matches within a neighborhood using the neighborhood hub.

  • Median price is a direction signal, not the entire story. It’s best interpreted alongside inventory, DOM, and sale-to-list ratio.
  • $ / sqft helps you compare value across neighborhoods. It’s especially useful when homes differ in size but are otherwise similar in location and condition.
  • Condition premiums still matter. Turnkey homes tend to compress DOM and concessions; dated homes are seeing more negotiation, especially when rates tick up.
  • Micro-markets behave differently. The same price point can feel competitive in Oxnard and more negotiable in premium Thousand Oaks pockets.

Understanding price per square foot variations helps buyers compare value across Ventura, Camarillo, Oxnard, and Thousand Oaks markets effectively.

What’s driving pricing in early 2026

Three drivers are showing up repeatedly: rate sensitivity by price band, inventory composition (more single-family choice vs still-tight attached supply), and buyer expectations on concessions for dated properties. In other words, the market is not “up or down” in a single direction—pricing is being earned through preparation, realistic positioning, and making the home easy to say yes to.

Want a neighborhood-level pricing read? Start with neighborhoods, or browse city pages like Ventura, Simi Valley, and Moorpark.

Inventory + Months of supply: what it means for buyers vs sellers

Inventory is where “market feel” becomes tangible. When there are more homes to choose from, buyers can slow down, compare options, and negotiate more directly. When inventory tightens, buyers are forced to decide quickly and compete more aggressively for the best-positioned listings. In January 2026, Ventura County posted 892 active listings and 2.4 months of supply.

A 2.4-month supply is still relatively tight by historical standards, but the key is how that supply is distributed. Some neighborhoods have multiple comparable listings available at the same time (which shifts leverage to the buyer), while other neighborhoods have one “best” option and limited alternatives (which shifts leverage back to the seller). If you’re planning a move, the fastest way to reduce risk is to track inventory at the neighborhood level and understand how many true substitutes exist for each property.

Active Listings
892
More choice vs December. Compare actives by city using the links in the city section below.
Months of Supply
2.4 months
A strong indicator of overall supply/demand balance across Ventura County.
Pending Sales
387
An early indicator of demand; pendings help confirm whether buyer activity is accelerating or cooling.

How to interpret months of supply (without over-simplifying)

Months of supply is best used as a framework, not a verdict. Lower supply generally favors sellers; higher supply generally favors buyers. The more important question is: what’s the supply in your exact price band and neighborhood? A 2.4-month county number can contain a 1.2-month micro-market (high competition) and a 4.0-month micro-market (higher concessions) at the same time.

Track neighborhood-level inventory trends in Simi Valley, Moorpark, and Port Hueneme for micro-market opportunities.

Buyer tip: When inventory is rising, your leverage often comes from patience and specificity—targeting the homes that are overpriced for their condition, or that have been sitting long enough to reset expectations. Seller tip: When inventory is rising, your “competition” is usually not last month’s closed sales—it’s the other homes currently available in your neighborhood, right now. Use the Seller Resources hub to map out a prep-and-pricing plan.

Days on Market + list-to-sale ratio: negotiation leverage

Two metrics give you a quick read on how negotiations are trending: days on market (DOM) and sale-to-list ratio. In January 2026, the countywide medians were 38 days and 98.9%. That combination tells you something important: the market is still closing near asking price in many cases, but buyers have enough choice to be selective—especially when a home is priced ambitiously or needs updates.

  • DOM (38 days): Homes are taking longer to convert to contract vs the December pace (33 days), which increases the odds of negotiation on the “second choice” listings.
  • Sale-to-list (98.9%): Across the county, closings are still near ask; the gap is typically explained by condition, location, and pricing accuracy—not broad market collapse.
  • Where buyers gain leverage: Dated properties, premium pricing pockets, and homes competing with newer, better-presented listings.
  • Where sellers retain leverage: Turnkey listings priced in line with current competition and located in high-demand micro-markets.

A practical way to read leverage on a specific listing

If a home is new to market and priced correctly, assume you’re competing. If it’s been listed long enough to cycle through multiple weekends of showings, the seller is typically more open to structured concessions (credits, repairs, or closing timelines). Buyers should focus on terms as much as price. Sellers should focus on reducing uncertainty: clean disclosures, clear pricing, and strong presentation so the buyer can commit confidently.

Neighborhood-level leverage matters most: For a faster read on whether your city segment is tightening or loosening, compare DOM and sale-to-list in Oxnard vs Thousand Oaks, then drill into specific neighborhoods from the neighborhood hub.

Interest rates & affordability: what changed this month

Mortgage rates remain one of the most important “hidden” drivers of the Ventura County housing market because they change buyer qualification and monthly payments immediately. In January 2026, the average 30-year fixed rate used for this update was 6.89%, up from 6.72% in December. Even small moves can change behavior: buyers may pivot to smaller homes, different neighborhoods, attached housing, or negotiate harder on price and concessions.

