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Monthly Market Report

Santa Clara housing market
December 2025

Single-family Santa Clara in December, year over year. Thirteen closings, the city’s busiest single month of 2025 and the fastest closing pace since spring.

Santa Clara single family, december 2025

The numbers,
year over year.

Every figure below is Santa Clara single-family residential for December 2025, set against December 2024. Same period, one year apart.

Scope and source

Santa Clara single-family residential. December 2025 compared to December 2024. Closed transactions only.

Based on information from the Washington County Board of REALTORS® Multiple Listing Service for the period 12/1/2025 through 12/31/2025.

Median sale price
$710,000 +9% YoY

Compared with $650,500 a year ago. The level the right-priced Santa Clara single-family home was trading at.

Closed sales
13 +30%

Single-family homes closed, up from 10 a year ago.

Active inventory
38 -7%

Single-family homes active at month end, against 41 a year ago. The shelf that fed contracts the following weeks.

Days on market
48 down 25 days

Median days from list to under contract, against 73 a year ago. The clock the active buyer pool was actually operating on.

New listings
9 +50%

New single-family listings hit the market, against 6 a year ago. The supply pulse feeding the buyer pool.

Percent of list price
98% -1 pts

Sellers closed at about 98 percent of list, against 99 percent a year ago. Across all residential the average home traded about $13,764 below list.

Average sale price
$909,600 +28% YoY

Compared with $705,740 a year ago. Mean of the actual sale prices, sample-sensitive in a small market.

Under contract
8 +33%

Single-family homes under contract at period end, against 6 a year ago. The pipeline feeding the next month’s closings.

Sold dollar volume
$11.8M +67%

Total single-family dollar volume, against $7.1M a year ago.

The full picture

Every metric, December 2025 vs December 2024

Metric December 2024 December 2025 Change
Median sale price $650,500 $710,000 up 9%
Average sale price $705,740 $909,600 up 28%
Closed sales 10 13 up 30%
Sold dollar volume $7.1M $11.8M up 67%
Active inventory 41 38 down 7%
New listings 6 9 up 50%
Under contract 6 8 up 33%
Days on market (sold) 73 48 down 25 days
Days to close 106 125 up 19 days
Avg days active listings sit 198 185 down 13 days
Percent of list price 99% 98% down 1 pt
The picture

Santa Clara, at a glance

Median sale price trend

Median single-family sale price by month. Each line is a year; the current year is highlighted in sky blue. Watch how prices move with the seasons and where this year sits against prior years.

$1.25M $860k $464k Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec 2025
Median price, year over year

December 2025 against December 2024, single-family median sale price.

$650,500 December 2024 $710,000 December 2025
Market at a glance

The strongest December the city has produced in years.

Thirteen single-family closings in December, more than any other single month of 2025 and a meaningful step up from the prior December’s ten. The median moved modestly higher year over year, the days-on-market figure shortened, and the year ended on the city’s healthiest closing pace since spring.

This is the clearest read Santa Clara has produced in months. With a sample large enough to take seriously, the picture is of a city closing 2025 with stable pricing, active buyer demand, and motivated sellers willing to negotiate clean term sheets to finish the year.

What changed since last year

The cleanest year-over-year read of the second half.

Closings up, median up, days on market down. The trio moved in the seller-favorable direction together, which has been rare in Santa Clara’s 2025 monthly data. The percent-of-list discipline held tight. The dollar gap between sale price and list price stayed in the same range as November.

If you are selling

December rewarded sellers who carried into the season.

The sellers who held listings through the holidays got rewarded. The buyer pool was small but decisive, and the closings that landed in December were almost all on homes that priced themselves into the band the data supported. The lesson, again, is preparation and accuracy.

Get your pricing band
If you are buying

Year-end buyers got real conversations.

The December buyer pool was disproportionately serious. Out-of-state buyers using the holiday week to view, locals with year-end timing requirements, and the right-sizer audience that always operates in Santa Clara. The negotiations that produced contracts were substantive and clean.

