Town of Apple Valley · 92307 · 92308 · San Bernardino County
Apple Valley CA Real Estate: Homes, Land & Zoning Analysis
Brightline West station confirmed at I-15/Dale Evans. NAVISP’s 6,220-acre industrial corridor is expanding. Walmart and Big Lots distribution centers are already operational.
The Apple Valley Infrastructure Position
Apple Valley incorporated as a Town — not a city — to preserve the rural, equestrian identity that defined it for decades. That identity is splitting in half.
Rural Identity vs. Growth Split
Apple Valley is trying to stay rural while major industrial growth arrives — creating real tension between its original character and new economic pressure.
- Incorporated as a Town specifically to protect equestrian and rural lifestyle
- Sections of the Apple Valley address fall under San Bernardino County development code, not Town zoning. Different setbacks, different allowed uses, same street.
- Now facing large-scale logistics development that will change the landscape forever
- The split between “old Apple Valley” and “new Apple Valley” is happening right now
Industrial Logistics Pipeline
Apple Valley has almost no major employers today — but multiple large logistics projects are already in CEQA review or approved, bringing the biggest employment wave the Town has ever seen.
- Over 3 million sq ft of industrial/logistics space currently in CEQA review or recently approved (Inland Empire North Logistics Center + Watson High Desert Logistics Center)
- Located north of Central Road and along key corridors
- First major large-scale employer pipeline in Town limits
Water Rates & Legal Battles
Water costs in Apple Valley are already among the highest in the High Desert — and a decade-long eminent domain fight just got new life in the Court of Appeal.
- Water rates among the highest in the High Desert
- Decade-long eminent domain battle with private water utility reopened by Court of Appeal in January 2025
- Ongoing rate pressure and legal uncertainty directly affect long-term ownership costs
Crime Trends
Crime sits at the national average overall, but property crime is rising fast — a key factor for families and resale value.
- Overall crime rate at the national average (2,118 per 100,000)
- Property crime up 32% year-over-year
- Violent crime remains relatively stable
School System
School quality directly impacts family decisions and resale value — Apple Valley Unified is average, but strong charter options exist.
- Apple Valley Unified School District: B-minus overall (Niche)
- Academy for Academic Excellence charter: A-rated
- Many families choose charters for stronger performance
Demographics & Retirement Communities
Apple Valley has an older population and heavy concentration of 55+ and mobile-home housing — creating a different buyer profile than Hesperia or Victorville.
- Median age 36.5 (four years older than Victorville or Hesperia)
- 17% of residents are 65+
- Fourteen mobile home parks and four 55+ gated communities dominate fixed-income corridors
Path of Progress & Pricing Gap
Apple Valley is caught between preserving its rural equestrian identity and the largest industrial growth wave it has ever seen — and that tension is exactly where the best buyer opportunities are hiding.
- Multiple large-scale logistics and industrial projects (over 3 million sq ft) now in CEQA review or approved
- First major employment pipeline inside Town limits in decades
- Creates clear pricing gaps between legacy rural parcels and those positioned for future growth
- The contradiction between “old Apple Valley” and “new Apple Valley” is driving the widest value window in the High Desert right now
Retirement communities and logistics warehouses. Town zoning and County zoning. The highest water rates and the biggest employment pipeline. Everything about Apple Valley is a contradiction — and contradictions are where ground-floor pricing lives.
Who buys Apple Valley real estate? Why it changes the strategy
Three buyer profiles drive Apple Valley transactions. Each is defined by what they're trying to accomplish with the parcel and the corridor. Each requires a different analysis before the offer — different Town of Apple Valley zoning verification, different proximity logic to the Brightline West station, different comparable sales framework. This is what I evaluate on your behalf.
The Brightline-adjacent investor
Acquiring SFR rental or raw acreage within the catalyst zone of the Brightline West Apple Valley station at Dale Evans Parkway. Underwriting a 2028 station opening, 90-minute Las Vegas connectivity, and the Town of Apple Valley's commercial buildout along the I-15 spine. The investment thesis is appreciation through transit-induced demand, not current cash flow.
Verification layer
- Parcel distance to confirmed station footprint
- Town of Apple Valley zoning designation and overlay status
- Water service from Apple Valley Choice Energy or Liberty Utilities territory
- Easement and access analysis from preliminary title
Target corridors: Dale Evans Parkway, Quarry Road, the I-15 frontage between Stoddard Wells and Bear Valley Road.
Targeting institutional path-of-progress positioning along multiple stations? Also evaluate Hesperia (Brightline I-15/Joshua Street station plus Silverwood 15,633 entitled homes) and Victorville (BNSF Barstow International Gateway plus SCLA logistics).
The Apple Valley equestrian buyer
2.06 to 2.5+ acre parcels in 92307 with riding rights under Town of Apple Valley zoning. Apple Valley's incorporated status means zoning is administered by the Town directly — different from the unincorporated Oak Hills, Phelan, and Pinon Hills regulatory pathway. Buyers target the Apple Valley Country Club corridor, Bell Mountain foothills, and the north-end equestrian heritage area.