Avg 30-Year Fixed
6.89%
Up from 6.72% in December; rates are a major driver of monthly payment decisions.
Payment Sensitivity
+$42/mo
Approx. +$42/month per $100k financed at January pricing/rate assumptions vs late-2025 levels.
Affordability Notes
Rate-sensitive entry tier
Entry-level ($650K–$850K) most sensitive; move-up ($1M+) showing resilience.

Here’s the simplest way to think about rate impact: at a purchase price of $860,000, rates influence not just the payment but also the buyer pool. When rates rise, the market often becomes more “condition and pricing sensitive.” Homes that would have sold quickly in a tighter-rate environment may still sell, but they tend to require cleaner presentation, stronger pricing, and occasionally structured concessions (credits or buydowns) to preserve net proceeds and reduce time on market.

Suggested update sentence (already baked into January numbers): “In January 2026, rates moved from 6.72% to 6.89%, which changed the monthly payment on a typical loan scenario by about $42 per $100,000 financed.”

Model your payment scenarios with our payment calculator and verify affordability with the affordability calculator. For FHA buyers, review our FHA loan limits 2026 Ventura County guide.

City-by-city highlights (Ventura, Camarillo, Oxnard, Thousand Oaks, Simi Valley, Moorpark)

County averages are useful, but real decisions happen at the city and neighborhood level. Below is a quick read on each city’s tone plus “what to watch” right now. If you want a tighter micro-market breakdown, start with the city pages and then drill into neighborhood links to compare competition by tract and price band.

Ventura

  • Median price: $906,500 • Median $/sqft: $552
  • Median DOM: 35 • Median sale-to-list: 97.7%
  • What to watch: Coastal premium holding; east Ventura seeing faster absorption than Westside
  • Explore Midtown Ventura, Pierpont, and College Area for different price points.
  • Start here: Ventura listings + market

Camarillo

  • Median price: $798,000 • Median $/sqft: $495
  • Median DOM: 30.5 • Median sale-to-list: 99.6%
  • What to watch: Strong family-buyer demand; well-priced turnkey homes moving in under 30 days
  • Popular neighborhoods include Mission Oaks and Vista Del Monte.
  • Start here: Camarillo listings + market

Oxnard

Thousand Oaks

Simi Valley

  • Median price: $837,550 • Median $/sqft: $466
  • Median DOM: 47 • Median sale-to-list: 98.9%
  • What to watch: Balanced market; good schools driving demand but rate sensitivity visible above $900K
  • Family-friendly neighborhoods like Wood Ranch remain popular despite rate increases.
  • Start here: Simi Valley listings + market

Moorpark

How to use the city highlights: If you’re buying, focus on the cities with faster absorption (shorter DOM) to calibrate competitiveness. If you’re selling, focus on your local competition and recent reductions—buyers can feel “choice” even in a tight countywide supply when similar listings stack up nearby.

What this means if you’re buying in the next 30–90 days (tactical checklist)

January conditions can create real opportunities for buyers, but only if you approach the market with a plan. With inventory expanding and DOM stretching modestly, the advantage goes to buyers who can move decisively on the right home while staying disciplined on pricing, condition, and financing. The checklist below is designed to reduce “decision fatigue” and increase your odds of getting strong terms without overreaching.

Buyer plan (30–90 days)

  • Pick your lane: Choose 1–2 cities and 2–4 neighborhoods first. Use Ventura County neighborhoods to compare micro-markets.
  • Use DOM as your strategy filter: Longer DOM homes often allow better terms; short DOM homes require cleaner, faster offers.
  • Anchor to condition + substitutes: If there are 3 similar homes available, buyers have leverage. If there’s 1 standout home, expect competition.
  • Understand financing options: Review FHA limits and pre-approval strategies before touring seriously.
  • Plan for insurance: See our Ventura County insurance guide for coverage planning.
  • Compare LA County options: If considering both markets, review Los Angeles County real estate and LA County FHA limits.
  • Model your payment scenario: Use our payment calculator and affordability calculator to stay aligned with monthly comfort.
  • Negotiate with specificity: Credits, repairs, and closing timelines can outperform broad discounts—especially when supported by a comp set.
  • Stay plugged into updates: Follow the monthly series here on the blog and use the Buyer Resources hub to keep your plan current.
Buyer bottom line: January rewards preparation. The “best value” deals tend to show up where sellers have realistic pricing but still need certainty—clean financing, short contingencies (when appropriate), and a straightforward closing plan.

What this means if you’re selling in the next 30–90 days (tactical checklist)

Sellers in January 2026 are operating in a market that is still supportive, but more discerning. Inventory increased, rates nudged higher, and buyers are doing more side-by-side comparisons. The outcome is that homes that are priced correctly and presented cleanly continue to attract strong demand, while homes that are aspirationally priced (or show as “project” inventory) tend to require more time and concessions.