Useful Santa Clara reading from elsewhere on the site: the Santa Clara move-up plan, Paradise Village at Zion, the buy-before-you-sell calculator.

The season

Holiday quiet, cleanest negotiations.

The seasonal pattern played out as it usually does: lowest volume of advertising activity, highest concentration of motivated participants. The result is the year’s tightest dataset, even at a low absolute count.

Looking ahead

January is the reset; Q1 will tell us 2026’s shape.

Santa Clara enters 2026 with momentum from a strong December and a healthy under-contract carry. The 2026 January data will tell us whether the December strength was a year-end push or the start of something more durable.

City-wide numbers are not your home. A real Santa Clara valuation is the next step.

Pricing your home

Santa Clara is not a volume game.

Santa Clara is small. Roughly nine residential closings a month, with a much higher concentration of luxury buyers shopping for character, view, or a specific subdivision than St. George ever sees. A citywide median averages an Entrada custom on a corner lot, a Heights rambler, and an Old Town pioneer cottage into a number that fits almost no individual home. Real pricing starts at your parcel, compares against recent closings on your exact street and inside your exact subdivision, then adjusts for view orientation, lot, and short-term-rental rights at the parcel level. The fastest read on where your home likely lands is the what is my home worth in Santa Clara page, then a full home valuation turns the band into a calibrated number.

Timing is the other lever, and it matters here because the buyer pool is thinner than in neighboring cities. If you are torn between listing now and waiting, the should I sell now or wait calculator runs the actual math on carry against probable appreciation, and the seller net sheet shows what you would actually pocket once costs come out. Above the million-dollar mark expired listings start to outnumber sold ones in some pockets, so pricing into the band you are actually in, not the one you wish you were in, is the single biggest lever you control.

Santa Clara neighborhoods

Entrada is not Paradise Village. Don't price like it is.

Santa Clara is a small city with five distinct sub-markets stacked under one address. A custom home in The Hills at Santa Clara or The Point at Snow Canyon trades on a completely different curve than a nightly-rental condo at Paradise Village at Zion or Arcadia Resort, and both of those trade on a completely different curve than a custom infill build on an irrigated lot in the Vineyards. National algorithms treat them as comparable. They are not.

That is why the neighborhood lens is the starting point here, not an afterthought. The protected historic core at the center of town, the two purpose-built STR resort communities that have no equivalent in Ivins or most of St. George, and the Snow Canyon viewshed that lifts the hillside pocket all shift the math before you ever start the comp work. My full breakdown of every Santa Clara area, what it offers, who buys there, and how it tends to price, lives on the Santa Clara neighborhoods guide. Start there before you anchor to a single listing.

Your next move

The sale is one half of a two-part move.

Most Santa Clara sellers are landing somewhere next, and the two halves go far smoother planned as one. If you are scaling up for a Hills at Santa Clara custom or a Vineyards build-to-suit lot, my moving up in Santa Clara guide covers the sequencing so you are never stuck owning two homes or scrambling with none. If you are freeing up equity and going the other way toward a low-maintenance single level near the heart of town, the right-sizing in Santa Clara page walks through doing it without leaving money on the table.

New construction in Santa Clara mostly happens on individual lots with custom or semi-custom builders rather than in large production subdivisions, so the path is different than in Washington or St. George. My new construction in Santa Clara guide breaks down the active lot inventory and the builder bench behind it, so you walk in knowing the timeline before you start. When you are ready to list, the full story of how I take a Santa Clara home to market lives on my sell your Santa Clara home page. Whichever direction you are headed, I can quarterback both sides of it at once.

What is your Santa Clara home worth right now?

The data above is the market. Your home is specific. Start with a no-obligation valuation and get an honest pricing band for your exact home in your exact Santa Clara pocket. No pressure, no signup wall, and you will not be added to a marketing list.

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