Verification layer
- Town of Apple Valley estate-agricultural zoning compliance
- Animal-keeping permits and density allowances
- Easement and bridle-path access verification
- Recorded CC&Rs in specific subdivisions (separate from Town zoning)
Target corridors: Apple Valley Country Club, Bell Mountain Estates, Apple Valley Road / Standing Rock, the Yucca Loma equestrian belt.
Targeting AG-zoned production acreage with full livestock rights under SBC zoning instead? Also evaluate Oak Hills (animal keeping by right under OH/RL, no HOA overlay), Phelan and Pinon Hills (larger acreage, Snowline JUSD).
The 55+ active-adult move-up buyer
Single-story, gated, low-maintenance homes in age-restricted communities concentrated in 92308. Sun City Apple Valley, Solera, Jess Ranch, and Del Webb at Apple Valley are the primary inventory. Buyers are typically equity-rich coastal California retirees trading 3,500 square feet of two-story maintenance for 1,800 square feet on a single level with HOA-maintained landscaping and amenity access.
Verification layer
- HOA budget review and reserve study analysis
- Recorded CC&Rs and age-restriction enforcement
- Amenity assessment status and special-assessment history
- Solar lease vs. owned status (common in newer Apple Valley tracts)
Target communities: Sun City Apple Valley, Solera at Apple Valley, Jess Ranch, Del Webb Apple Valley, and adjacent gated single-story tracts in 92308.
The analysis I run is different for each profile. The zoning verification is different. The water service review is different. The comparable sales framework is different.
That's the difference between a real estate agent and a Net Rights Analyst.
Apple Valley Real Estate Market Data — May 2026
Single family residence and lot/land snapshots for ZIP codes 92307 and 92308. Source: Realtors Property Resource (RPR), monthly market activity report, pulled covering May 2026 transactions.
Median Sold Price (SFH)
Median Estimated Value (SFH)
Median Days on Market
Months of Inventory (SFH)
Sold-to-List Ratio (SFH)
New SFH Listings (May)
Single family residence — May 2026 headline metrics
Still a seller's market, but loosening. Inventory rose to 3.18 months from 2.89 in April, while the sold-to-list ratio climbed past 100% — sellers captured slightly above asking last month even as more homes came to market.
| Metric | May 2026 | Month over Month | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Estimated Property Value | $467,930 | +0.03% | AVM, full market |
| Median Sold Price | $447,000 | −0.67% | 92 closings, MLS |
| Median List Price (active) | $485,000 | +2.11% | 305 active, MLS |
| Median List Price (new listings) | $450,000 | −2.17% | 150 new in May |
| Sold-to-List Price Ratio | 100.5% | +1.1 pts | Above full ask |
| Months Supply of Inventory | 3.18 | +10.0% | Seller's market, easing |
| Median Days on Market (sold) | 30 | −14.3% | Faster absorption |
| Median Days on Market (new pending) | 29 | −3.3% | Pending velocity |
| Median Price per Sq Ft (sold) | $236 | −1.26% | Closed listings, MLS |
| Median Price per Sq Ft (active) | $249 | +0.81% | Active listings, MLS |
| New Pending Listings (May) | 111 | −1.77% | Absorption signal |
| Closed Sales (May) | 92 | +24.3% | Up sharply from 74 |
Apple Valley single family inventory rose 10% month-over-month as 150 new listings hit the market, the most in months. Even so, sellers captured 100.5% of asking and the median home moved in 30 days — faster than April. With Freddie Mac's 30-year fixed at 6.48% as of (down from 6.85% a year earlier), buyers entering Apple Valley should still expect competition on well-priced inventory, particularly under $450,000.
Single family — value methodology across timeframes
The three values diverge for different reasons. Estimated value uses every property in the market. Sold price reflects only what actually closed. List price reflects what sellers are asking. Percentages show the change from each prior period to May 2026.
| Timeframe | Median Estimated Value | Median Sold Price | Median List Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current (May 2026) | $467,930 | $447,000 | $485,000 |
| Last Month | $467,810 (+0.03%) | $450,000 (−0.67%) | $469,450 (+3.31%) |
| 3 Months Ago | $462,310 (+1.22%) | $482,500 (−7.36%) | $479,499 (+1.15%) |
| 12 Months Ago | $472,370 (−0.94%) | $435,000 (+2.76%) | $457,400 (+6.03%) |
| 24 Months Ago | $445,850 (+4.95%) | $430,000 (+3.95%) | $472,500 (+2.65%) |
| 36 Months Ago | $422,850 (+10.66%) | $414,500 (+7.84%) | $450,000 (+7.78%) |
Recently sold Apple Valley homes — May 2026 closings
Five representative arms-length closings from the 92 single family sales recorded in May 2026. This sample spans $350,000 to $720,000 with a midpoint near $450,000 — closely tracking the market median of $447,000.