Seller plan (30–90 days)

  • Price to today’s competition: Buyers are choosing between actives, not last season’s peak. Benchmark against current listings and recent pendings.
  • Win on presentation: In a higher-rate environment, buyers are less forgiving about visible deferred maintenance. Clean, staged, and well-photographed homes compress DOM.
  • Control the inspection narrative: Pre-list strategies help avoid surprise renegotiations and reduce buyer hesitation.
  • Have a concessions plan: Consider credits/buydowns when rates rise—often cheaper than extended DOM and price chasing later. Reference Seller Resources.
  • Understand buyer financing: Many buyers use FHA financing—see FHA loan limits to understand buyer constraints.
  • Price competitively: Use our neighborhood guides to understand micro-market pricing.
  • Consider first-time buyer demand: Review our first-time buyer guide to understand what entry-level buyers need.
  • Monitor the first 10 days: Early showing activity is the clearest pricing signal. If traffic is light, adjust quickly before the listing becomes “stale.”
  • Plan a clean marketing path: Strong photos, accurate disclosures, and a clear story about upgrades reduce uncertainty and improve offer quality.
Seller bottom line: In January, the strongest outcomes typically go to sellers who treat pricing as a strategy, not a wish. When inventory rises, the market rewards clarity, condition, and realistic positioning.

Watchlist: 5 things to monitor next month

If you only track five things between now and the next update, track these. They influence inventory flow, negotiation leverage, and how quickly buyers can act.

  • Inventory direction: Does active inventory continue rising above 892, and is the increase concentrated in a specific price band?
  • Rates & affordability: Does the average 30-year fixed remain near 6.89% or move meaningfully? Re-run payment scenarios using the payment calculator.
  • Insurance and underwriting friction: Are insurance delays increasing in hillside/fire-risk pockets? Reference the insurance guide.
  • Price reductions: Are reductions clustering in specific cities (e.g., premium pricing pockets) or in “dated condition” inventory?
  • Pending pace: Do pendings remain near 387 or accelerate? Pendings are one of the earliest reads on demand.
If you want this personalized: I can pull a neighborhood-level snapshot for your exact city, price range, and home type (single-family vs condo/townhome) and summarize the competitive set.

Stay current with our 2026 market forecast for regional trends, and use the buyer resources hub to plan your next 30-90 days.

FAQ

What is the Ventura County median home price in January 2026?

In January 2026, the countywide median sale price was $860,000. This represents a 1.2% decrease from December’s $871,000, consistent with typical seasonal adjustment. For city-specific pricing, explore our neighborhood guides or review the 2026 market forecast for broader context.

How many homes are for sale in Ventura County right now?

As of this January 2026 update, Ventura County has 892 active listings. Inventory is not evenly distributed: some neighborhoods have multiple comparable options (more buyer leverage), while others remain tight. To compare your target areas, start at the Ventura County hub and drill into the neighborhood hub.

Is Ventura County a buyer’s market or seller’s market in January 2026?

A useful framework is months of supply. January 2026 came in at 2.4 months of supply, which typically indicates a market that still leans seller-favorable overall, but with growing opportunities for buyers on specific listings. The most accurate answer depends on your city and price band—compare city pages like Oxnard and Thousand Oaks to see how leverage changes locally.

What are days on market in Ventura County right now?

In January 2026, the median days on market was 38 days. DOM varies widely by city, neighborhood, condition, and price tier. For example, within the city highlights used in this update, Oxnard shows faster absorption (around 20–30 days in competitive pockets), while Thousand Oaks can show extended timelines (45–60 days) when premium pricing meets buyer selectivity.

How close to asking price are homes selling in Ventura County?

The median sale-to-list ratio in January 2026 was 98.9%. That’s close to asking overall, but it’s not uniform: turnkey homes tend to hold price better, while dated homes (or listings priced above current competition) are more likely to include concessions. If you’re selling, use the Seller Resources hub to plan pricing and preparation.

Which Ventura County cities are moving fastest in early 2026?

Speed varies by city and price band. In January 2026 conditions, Oxnard and Camarillo are showing strong absorption in key price bands, while premium Thousand Oaks pockets can take longer when pricing is aspirational. Compare Camarillo, Oxnard, and Thousand Oaks.

How do mortgage rates impact the Ventura County housing market?

Rates directly affect payment and qualification. January’s 6.89% average rate can cost about $42 more per month per $100,000 financed than at December’s 6.72% level. Use our payment calculator to model different scenarios, and review pre-approval strategies to maximize buying power. FHA buyers should also review FHA loan limits for the current ceiling and qualification considerations.

Where can I find Ventura County neighborhood-level market data?

Explore Ventura County neighborhoods for micro-market browsing and drill-downs. If you want a targeted snapshot tied to your timeline, start with a city page like Ventura or Simi Valley, then compare similar homes using recent actives and pendings.

Resources Hub

If you’re planning a move in 2026, use these pages to keep your strategy grounded in local data and micro-market realities. These are intentionally structured to support both Google search and AI search discovery.

Quick city links: VenturaCamarilloOxnardThousand OaksSimi ValleyMoorparkPort Hueneme

To Learn More and Stay Up To Date: