The short version: Heading into mid-2026, the downtown San Diego condo market has shifted in favor of buyers. The median condo price in the 92101 ZIP code is hovering near $795,000, inventory has climbed to roughly 7 months of supply, and condos are taking 70 to 90+ days to sell. Prices are essentially flat to slightly down year over year, while well-priced and well-run buildings continue to attract steady demand. For buyers, that means real negotiating room for the first time in years. For sellers, pricing and presentation now matter more than ever.
What is the downtown San Diego condo market doing in 2026?
After several years of fast sales and thin inventory, the downtown condo market has cooled into a more balanced, buyer-friendly environment. The fundamentals that make downtown desirable have not changed: a 95 Walk Score, a waterfront setting, and one of the most amenity-rich urban cores in California. What has changed is the math. More units are listed, days on market have stretched out, and a meaningful share of sellers are reducing their asking price to compete.
| Metric (Downtown / 92101) | Current Reading (2026) | Year-Over-Year |
|---|---|---|
| Median condo price (92101) | ~$795,000 | Roughly flat to down slightly |
| Median price per square foot | ~$695 | Down ~2.7% |
| Active condo listings | ~270–320 | Up |
| Months of supply | ~7.4 months | Higher (more balanced) |
| Average days on market | 70–90+ days | Longer |
| Listings with a price reduction | ~1 in 3 | Elevated |
Figures drawn from public MLS-derived sources (Redfin 92101 and Downtown neighborhood reports, Zillow ZHVI for 92101) as of early-to-mid 2026. Confirm against the latest San Diego MLS data before quoting in a listing presentation.
How much do downtown San Diego condos cost in 2026?
The typical downtown condo is selling in the high-$700,000s. The broader 92101 attached-home median sat near $795,000 in spring 2026, while Redfin’s tighter Downtown San Diego neighborhood read came in closer to $755,000, at roughly $695 per square foot. The gap between those numbers is normal: it reflects which buildings and unit sizes happened to close in a given month.
Pricing also varies enormously by building, floor, and view. A garden-level unit in an older mid-rise and a high-floor home with a protected bay view can sit in completely different price tiers within the same complex. That is why the county or even ZIP-level median is only a starting point, never a valuation.
How much inventory is available, and how long are condos taking to sell?
Buyers have more to choose from than at any point in the last several years. Downtown is carrying somewhere around 270 to 320 active condo listings and close to seven months of supply, which is firmly in balanced-to-buyer territory for this property type. (For context, anything under about three months typically favors sellers.)
Time on market has stretched accordingly. Depending on the source and how re-listed units are counted, the average downtown condo is taking 70 to 90+ days to sell, and roughly one in three active listings has already taken at least one price reduction. The takeaway is consistent across every data set: motivated, realistically priced sellers are transacting, while aspirationally priced listings are sitting.
Is it a buyer’s or seller’s market downtown?
For most of the downtown condo market in 2026, it is a buyer’s market, and that is genuinely good news if you have been waiting on the sidelines. Increased inventory and longer marketing times have restored negotiating leverage that simply did not exist during the 2021–2022 frenzy. Buyers are securing price concessions, closing-cost credits, and inspection-driven repairs that were nearly impossible to ask for a few years ago.
Sellers are not shut out, but the strategy has changed. Sharp pricing from day one, professional staging and photography, and a building that shows well on HOA health all separate the condos that sell from the ones that linger. If you are weighing a sale, it is worth requesting a current downtown condo value estimate before you set a number.
The luxury condo segment is moving to its own rhythm
Downtown’s premium towers behave differently from the broader market. In 2025, MLS-recorded luxury downtown condo sales averaged roughly $1.4 million with a median around $1,205,000, and price per square foot ranged dramatically, from about $519 all the way to just over $2,000. That spread tells you buyers at the top of the market are paying for a specific stack, a higher floor, a protected view corridor, and a complete service package, not just square footage.
Buildings worth knowing when you compare the high end include Pacific Gate, Savina, The Grande, Harbor Club, and Electra. Notably, older landmark towers can still command premium pricing when they offer rare floor plans, penthouse positions, and protected views, proving that reputation and service often outweigh year of construction.
