# St. Petersburg Home Prices 2026: What the Data Shows

> St. Pete home prices are up 3.2% YoY in 2026. Get ZIP-level data, neighborhood breakdowns, and find out what your home is worth from a local MLS expert.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/st-petersburg-home-prices-2026
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-05-17
**Updated**: 2026-05-17
**Intent**: seller
**Keywords**: St. Petersburg home prices 2026, St. Pete real estate market 2026, home values St. Petersburg FL, Pinellas County housing market, St. Pete median home price, Tampa Bay home prices, St. Petersburg real estate trends


## St. Petersburg Home Prices in 2026: The Short Answer

The median sale price for a single-family home in St. Petersburg, FL is approximately **$435,000** as of Q1 2026, up **3.2% year-over-year**, according to Stellar MLS closed transaction data. That growth is real but uneven — waterfront and elevated properties are outperforming, while condos and flood-exposed homes are facing headwinds from rising insurance costs and new HOA reserve mandates.

If you own a home in St. Pete right now, what that number means *for your specific address* depends on your ZIP code, flood zone, lot size, and condition — not a citywide average.

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## The ZIP-Level Breakdown: St. Pete Is Not One Market

Looking at St. Petersburg as a single number misses the story. Here's how median prices are playing out across the city's major ZIP codes, based on Stellar MLS closed sales through Q1 2026:

| ZIP Code | Area | Approx. Median Sale Price | YoY Change |
|----------|------|--------------------------|------------|
| 33701 | Downtown St. Pete | $390,000 (condos dominant) | -3.1% |
| 33703 | Shore Acres / Snell Isle | $525,000 | +4.8% |
| 33704 | Old Northeast / Crescent Lake | $615,000 | +6.2% |
| 33705 | Historic Kenwood / Bartlett Park | $345,000 | +5.1% |
| 33710 | Jungle Prada / Tyrone | $375,000 | +2.9% |
| 33711 | Pinellas Point / Lakewood | $310,000 | +1.7% |

A few things jump out. **33704 (Old Northeast)** is the strongest-performing ZIP in the city — walkability, tree canopy, character homes, and proximity to Coffee Pot Bayou are commanding serious premiums. I listed a place off Brightwaters Boulevard in Old Northeast last spring and had three offers over asking within a week.

**33701 (Downtown)** is the outlier — condo prices are softening as Florida's SB 4D reserve requirements push HOA fees higher and some buyers are stepping back from high-rise units. If you own a downtown condo, the pricing calculus looks different than it does for a single-family owner in [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood).

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## What's Driving Price Growth in St. Pete in 2026

Several structural forces are keeping single-family values elevated even as the broader Florida market cools:

**Limited inventory.** St. Petersburg is a built-out peninsula. There's no exurban sprawl option here the way there is in Pasco County or Manatee. When inventory stays low, prices stay supported. Active listings in Pinellas County are running roughly 18% below the 5-year pre-pandemic average.

**Demand from in-state relocation.** A significant portion of St. Pete buyers in 2026 are coming from Tampa, Clearwater, and other Florida markets — not just from out of state. The walkable, arts-district feel of Central Avenue, the waterfront parks, and the relative affordability compared to Miami or Naples still attract buyers who want an urban lifestyle without a $900,000 price tag.

**Post-Helene flight to elevation.** Hurricane Helene reshuffled buyer priorities. Homes that sit above base flood elevation — or outside FEMA AE and VE zones entirely — are commanding a noticeable premium. A block can make a $40,000 difference when one property carries a $6,000 annual flood insurance premium and the neighboring one carries zero. Check out our breakdown of [flood insurance costs in St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg) for the full picture.

**Remote work anchoring.** St. Pete's coffee shops, the Pier, the arts scene, and quality-of-life factors are retaining residents who might otherwise have moved during a softening job market. That demographic tends to be equity-rich and not distressed sellers.

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## The Condo Problem: Why That Segment Is Different

I'd be doing you a disservice if I didn't call out the condo market specifically, because it doesn't follow the single-family story.

Florida's SB 4D legislation — passed after the Surfside collapse — requires condo associations to fully fund structural reserve accounts by the end of 2025. For buildings 3 stories and taller, that's triggering **significant HOA fee increases**, sometimes doubling monthly dues overnight. A unit in a downtown high-rise that was carrying $550/month in fees in 2024 might be at $1,100/month in 2026.

That math kills affordability fast. Buyers are factoring those fees into offer prices, which is why you're seeing 3-6% price softening in the 33701 ZIP and some of the waterfront condo towers along Beach Drive.

If you own a condo in St. Pete and are thinking about selling, timing is a genuine consideration right now. The window before further fee increases get priced in further may be shortening.

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## Why Zillow's Number for Your House Is Probably Wrong

I pull Stellar MLS data every day. Zillow's Zestimate uses a national model that is notoriously unreliable in Florida's hyperlocal, flood-zone-complicated market.

