There's such a disparity between the "actives" and the "solds" that now I understand why both Redfin and Zillow made it impossible to view them all on the screen simultaneously (the way you could for many years). I can think of a number of neighborhoods from say Torrance/Carson, all the way east to Disneyland that "look like" 900K neighborhoods on the active view, but then you switch to the sold in last 90 days view and nope, that's a low-to-mid 800's neighborhood. And there are pockets where it's more egregious than that. "Million dollar" homes for sale surrounded by homes that recently sold in the high sevens. And those homes definitely didn't/don't require 200K of work, as the seller of the "million dollar" home next door might declare.
There's such a disparity between the "actives" and the "solds" that now I understand why both Redfin and Zillow made it impossible to view them all on the screen simultaneously (the way you could for many years). I can think of a number of neighborhoods from say Torrance/Carson, all the way east to Disneyland that "look like" 900K neighborhoods on the active view, but then you switch to the sold in last 90 days view and nope, that's a low-to-mid 800's neighborhood. And there are pockets where it's more egregious than that. "Million dollar" homes for sale surrounded by homes that recently sold in the high sevens. And those homes definitely didn't/don't require 200K of work, as the seller of the "million dollar" home next door might declare.