The typical luxury home costs less than $1 million in just seven of the top 50 most populous metros, down from 30 just five years ago. This is according to a new report from Redfin.
The most affordable metro for buying a high-end property is Detroit, where the median price for a luxury home was $753,851 in April — 44.1 percent less than the typical luxury home nationwide.
That’s according to an analysis of Redfin’s home sale price-tier data, with luxury homes defined as those estimated to be in the top 5 percent of their respective metro area based on prices of homes sold over a rolling 12-month period. The data is calculated in rolling three-month periods, with this report covering February-April.
From 2013 (the earliest data available) through 2017, there were 35 major metros where the median price for a luxury home was less than $1 million. That number started to fall in 2018 and by 2020, was down to 30.
Then the pandemic buying spree accelerated home price growth across all tiers — including the luxury bracket. In 2025, there are only seven major metros where a luxury home can be purchased for less than $1 million: Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, St. Louis, Cincinnati and San Antonio.
The three most affordable metros for luxury homes align with the most affordable homebuying metros overall; Detroit ($195,000), Cleveland ($235,000) and Pittsburgh ($250,000) also recorded the lowest median home prices of the top 50 metros in April.
“The Rust Belt’s relative affordability has preserved opportunities for luxury buyers that have all but disappeared in much of the country,” Redfin Senior Economist Sheharyar Bokhari said in a release. “These metros haven’t seen as much explosive investor demand or speculative buying, which has helped keep prices grounded. Buyers can get historic charm, large lots, and upscale finishes — often in walkable, tree-lined neighborhoods —for a small fraction of what a similar home would cost in cities like San Francisco or New York.”
San Francisco most expensive metro for luxury homes
The typical luxury home in San Francisco sold for $6,092,801 in April — making it the most expensive of the top 50 metros. In fact, the typical cost of a San Francisco starter home (5th-35th percentile in price) was $972,825 — more expensive than a luxury home in the seven most affordable metros.
Bay Area neighbor San Jose is the second most expensive major metro for luxury homes, with a median price of $5,508,743. Another California metro, Anaheim, was the third most expensive ($5,298,770), followed by Miami ($4,367,401).
New York was the fifth most expensive, with a median price of $4,216,813, but recorded the least growth of any of the top 50 metros between 2015 and 2025 (33.4 percent).
West Palm Beach, Fla., recorded the most growth over the past decade, with the price of a median luxury home jumping 207.6 percent from $1,343,114 to $4,132,048.