Zillow's own published accuracy data shows a **7-12% median error rate for off-market homes in Florida**. On a $435,000 home, that's a $30,000–$52,000 swing. On a $700,000 Snell Isle property, that error could be $50,000–$85,000 in either direction.

The algorithm doesn't know:
- Whether your home was renovated since the last sale
- That your street sits 2 feet above base flood elevation while the next block floods every time there's a king tide
- That you're on a double lot in [Old Northeast](/neighborhoods/old-northeast), which adds substantial land value
- That your [Shore Acres](/neighborhoods/shore-acres) home had water intrusion during Helene and the buyer pool is smaller as a result

Real comps from a local agent — pulled from actual closed sales, adjusted for condition and flood zone — will always be more accurate than an algorithm running on stale national data.

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## What This Means If You're Thinking About Selling

The 2026 St. Pete market rewards sellers who price precisely, not optimistically. Days on market have stretched from 18-22 days at the 2022 peak to **28-35 days** today for well-priced homes. Overpriced listings are sitting 60-90 days and taking price cuts that often leave money on the table versus a sharp initial price.

The sellers doing best right now are:
1. Pricing within 2-3% of actual comparable sales from the last 90 days
2. Addressing anything that will show up on inspection (roof age, HVAC, electrical)
3. Getting ahead of flood disclosure — if Helene touched your property, disclose early and price it right rather than deal with a blown-up contract after inspection
4. Leaning into what makes St. Pete compelling: proximity to the Pier, walkability, neighborhood character

For a deeper look at whether now is the right moment for your situation, see [Should I Sell My Home in 2026 in Tampa Bay?](/questions/should-i-sell-my-home-in-2026-tampa-bay) and [How Long Does It Take to Sell a House in Tampa Bay?](/questions/how-long-does-it-take-to-sell-house-tampa-bay).

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## Get Your Home's Actual 2026 Value

Citywide medians and ZIP-level averages tell you the direction of the market. They don't tell you what your specific house on your specific street in your specific condition is worth to a buyer in 2026.

If you want a real MLS-based valuation for your address — not an algorithm's guess — I'll pull 3 actual closed comps and text them to you within 24 hours, free, no pressure. Drop your address at [stpetehomeguide.com/contact](/contact) and I'll get back to you same day.

*Data reflects Stellar MLS closed transactions and Pinellas County Property Appraiser records as of Q1 2026. Market conditions change; consult a licensed Florida real estate professional for current guidance. Luke Salm, License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS, Trinity FL.*


## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What is the median home price in St. Petersburg, FL in 2026?**

As of Q1 2026, the median sale price for a single-family home in St. Petersburg is approximately $435,000, according to Stellar MLS data. That represents a 3.2% increase year-over-year from Q1 2025. Condos and townhomes are tracking lower, with a median closer to $295,000 across Pinellas County.

**Q: Are St. Pete home prices going up or down in 2026?**

Single-family home prices in St. Petersburg are up 3.2% year-over-year as of early 2026. Condo prices have softened roughly 4-6% in some ZIP codes due to new HOA reserve requirements under Florida's SB 4D legislation and rising insurance costs post-Hurricane Helene. The two segments are moving in opposite directions right now.

**Q: Which St. Pete neighborhoods have the highest home values in 2026?**

Snell Isle, Old Northeast, and Venetian Isles consistently rank as St. Pete's highest-value neighborhoods. Snell Isle waterfront properties regularly close above $1.5 million, while Old Northeast bungalows have been selling in the $550,000–$850,000 range depending on condition and lot size, per Stellar MLS 2026 closed sales.

**Q: How accurate is Zillow's Zestimate for St. Petersburg homes?**

Zillow's own accuracy data shows a 7-12% median error rate for off-market homes in Florida markets, which in St. Pete can translate to a $30,000–$52,000 swing on a median-priced home. Flood zone status, renovation quality, and lot premiums in neighborhoods like Shore Acres or Snell Isle are factors an algorithm consistently misprices.

**Q: How has Hurricane Helene affected St. Pete home prices?**

Hurricane Helene's impact has been uneven. Waterfront and low-lying areas saw a short-term dip in buyer demand immediately after the storm, and flood insurance premiums in FEMA AE and VE zones have climbed significantly — some homeowners are reporting annual premiums of $6,000 or more. Elevated homes and those outside flood zones have seen relatively stronger price appreciation as a result.

**Q: How long are homes staying on the market in St. Petersburg in 2026?**

Well-priced single-family homes in St. Pete are averaging 28-35 days on market in 2026, compared to 18-22 days at the peak of 2021-2022. Overpriced listings and condos with high HOA fees are sitting longer, sometimes 60-90 days before a price reduction. Pricing strategy matters more now than at any point in the last four years.


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*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
