Salinas Real Estate Market Update
New Title

Salinas Real Estate Market Update: What Creekbridge Tells First-Time Buyers About Monterey County
If you're a first-time home buyer watching the Monterey County market and wondering whether now is the right time to make a move, the numbers coming out of Creekbridge in Salinas, CA this May are worth a close look. Here's the full breakdown — and what it actually means for you.
What's the Big Number?
The median sold price in Creekbridge hit $850,000 in May 2026, up 6% month-over-month. That works out to $367 per square foot, with the median list price sitting at $935,000.
That's a meaningful jump in a single month, and it's the first sign that this neighborhood is heating up.
How Much Is Out There?
Inventory is tight:
- 4 active listings
- 6 new listings, with a median price of $843,450
- 4 new pending listings, with a median price of $808,450
When new pending listings are priced close to (or even above) what's currently active, it tells you buyers are competing for what little is available — and winning it fast.
How Fast Are Homes Moving?
Homes in Creekbridge spent a median of 11 days on market in May, a 27% drop from the month before. Properties that went pending moved even quicker, with a median of just 6 days on market and a price point of $503 per square foot.
For context: 11 days on market is fast. A balanced market typically sees homes sit for 30-45 days. Anything under two weeks signals strong buyer demand chasing a short supply of homes.
What Kind of Market Is This?
Every market falls somewhere on a spectrum from seller's market to buyer's market, and the data points to one answer here:
- Months of supply: 0.8 (up 33% from last month, but still down 47% year-over-year)
- Sold price: $850,000 (up 6% MoM)
- Average days on market: 11 (down 27% MoM)
- Sold-to-list ratio: 99.3% (homes are selling for nearly full asking price)
The Takeaway
With 0.8 months of supply and homes selling at 99.27% of list price, this is a competitive seller's market. Anything under one month of supply means, mathematically, the entire current inventory would sell out in under 30 days if no new listings came on the market. That's about as tight as it gets.
What This Means If You're a First-Time Home Buyer in Monterey County
Numbers like these can feel intimidating if you're just starting your home search. But a tight market doesn't mean you're locked out — it means you need to be prepared and strategic. Here's how to put yourself in a strong position:
1. Get pre-approved before you start touring homes. In a market where pending listings go under contract in 6 days, sellers aren't going to wait around for a buyer who's still shopping for a lender. A pre-approval letter in hand lets you move the moment the right home appears.
2. Look into Monterey County's down payment assistance programs. First-time buyers in Monterey County have real options to reduce their cash-to-close:
- The County of Monterey First-Time Homebuyer (FTHB) Program offers down payment assistance to income-qualified households (at or below 80% of area median income) purchasing in unincorporated parts of the county, as long as the buyer contributes at least 3.5% of the purchase price themselves.
- CalHFA's MyHome Assistance Program offers a deferred-payment junior loan to help with down payment and closing costs statewide.
- GSFA Platinum offers flexible down payment and closing cost assistance for California buyers and isn't limited to first-time purchasers.
- In South Monterey County (including King City), USDA Rural Development loans can finance up to 100% of the purchase price for buyers who meet income and location requirements — a strong option in a market where saving 20% down feels out of reach.
Program rules, income limits, and funding availability change often, so confirm current terms with the Monterey County Housing and Community Development Office or a participating lender before counting on a specific number.
3. Don't assume "first-time buyer" math rules you out of a competitive neighborhood. A 99.3% sold-to-list ratio means most sellers aren't getting wildly more than asking — they're getting close to it. That's a more predictable, less emotional environment to negotiate in than a market where everything sells $50,000 over ask.
4. Move fast, but don't skip the fundamentals. Fast markets tempt buyers into skipping inspections or waiving contingencies. Talk to your agent about which contingencies actually carry risk in this specific market and which ones are safe to streamline.
Want the Numbers for Your Neighborhood?
Market conditions shift block by block across Monterey ounty — Salinas, Monterey, Seaside, Carmel, and South County each tell a different story. If you're thinking about buying your first home in this area, I send out a weekly market minute just like this one, and I'd be glad to run the numbers for the specific neighborhood you're watching.
Raymond Bojorquez | CA DRE #02101529
M2 Realty Group
bojorquezrealty@gmail.com
(831) 596-0658




