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    Home»Business»The AI boom didn’t kill Silicon Valley—it supercharged its housing market
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    The AI boom didn’t kill Silicon Valley—it supercharged its housing market

    May 29, 20264 Mins Read
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    The AI boom has become a boon to the Bay Area’s luxury home market as homebuyers are able to bring more cash to closing than a few years ago, according to a new report from Realtor.com.

    Buyers made a median down payment of 35% of the purchase price for a luxury home in the greater San Francisco area in 2025, up 6.6 percentage points from a few years ago, the Austin-based real estate site reported on Thursday. That means buyers are bringing about $198,000 extra to closing for a $3 million entry-level luxury home than they were as recently as 2022. 

    The Bay Area’s luxury housing market is bucking a trend in other cities like Miami, Austin, and New York, where homebuyers have eased up on down payments as interest rates have fallen in recent years. While these housing markets share many similarities—high prices, thriving tech industry, and a concentration of wealth—what sets the Bay Area apart is it’s home to many AI companies and workers cashing in on the equity offered by their employers are diving into the housing market, according to Jiayi Xu, an economist at Realtor.com. 

    Whereas there’s been a migration of tech workers to Austin from Silicon Valley, the persistently high down payments in the Bay area show that AI wealth has not followed the broader tech exodus, Xu tells Fast Company. “The Bay Area’s concentration of AI-native companies and their employees appears more entrenched than the migration narrative suggests, and the housing market is reflecting that reality in real time.”

    The report highlights how the AI boom is affecting a housing market that was already expensive, Xu adds. “In a market where larger down payments have become both a financial necessity and a competitive signal, access to liquid wealth increasingly determines who can participate—and the AI boom appears to be raising that bar in ways that go beyond what income or savings alone can clear.”

    RATES AND DOWN PAYMENTS

    The run-up in mortgage rates earlier in the decade saw the 30-year rate surpass 8% in October 2023. It was during this period that homebuyers started bringing more cash to closing—and the median down payment in the Bay Area peaked at 38.3% in 2023, roughly in-line with other markets that also saw median down payments top 30%.

    But whereas down payments normalized to 2022-era levels elsewhere as rates have come down, that hasn’t happened in the Bay Area. And that divergence is explained by the AI boom, Xu noted. “A specific, concentrated source of new wealth is reshaping competition at the top of the Bay Area market—and it’s not going away,” he said in a statement.

    While the Realtor.com study impacts the early impact of how wealth from the growth in the AI industry is resetting some housing norms, the story doesn’t end there. That’s because more and more homebuyers are bringing down payments in excess of 20% to closing for homes in the $750,000 to $1.5 million price range—and seven-figure down payments have become more common, as well.

    That workers in a cutting-edge industry still see so much value in the housing market may not be so surprising, but there is a ripple effect that affects other prospective homebuyers—especially those who may not be so cash rich.If large down payments become the norm, the effective price floor rises even if list prices stay flat, Xu notes, and that has the potential to lock out buyers if the barrier to entry shifts from income to wealth. “The downstream consequence may be a market that freezes in place: unable to move up, buyers stay put, further restricting the already tight supply in lower and middle tiers.”



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