Windsor is the fastest-moving submarket in Sonoma County right now. Over the three months ending May 2026, Windsor homes sold in an average of 35 days while the countywide average stretched to 55, sales volume climbed 24 percent year over year, and the median sold price rose 6 percent to about $847,000 even as the county median held flat. In a market where most of Sonoma County is treading water, Windsor is gaining ground.
Chart: Windsor outpaced the county on sales, price, and speed in the most recent quarter, year over year.
Homes are selling faster in Windsor, not slower
The clearest divergence is speed. Windsor's average days on market fell from 41 to 35 over the past year, a drop of about 15 percent. Across all of Sonoma County, the trend ran the other way: average days on market rose from 51 to 55. So while buyers countywide have been getting a little more breathing room, Windsor sellers have been getting offers faster. Months of inventory in Windsor sits at 2.6, comfortably inside seller's-market territory.
Chart: Windsor's days on market dropped over the year while the county's climbed.
Windsor's median price is rising while the county holds flat
Price is the second half of the story. Windsor's median sold price averaged roughly $847,000 over March through May 2026, up about 6 percent from $798,000 a year earlier. The countywide median was essentially unchanged over the same window, hovering near $813,000. That means Windsor's median sold price has actually pulled ahead of the county median, a notable shift for a town that has historically priced below the upper end of the county. Sellers are also holding their pricing power: Windsor homes closed at about 99 percent of their original list price, versus roughly 96 percent countywide, which tells you there is less discounting happening here.
Chart: Windsor's median sold price has caught up to and passed the countywide median.
It is a seller's market, but buyers still get more house for the money
Windsor's absorption rate, the single best gauge of market temperature, averaged about 40 percent of available inventory selling per month, against roughly 36 percent for the county. Anything above 35 percent is a strong seller's market, so both are hot, but Windsor runs hotter most months. Here is the part buyers should not miss: even with prices rising, Windsor's average price per square foot was about $478, while the county averaged closer to $553. That is roughly 14 percent more home for every dollar, which helps explain why demand keeps building. Bay Area buyers comparing Windsor to Healdsburg or Santa Rosa are finding newer, larger homes for less per foot, and they are acting on it.
Chart: Windsor's absorption rate sits above the county line in most months, signalling a stronger seller's market.
A closer look at the 78 homes that just sold in Windsor
To see what is actually happening at the closing table, we pulled every Windsor sale that recorded from mid-December 2025 through mid-June 2026: 78 homes, $71.7 million in total volume. The median sale price came in at $841,500 and the average at $919,619, the median home traded at $456 per square foot, and the typical sale closed in 28 days at 98.93 percent of its original list price. Prices ranged from $564,000 for the smallest entry-level home on Emily Rose Circle to $3,725,000 on Balverne Lane, the only sale above $2 million in the entire period. Three- and four-bedroom homes did almost all the work, accounting for 71 of the 78 closings.
Windsor is a split market: price it right or pay for it
The most useful pattern in the data is also the most overlooked. Forty percent of Windsor homes (31 of 78) sold over their original list price, but 47 percent (37 homes) sold under, with the remaining 13 percent landing right on the number. The same six months produced a home that sold $111,000 over asking and another that sold $165,000 under. That is not a contradiction, it is the signal: Windsor rewards correctly priced homes and punishes overpriced ones. The fact that the average sale still landed at 98.93 percent of original list tells you the discounts were mostly small corrections, while the homes priced to draw interest were the ones that ran up. More than a third of all sales (36 percent) drew multiple offers.
Chart: Windsor is a split market: 40 percent sold over asking, 47 percent under.
The clearest illustration is two homes that closed in the same window. The seller on Seghesio Way priced at $1,089,000 and sold for $1,200,000, a $111,000 premium, in zero days on market. The seller on Blazing Star Court launched at $1,090,000 and ultimately closed at $925,000, a $165,000 haircut and the lowest sale-to-list ratio in the set. Same town, same price band, opposite outcomes, and the difference came down to the launch price. On a percentage basis the strongest result was on Pearl Bailey Court, which sold for 111.46 percent of asking.
Where the competition actually is
When Windsor homes are priced to attract buyers, they attract a lot of them. The most contested listing of the period was on Sauvignon Place, which drew seven offers and sold for $1,010,000, about 6 percent over list. A home on Leno Drive pulled six offers, and three more (on Flametree Circle, Victoria Lane, and Esparto Court) drew five apiece. The competition was not concentrated at one price point either: contested homes ranged from the $770,000s up to $1.3 million, which tells buyers that bidding wars in Windsor are about pricing and presentation, not just the entry-level tier.
How Windsor buyers are paying, and why cash is a detached-home story
Two-thirds of Windsor buyers (67 percent) used conventional financing. Cash made up 17 percent of purchases, with VA at 8 percent and FHA at 6 percent rounding out the bulk of the rest. The interesting wrinkle: every one of the 13 cash deals was a single-family home, and none were condos. For sellers of detached homes, that is a meaningful pool of buyers who can close quickly without an appraisal contingency. For condo and townhome sellers, the buyer is almost always financing, so pricing to appraise matters more.
Chart: How Windsor buyers paid: cash is 17 percent, and all of it detached.
Condos are quietly holding their value
One trend worth flagging for entry-level buyers and downsizers, with the caveat that only three condo or PUD sales closed in this window, so treat it as a signal rather than a statistic. Those attached homes traded at $456 per square foot, essentially identical to the $453 per square foot for detached homes. In most markets a detached home commands a clear per-foot premium over attached product, so the parity is unusual. The condos also moved faster, a median of 14 days versus 29 for single-family homes, and every one of them sold at or above list. If that pattern holds, Windsor condos are a quietly competitive entry point into a town where detached inventory stays tight.
What this means if you are buying or selling in Windsor
If you are selling, the data favors you, but only if you price with discipline. Faster sales, a rising median, and a strong pool of cash and conventional buyers mean well-prepared Windsor listings are moving, and neighborhoods like Lakewood Hills continue to draw competitive interest. The split-market numbers are the warning label: the homes that sold over asking were priced to invite offers, and the biggest discount of the period was an overpriced launch that needed a correction. Our guidance for selling a home in Windsor walks through how to position for this market.
If you are buying, the message is to move with intent but not panic. Inventory is tighter than the county overall and the best homes go quickly, often with multiple offers, yet Windsor still delivers better value per square foot than most of the towns it competes with. Watch for the homes that sit, because nearly half of all sales closed under list, and a patient, well-represented buyer can find room to negotiate. For a wider view of how Windsor stacks up against its neighbors, our guide to the best cities in Sonoma County is a useful starting point.
Have questions about buying or selling in Windsor? Email me directly at david@bruingtonhargreaves.com and I will walk you through what the numbers mean for your situation.
About the Author
David Hargreaves is the co-founder of BruingtonHargreaves, one of Sonoma County's top-ranked real estate teams and part of W Real Estate. Originally from the UK and an Oxford University graduate, David built and ran a digital marketing agency serving Google, Facebook, and other major brands before becoming one of Sonoma County's top agents within three years of entering real estate.
Today he and business partner Jonathan Bruington have sold more than $250 million in Sonoma County homes over the past three years, earning recognition as a RealTrends No. 2 team in the county and the No. 1 team in Healdsburg. David specialises in helping Bay Area buyers and sellers with luxury properties and vacation rentals across Healdsburg, Windsor, Santa Rosa, and the Russian River communities.
He lives in Sonoma County with his wife Nancy and is happiest cycling the back roads, exploring local wineries, or behind a camera. Have a question about buying, selling, or building in Wine Country? Book a free call.
