Is now a good time to buy a first home in San Diego in 2026, or should you wait for rates to come down?
[SNIPPET ANSWER: Waiting for lower rates in San Diego often means competing with more buyers and paying higher prices. For most first-time buyers, entering the market now and refinancing later builds wealth sooner.]
I hear this question almost every week. Someone calls my office in Rancho Bernardo, and the conversation goes something like, “Scott, should I just hold off another year until rates hit 5%?” It’s a fair question. But after 16 years as an Associate Broker serving San Diego County and closing over 275 transactions, I can tell you that timing the market rarely works the way people hope.
Here’s the reality. Mortgage rates in San Diego are sitting around 6.3% to 6.5% as of May 2026. Median detached home prices climbed 2.4% year-over-year to $1,100,000. The condo and townhome market, which is where many first-time buyers start, tells a slightly different story at a $670,000 median. A cloudy mind can’t make decisions, so let me bring you some clean information so you can think this through with confidence.
Let’s ground this in real numbers so the picture is clear.
So what does this mean for you? Even the most optimistic forecasts show rates landing somewhere between 5.5% and 6.5% for the foreseeable future. Nobody credible is predicting a return to 3% or even 4% anytime soon. The rate environment you’re looking at today is likely very close to the rate environment you’d face six or twelve months from now.
One couple I worked with in Mira Mesa spent most of 2024 waiting for rates to drop below 6%. By early 2025, rates had barely budged, but the townhome they’d been watching had appreciated by over $30,000. They ended up buying a similar unit at a higher price and a nearly identical rate. The math didn’t reward their patience.
This is the part most first-time buyers don’t calculate. When rates drop, even by half a percent, buyer demand surges. More competition means higher prices, bidding wars, and fewer concessions from sellers.
Here’s what’s happening in San Diego right now:
If rates dip to 5.5%, those inventory numbers tighten fast. What I tell my clients is this: you can refinance a rate, but you can’t renegotiate a purchase price after close. Buying at today’s prices with today’s competition levels, then refinancing when rates eventually soften, is a strategy that has consistently worked well for the buyers I’ve guided through this market.
Think of it like this. A $600,000 condo in Clairemont or University City at 6.4% costs you roughly $230 more per month than the same unit at 5.7%. But if that condo appreciates even 3% while you’re waiting, you’ve lost $18,000 in equity you’ll never recapture. The monthly savings from a lower rate would take years to offset that.
Not every corner of this county behaves the same way. As a real estate agent in San Diego who has worked extensively across communities from Poway to Sorrento Valley, I can tell you the micro-markets vary enormously.
Here’s something worth noting. Detached home inventory dropped 21.5% year-over-year, making that segment very competitive. Meanwhile, attached home inventory rose 3.2%, and the median price for condos and townhomes actually dipped 1.1% to $670,000. If you’re a first-time buyer, condos and townhomes across San Diego’s neighborhoods offer your clearest path to homeownership right now.
A recent buyer I worked with in Sorrento Valley had been laser-focused on finding a single-family home under $900,000. After we toured several neighborhoods together over about three months, he realized a well-located townhome at $640,000 gave him a lower monthly payment, lower maintenance costs, and proximity to his biotech job. He’s already building equity while his coworkers are still renting and waiting for “the right time.”
One of the biggest myths I encounter is that you need $150,000 or more to buy in San Diego. The median down payment did reach $169,000 in late 2024, but that includes move-up buyers with massive equity from a previous sale. Your situation is different.
On a $600,000 condo with an FHA loan, your 3.5% down payment is $21,000. The GSFA Platinum program alone could cover that. Pair it with SDHC’s closing cost grant and your realistic out-of-pocket drops to somewhere between $15,000 and $25,000. That changes the conversation entirely.
San Diego’s conforming loan limit for 2026 is $1,104,000, and the FHA loan limit is $1,006,250. Most homes in the county qualify for standard financing. If you’re a VA-eligible buyer near Miramar or Camp Pendleton, a VA loan can get you in with zero down payment.
One thing I provide to every buyer I work with is a complimentary attorney review of contracts and disclosures, covered by me, even if escrow cancels. When you’re navigating assistance programs and complex financing for the first time, that extra layer of protection matters.
