The state’s population exodus was second only to New York, which lost 15,000 more people. The sky-high cost of housing was the residents’ primary reason for departure.
Source: Inman News
Costly housing spurred California’s 500,000-person pandemic exit
More from californiaMore posts in california »
More from California Association of Realtors (C.A.R.)More posts in California Association of Realtors (C.A.R.) »
- Ed Zorn and Phillip Cantrell to agents: Stop sharing commissions
- Vacant, foreign-owned homes draw criticism in LA post-wildfires
- CAR publishes open letter to support LA wildfire victims
- Helpful resources and a call to action for California wildfire victims
- NAR hit with new 3-way agreement suit as enrollment imbroglio builds
More from DataMore posts in Data »
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- October brought the strongest buyer’s market in 12 years: Redfin
- The inventory surge is sputtering. See how your market stacks up
- New client leads, murky waters: October’s mixed bag for real estate
- What Zillow’s marketing genius can teach you about social media
More from floridaMore posts in florida »
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Zillow reverses course and removes climate data from listings
- Zillow’s SkyTour uses complex 3D tech to simplify home search
- Delistings and discounts jump as holiday season approaches
- ‘More persistent headwinds’ plague housing market as prices barely budge
More from housing costsMore posts in housing costs »
- Which US cities are the most house poor? (And which are the least?)
- 48% of Americans blame investors for ‘unreasonable’ housing costs
- Fewer consumers think it’s a good time to buy — or sell: Inman-Dig poll
- Pressure on mortgage rates eases as Trump pauses higher tariffs
- Steel and aluminum are President Trump’s latest tariff targets
More from los angelesMore posts in los angeles »
- The most iconic house in Los Angeles is now for sale
- What it takes to build a $100M real estate brand with heart
- Why 2026 will reward those who plan with precision, not emotion: Mauricio Umansky
- Luxury’s next phase: What the 2026 buyer really wants
- Delistings and discounts jump as holiday season approaches
More from Los Angeles TimesMore posts in Los Angeles Times »
- Developers are lining up to buy in on Altadena’s burned out lots
- Prefab home companies step in to rebuild LA wildfire zones
- CAR publishes open letter to support LA wildfire victims
- Los Angeles real estate developer arrested in murder-for-hire plot
- Mohamed Hadid unloads ‘clear and present danger’ spec mansion
More from luxuryMore posts in luxury »
- This team is jumping on the private listing platform trend (EXCLUSIVE)
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- The most iconic house in Los Angeles is now for sale
- Why 2026 will reward those who plan with precision, not emotion: Mauricio Umansky
More from luxury lensMore posts in luxury lens »
- This team is jumping on the private listing platform trend (EXCLUSIVE)
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- The most iconic house in Los Angeles is now for sale
- Why 2026 will reward those who plan with precision, not emotion: Mauricio Umansky
More from luxury_lensMore posts in luxury_lens »
- This team is jumping on the private listing platform trend (EXCLUSIVE)
- Jason Oppenheim: Private listings could take real estate ‘back to the Dark Ages’
- Alexander brothers denied motion to dismiss sex-trafficking charges
- Jason Oppenheim: ‘Epic’ real estate + big drama makes new ‘Selling the OC’ season the best yet
- SERHANT. enters Sin City with 2nd Southwestern market launch
More from Markets & EconomyMore posts in Markets & Economy »
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
- Shutdown blip, or worrying trend? Agent pipelines thin in November
- Homebuyers came out in force last week, and rates are trending down
- October was another slow month for pending home sales
More from new yorkMore posts in new york »
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- Delistings and discounts jump as holiday season approaches
- ‘More persistent headwinds’ plague housing market as prices barely budge
- What saved my life — and why our industry must choose compassion over judgment
More from population shiftsMore posts in population shifts »
More from san franciscoMore posts in san francisco »
- Delistings and discounts jump as holiday season approaches
- In crowded virtual staging category, Collov AI offers ease, affordability: Tech Review
- 53% of US homes lost value from 2024 — but it’s not a crash
- Welcome to the Senior Class: Downsizing with a home equity conversion mortgage
- 15% of homebuyers ‘ghosted’ homesellers in September
More from SelectMore posts in Select »
- This team is jumping on the private listing platform trend (EXCLUSIVE)
- Redfin on 2026: Affordability improves, sales rise only slightly
- Dual licensing is on the rise. Is it the right move for your business?
- Future-proof your digital footprint for 2026 (and beyond)
- Change strategy as the market shifts to win the listings long game
More from texasMore posts in texas »
- Delistings and discounts jump as holiday season approaches
- ‘More persistent headwinds’ plague housing market as prices barely budge
- This week was all about NAR: Inman’s Top 5 stories
- 53% of US homes lost value from 2024 — but it’s not a crash
- ‘He didn’t even say he was sorry’: Brooklyn investor gets prison time for 12-year deed fraud scheme
Be First to Comment