HOA dues, assessments, and warrantability: the issue that matters most right now
If there is one factor reshaping downtown condo values in 2026, it is the health of each building’s homeowners association. Buildings carrying high HOA dues, deferred-maintenance backlogs, or pending special assessments are underperforming, and some are seeing genuine buyer hesitation. Just as important, lenders have tightened scrutiny of non-warrantable projects, which can limit financing options and shrink a unit’s buyer pool.
This is exactly where local expertise pays for itself. Before you buy, review the building’s:
- Operating budget and reserve study (is the reserve adequately funded?)
- Recent and pending special assessments
- Reserve and litigation status
- Rental and short-term-rental restrictions
- Owner-occupancy ratio and any delinquency rates
- Insurance coverage and any open code violations
Two condos with identical views can carry very different long-term costs and resale prospects based on these documents alone.
Mortgage rates and financing in 2026
Financing conditions have eased modestly. Thirty-year mortgage rates have been running in the low-6% range, roughly 6.36% in spring 2026, which is about 45 basis points lower than a year earlier. The 2026 conforming loan limit for San Diego County rose to $1,104,000, the highest on record, which means many downtown condos can still be financed with conforming (rather than jumbo) terms. The practical effect: when rates dip below psychological thresholds, sidelined buyers re-engage quickly, and the most attractive listings see renewed competition.
What this means if you are buying a downtown condo
- You have leverage. Use it on price, credits, and repairs, but stay realistic on the strongest, best-priced listings, which still move.
- Underwrite the building, not just the unit. HOA health can make or break long-term value.
- Get pre-approved and confirm warrantability early so financing surprises do not derail a strong offer.
- Start with the right shortlist. Browse current options on our downtown condo search and read the buying guide.
What this means if you are selling a downtown condo
- Price to the current market, not last year’s. The first two weeks of accurate pricing draw the most qualified traffic.
- Presentation is non-negotiable. Professional photography, staging, and a clean HOA story shorten time on market.
- Get the building documents in order up front to keep buyers and their lenders confident.
- Know your number first. Request a current condo value estimate and review the selling guide.
Frequently asked questions
What is the average price of a condo in downtown San Diego in 2026?
The median downtown San Diego (92101) condo price is roughly $795,000 in 2026, at about $695 per square foot, though prices range from the high-$400,000s for smaller units to well over $1 million for luxury and view homes.
Is downtown San Diego a buyer’s or seller’s market right now?
For most of 2026 it favors buyers. Inventory sits near seven months of supply, condos are taking 70 to 90+ days to sell, and about one in three listings has reduced its price, all of which restore negotiating leverage to buyers.
Are downtown San Diego condo prices going up or down in 2026?
Prices are essentially flat to slightly down year over year. Most analysts expect downtown condos to land somewhere between flat and about 3% lower for the year, with high-HOA and non-warrantable buildings underperforming the segment.
Why do HOA dues matter so much when buying a downtown condo?
High dues, deferred maintenance, and pending special assessments directly affect both your monthly cost and the unit’s resale and financing prospects. Lenders also scrutinize non-warrantable buildings, which can limit your loan options, so reviewing the HOA budget, reserves, and assessment history is essential.
What are the best-known luxury condo buildings in downtown San Diego?
Frequently referenced premium towers include Pacific Gate, Savina, The Grande, Harbor Club, and Electra. Luxury pricing depends heavily on floor, view orientation, finishes, and building services rather than square footage alone.
How long does it take to sell a condo in downtown San Diego?
In 2026, the average downtown condo takes about 70 to 90+ days to sell, longer than the 2021–2022 peak. Accurately priced, well-presented units in healthy buildings continue to sell faster than the average.
Thinking about buying or selling a downtown San Diego condo?
The Neuman Team has specialized in downtown San Diego condos for decades. We will help you read the building, not just the listing, and negotiate from a position of knowledge.
Contact The Neuman Team · (800) 221-2210
Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices California Properties · 516 5th Avenue, San Diego, CA 92101 · DRE #00809392