San Francisco's AI boom has minted enough new wealth to push 144 homes past the $1 million-over-asking threshold in just six months.
The number of San Francisco homes selling for at least $1 million above asking surged to 144 in the first half of 2026, a 1,700% jump from eight such transactions a year earlier, as AI-driven wealth reshapes the city's housing market.
"It's absolutely bananas and may be the most useful data in understanding the 2026 San Francisco housing market," said Mike Simonsen, chief economist at Compass, which compiled the data. "This is of course related to the AI boom — it's migration and hiring, as well as preparing for mega IPOs."
June alone recorded 44 hyper-bidding transactions totaling more than $60 million, Compass data show. That compares with just six such sales in the entire first half of 2024. The median single-family home price has climbed to $2.2 million from $1.7 million a year ago, a 17% increase, while inventory has plunged about 45%. Homes are selling in an average of 18 days, the fastest pace in five years.
The frenzy is concentrated in neighborhoods near AI employers and affluent pockets of the Peninsula and Marin, creating what Compass describes as a market "increasingly segmented by income tier and proximity to AI-driven employment centers." OpenAI and Anthropic, both headquartered in San Francisco, have filed for initial public offerings at valuations approaching $1 trillion, promising to mint a new class of multimillionaires in a city already home to the highest concentration of billionaires per capita in the world.
The 94114 zip code — encompassing the Castro, Noe Valley and Dolores Heights — saw the highest concentration of million-dollar-plus overbids, according to Compass. A Cow Hollow home at 2512 Union St. sold in May for nearly double its $7.95 million asking price, closing at about $15 million, a transaction that foreshadowed the broader trend now visible in the data.
The bidding wars stand in stark contrast to conditions just a few years ago, when San Francisco's housing market slumped amid pandemic-era departures and concerns about crime and homelessness. The city now has the highest median home price in the country, according to a May analysis from Redfin.
A Narrow Boom, Not a Broad One
"What's different this time is that the benefits or the prosperity of AI seems much more concentrated," said Daryl Fairweather, chief economist at Redfin. "It's not that everybody is going out and buying homes."
Across the broader market, the median listing price has actually declined 4.9% from a year ago to $1.137 million, a drop that Joel Berner, senior economist at Realtor.com, attributed to smaller homes entering the market. The luxury tiers — the 95th and 99th price percentiles — are seeing stronger price growth than the median, he said.
"This kind of uptick in buyer activity is consistent with a cash infusion on the buyer side, which we know is occurring as part of the AI boom and the IPOs of several of these companies with presences in the Bay Area," Berner said. "Buyers have more money in their pockets, but they're chasing after the same pool of homes as before as supply has not yet had the chance to meet demand."
Because San Francisco is a notoriously tough place to build new homes, with pricey and scarce land and high regulatory burdens for builders, Berner said it is "unlikely that a new wave of construction comes to balance the market, so expect seller's market conditions to continue and prices to start rising significantly."
Other tech hubs across the country have not seen a similar trend of overbidding, Simonsen noted, underscoring the unique concentration of AI-generated wealth in the Bay Area. The last time San Francisco saw this kind of concentrated buying pressure was during the 2021 tech rally, but the current wave is more narrowly focused on the luxury tier and tied directly to AI company liquidity events rather than broad-based tech hiring.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.