The housing market in California was never sustainable. Prices were pure fantasy compared to incomes.
This housing market collapse feels like 2008 déjà vu, but with higher interest rates and worse insurance costs.
Anyone still buying in this housing market is either desperate or ignoring basic math.
Honestly, the housing market needs this correction. Homes were insanely overpriced.
People act like the housing market will always go up. Guess what? Trees don’t grow to the sky.
The California housing market is being propped up by investors, not real families. That’s why it’s crashing first.
Housing market predictions are tricky, but the writing has been on the wall for California for years.
Without cheap money, the housing market simply can’t sustain those million-dollar homes.
If the housing market really corrects 20–30%, will younger buyers finally jump in, or just wait longer?
The housing market isn’t crashing everywhere—California is just the weakest link.