Let’s talk about what staying on the sidelines actually costs. Average rent for a two-bedroom apartment in many San Diego neighborhoods runs $2,500 to $3,200 per month. That’s money building someone else’s equity.
If you purchase a $600,000 condo at 6.4% with 5% down, your principal and interest payment is roughly $3,560. Add taxes, insurance, and HOA, and you’re in the $4,200 to $4,500 range. Yes, that’s more than rent. But a meaningful portion of that payment goes toward principal, which is your money being saved inside the property.
After five years of ownership at even modest 3% annual appreciation, that $600,000 condo becomes a $695,000 asset. You’ve built roughly $125,000 in equity between appreciation and mortgage paydown. Meanwhile, five years of renting at $2,800 per month is $168,000 with nothing to show for it.
What does that actually mean for your future? It means homeownership, even at today’s rates, is still the most reliable wealth-building tool available to you in San Diego.
It’s challenging but achievable, especially in the condo and townhome market. With a median attached home price of $670,000 and down payment assistance programs offering $10,000 to $50,000 or more, realistic out-of-pocket costs can start around $15,000 to $25,000. Neighborhoods like Mira Mesa and Clairemont offer strong value.
As of May 2026, 30-year fixed rates range from 6.37% to 6.46%. Forecasters expect rates to stay between 5.5% and 6.5% through year-end. Significant drops below that range are not widely anticipated by major forecasting organizations.
Conventional loans start at 3% down, and FHA loans require 3.5%. On a $600,000 condo, that’s $18,000 to $21,000 before assistance programs. VA loans require zero down. Multiple local and state programs can offset most or all of the down payment.
History suggests prices rarely drop meaningfully in San Diego’s supply-constrained market. Detached home prices rose 2.4% year-over-year, and even with rate uncertainty, only 3.2 months of inventory exist. Waiting tends to mean paying more, not less.
Mira Mesa, Clairemont Mesa, Chula Vista, and Oceanside consistently offer more accessible price points. The condo and townhome markets in Rancho Bernardo, University City, and Sorrento Valley also provide solid entry points below the county median.
Absolutely, and this is a strategy I discuss with clients regularly. Refinancing typically costs $3,000 to $6,000 and takes 30 to 45 days. If rates drop even half a percent, you can reduce your payment without losing the equity you’ve been building.
The SDHC Middle-Income Program provides a $40,000 deferred loan plus a $10,000 closing cost grant for buyers earning between 80% and 150% of the Area Median Income. The Low-Income Program offers up to 19% of the purchase price at 3% interest.
About 41% of homes sell above asking price, and inventory sits at 3.2 months of supply. However, the condo and townhome segment is more balanced with inventory rising 3.2% year-over-year. Homes average 34 days on market, giving you time to make informed decisions.
For most first-time buyers, condos and townhomes offer the clearest path. Detached inventory dropped 21.5%, while attached inventory rose 3.2% and the median price dipped 1.1%. You’ll have more choices, more negotiating room, and lower entry costs.
Look for an agent with direct experience guiding first-time buyers through financing, assistance programs, and negotiations. With 180 client reviews at a 5 out of 5 average rating and over 275 closed transactions, I’ve spent 16 years helping first-time buyers in San Diego navigate exactly this decision.
The question isn’t really whether rates will drop. They might, modestly. The question is whether waiting will put you in a stronger position. In most scenarios, the answer is no. San Diego’s limited supply, strong job market, and persistent demand mean that lower rates will likely bring higher prices and more competition.
Your smartest move is to get clear on your numbers, explore assistance programs, and focus on neighborhoods where the condo and townhome market gives you room to negotiate. Buy at today’s prices, build equity from day one, and refinance when the opportunity comes.
If you want a calm, step-by-step plan tailored to your budget and timeline, I’d be glad to walk through it with you. I’m Scott Cheng, Associate Broker at Real Brokerage, and you can reach me at 858-405-0002 or visit my office at 16516 Bernardo Center Dr. Ste. 300. Let’s bring some clarity to your homebuying decision.
Scott Cheng provides free, no-obligation consultations for buyers, sellers, and investors.
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