What Is Your Riverside Home Worth in Today’s Market?
Riverside is the largest and most varied housing market in the Inland Empire — and the hardest to price with a national algorithm. Orangecrest is not Wood Streets. Canyon Crest is not La Sierra. Find out what your home is actually worth from a team that knows every Riverside neighborhood.
Looking for what your Riverside home is worth in today’s market? You’re in the right place.
Selling the home you’ve built your life in is one of the biggest decisions you’ll make.
A Wood Streets bungalow trades on different fundamentals than an Orangecrest tract home. A custom estate in Alessandro Heights is priced by a different buyer pool than a starter home in Arlanza. National algorithms blend it all together. You deserve a real number from people who know your specific neighborhood.
Not a guess. Not an algorithm. A real Riverside home valuation from a team that has sold over 300 homes across the Inland Empire.
$633K
Riverside Median Price
49
Avg. Days on Market
$397
Median Price Per Sq Ft
These are citywide averages. Your home is unique — neighborhood, square footage, era of construction, upgrades, and current buyer demand all matter.
Riverside Home Values — From Orangecrest to Wood Streets
DeBonis Real Estate Team works the entire Riverside market — from the family-oriented neighborhoods of Orangecrest and Mission Grove, to the historic Wood Streets and original 1871 Mile Square downtown, to the custom estates of Canyon Crest and Alessandro Heights, to the rural-residential pockets of Woodcrest and the family neighborhoods of La Sierra and Arlanza. Every neighborhood has its own buyer pool, its own pricing logic, and its own resale dynamic.
Whether you are a first-time buyer, a growing family looking to move up, or a long-time owner ready to unlock the equity you have built — knowing your home’s true market value is the foundation of every smart real estate decision. Curious what your Riverside home is worth in today’s market? Find out here →
Riverside’s citywide median sits around $633,000 with homes typically selling in 49 days. But that single number hides enormous variation. Canyon Crest and Alessandro Heights regularly trade above $1 million for custom estates with views. Wood Streets commands character premiums for its preserved Craftsman, Spanish Colonial Revival, and Tudor architecture from the 1916–1940 historic period. Orangecrest and Mission Grove move on family-driven demand and school district appeal, with Orangecrest medians around $770,000. La Sierra and Arlanza offer some of the most accessible single-family inventory in metro Riverside, while Woodcrest just south of the city line trades higher on lot size and acreage.
A national algorithm cannot tell the difference between a UC Riverside-adjacent rental and a four-bedroom family home in Woodcrest. We can. With 20 Years of Real Estate Experience pricing homes across this corner of California — every neighborhood, every architectural era, every price point — DeBonis Real Estate Team gives you a neighborhood-specific Riverside home valuation, not a generic citywide guess.
What Happens Next
Here’s exactly what to expect
No surprises. No pressure. Just a clear plan for your next move.
1. We Analyze Your Home
We review your specific Riverside neighborhood, era of construction, lot size, upgrades, and current buyer demand to build your real valuation — not an automated estimate.
2. We Reach Out Personally
A DeBonis team member contacts you directly with your neighborhood-specific Riverside home value report. You will always speak to Luc, Stephenie, or Patrick.
3. You Decide — No Pressure
There is zero obligation to list. We give you the information you need to make the right decision for your family and your next chapter.
Riverside Home Values FAQ
Riverside Home Values — What Sellers Ask Most
Real answers about the Riverside market — from a team that has worked the city for two decades.
What is the average home price in Riverside, CA?
The citywide median home price in Riverside sits around $633,000, with a typical price of about $397 per square foot. But Riverside is the largest, most varied market in the Inland Empire — values range from accessible family homes in La Sierra and Arlanza to multi-million-dollar custom estates in Alessandro Heights and Canyon Crest. Citywide averages are useful starting points, but your specific home’s value depends on neighborhood, era of construction, lot size, upgrades, and current buyer demand.
Are home values rising in Riverside right now?
Riverside has stabilized after years of rapid appreciation. The current market is somewhat competitive — well-priced homes still move with purpose, while overpriced listings sit. Anchored by UC Riverside, the historic Mission Inn, and a steady inflow of buyers from coastal California priced out of LA, Orange County, and San Diego, the city’s housing demand remains structurally strong. The current 49-day average days-on-market reflects a balanced environment where pricing accuracy matters more than market timing.
Which Riverside neighborhoods have the highest home values?
Riverside’s premium neighborhoods sit on the city’s elevated terrain. Canyon Crest and Alessandro Heights — including gated estate communities like Hillcrest Estates and Stellan Ridge — regularly feature homes well above $1 million, with the 92506 zip code commanding median prices around $710,000 and rising into multi-million-dollar territory at the upper end. Woodcrest, just south of the city line, trades higher on lot size and acreage, with medians around $835,000. Wood Streets commands a different kind of premium — character — with preserved Craftsman, Spanish Colonial Revival, and Tudor architecture from the historic 1916–1940 development period.
How long do homes take to sell in Riverside?
The Riverside citywide average is 49 days on market, but that number masks significant variation by neighborhood and pricing strategy. Well-priced Orangecrest family homes frequently go pending in around 41 days. Custom estates in Canyon Crest can take longer because the buyer pool is smaller and more discerning. Homes priced even 5–10 percent above market value often sit for 90 days or more anywhere in the city. The single biggest predictor of days on market is initial list price relative to true market value — which is exactly what a neighborhood-specific valuation gives you.
How accurate are online home value estimates like Zillow’s Zestimate?
Automated valuation models are useful starting points but routinely miss in markets like Riverside. They cannot account for the character premium of a 1923 Wood Streets bungalow versus a 2005 Orangecrest tract home of similar square footage. They cannot price view lots in Canyon Crest or acreage in Woodcrest properly. They blend a UC Riverside-adjacent rental with a four-bedroom family home in Mission Grove and call it the same market. A neighborhood-specific valuation from a team that has sold homes on your street — that’s the number that matters when you’re pricing a listing.
A Family-Moving Families
Luc, Stephenie, and Patrick DeBonis have two generations of Riverside roots — and 20 Years of Real Estate Experience pricing homes from Wood Streets to Orangecrest, La Sierra to Canyon Crest. Real numbers, not automated guesses.

