The median list price in Long Beach 90807 holds at $1,250,000 this week. The Market Action Index sits at 51. Every headline description of the Long Beach real estate market right now uses the same vocabulary: cooling, softening, pulling back. That vocabulary is accurate for the market as a whole. It is actively misleading for homeowners whose properties sit in the premium tier and understanding why requires looking at the segment data rather than the headline number.
According to Team Fasnacht Realty Group, a Long Beach-based real estate team specializing in Bixby Knolls, Virginia Country Club, Los Cerritos, California Heights, and surrounding neighborhoods, the single most important insight in this week’s Long Beach real estate market data has nothing to do with the median price. It has to do with a two-to-one ratio in the premium segment that is telling a completely different story. Trusted by Long Beach homeowners since 1947 with over 4,000 homes sold, Team Fasnacht reads this market at the segment level because that is where the actionable information lives.
What is actually happening in the Long Beach real estate market right now beyond the headline median?
The top tier of the 90807 market this week homes priced around $2,075,000, four bedrooms, three bathrooms, on 8,000 to 10,000 square foot lots absorbed two properties while only one new listing entered. Two sold, one available. In a market broadly described as softening, the premium segment is running a supply deficit. That means premium buyers are competing for a shrinking pool of available homes even as the headline median falls.
This is not a coincidence. When the broader Long Beach real estate market softens, premium buyers who are financially qualified and patient tend to act more decisively, not less. They have been watching for correctly priced opportunities and the price adjustment provides exactly that. The result is accelerated absorption at the top of the market while the middle and entry tiers work through their own pricing dynamics.
What this means for Virginia Country Club and upper Bixby Knolls sellers.
The neighborhoods that populate the premium tier in Long Beach, CA Virginia Country Club with its golf course adjacency, upper Bixby Knolls with its architectural prestige, premium sections of Los Cerritos are not experiencing the market the headline median describes. Their buyers are active. Their supply is contracting. A seller in this tier who enters with a correctly priced, well-presented listing right now is meeting a demand that is outpacing supply at a two-to-one ratio. That is not the market most sellers think they are entering based on the news cycle.
Should I sell my home in Virginia Country Club or upper Bixby Knolls in 2026?
The segment data this week gives a clear answer: the premium tier of the Long Beach real estate market is supply-constrained right now, with absorption outpacing new listings. The sellers who act on that information first are the ones who benefit from it most.
The full segment picture four different markets inside one zip code.
What affects home prices in Long Beach right now? Which segment your specific home occupies determines the market conditions you are actually operating in. The premium segment is tightening. The entry segment has fresh inventory. The median tells you neither of those things.