| Address (ZIP) | Beds/Baths | Sq Ft | Sold Price | $/Sq Ft | DOM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16979 Nanticoke Rd (92307) | 4/4 | 3,128 | $720,000 | $230 | 7 |
| 12575 Tesuque Rd (92308) | 4/2 | 1,760 | $465,000 | $264 | 3 |
| 20696 Tonawanda Rd (92307) | 3/2 | 2,039 | $450,000 | $221 | 7 |
| 19125 Shoshonee Rd (92307) | 3/2 | 1,696 | $405,000 | $239 | 15 |
| 14027 Navajo Rd (92307) | 4/2 | 2,493 | $350,000 | $140 | 112 |
Sample drawn from May 2026 RPR closed listings (Public Records and MLS). Days on Market reflects time from list date to close date. Median of all 92 closings was $447,000.
Lot and land — May 2026 headline metrics
Still a deep buyer's market, though slightly less so than April. 29.59 months of inventory means land could take roughly two and a half years to absorb at current pending rates. Estimated lot values are up 15.22% over the trailing 12 months even as monthly sold prices swing widely on tiny closing counts.
| Metric | May 2026 | Month over Month | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Estimated Lot Value | $106,000 | +10.42% | AVM, full market |
| Median List Price (active) | $100,000 | 0% | 503 active, MLS |
| Median List Price (new listings) | $72,500 | −26.8% | 47 new in May |
| Median Sold Price (May) | $38,000 | −15.56% | 9 closings, small sample |
| Sold-to-List Price Ratio | 91.8% | +8.3 pts | ~8% under ask |
| Months Supply of Inventory | 29.59 | −9.65% | Severe buyer's market |
| Median Days on Market | 84 | +12.0% | Slow absorption |
| Median Est. Value, trailing 12 mo | +15.22% | — | AVM appreciation |
The dual-market position — single family vs. land
Apple Valley's split remains among the widest in the High Desert. Single family homes absorb in about three months; raw land in roughly two and a half years. The two segments are also moving in opposite directions on value: over the trailing 12 months, estimated lot values rose 15.22% while estimated home values slipped 0.94%.
| Indicator | Single Family | Lot / Land | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market Type | Seller's Market | Buyer's Market | Two-speed market |
| Months of Inventory | 3.18 | 29.59 | ~9x more land supply |
| Sold-to-List Ratio | 100.5% | 91.8% | Land buyers negotiate |
| 12-Month Est. Value Trend | −0.94% | +15.22% | Opposite directions |
| New May Inventory | 150 homes | 47 parcels | Homes dominate flow |
Distressed market activity — last 90 days
Apple Valley distressed activity remains within historical norms. Distressed properties can represent opportunity for primary buyers and investors prepared to navigate Notice of Default, foreclosure, or short-sale processes.
| Property Type | Distressed Count | Median List / Est. Value | Total Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single Family Residence | 10 properties | $454,500 | $4,770,625 |
| Lot / Land | 2 parcels | $114,000 | $114,000 |
Distressed types observed include Notice of Default, Notice of Foreclosure Sale, and Short Sale listings. Combined single family and land distressed inventory totals approximately $4.88 million in volume across 12 properties, with median distressed single family pricing near $243 per square foot — representing acquisition opportunity below replacement cost in select cases.
What this market means for buyers and sellers
If you're buying a single family home
Expect to pay at or slightly above list price. A 100.5% sold-to-list ratio means lowball offers will not be accepted on appropriately priced inventory. Plan to act within the first week on properties that match your criteria.
April's record-tight 2.89-month supply has eased to 3.18, and 150 new listings arrived in May — so there is marginally more to choose from than a month ago, especially above $450,000.
If you're selling a single family home
Price within 1–2% of recent comparable closings. With the active list median at $485,000 but the sold median at $447,000, homes asking at the top of the range are sitting while sharply priced homes close in about 30 days.
Year-over-year estimated value is essentially flat (−0.94%). Timing-based hold strategies should account for this stall rather than assume continued appreciation.
If you're buying land
You have substantial leverage. A 91.8% sold-to-list ratio means offers in the 8–15% under-ask range fall within market norms, and 29.59 months of inventory puts real holding-cost pressure on sellers.
Verify net rights before submitting. Zoning, will-serve water, septic feasibility, and parcel-specific overlays vary widely across Apple Valley.
If you're selling land
Price aggressively or hold long-term. With active listings averaging 84 days and inventory near 30 months, only well-priced or clearly entitled parcels move quickly.
Sellers near the Brightline West Dale Evans station footprint or with documented entitlement progress hold measurable pricing power despite broad market softness — estimated lot values are up 15.22% year over year.
Net Rights interpretation. Apple Valley land tells a structural story homes do not. Inventory is severe at 29.59 months and the handful of May closings came in around 8% under ask. Yet trailing 12-month estimated lot values are up 15.22% — the opposite direction from single family values, which slipped 0.94%.
The disconnect tracks the Brightline West Victor Valley station now under construction on roughly 300 acres southeast of Dale Evans Parkway and the I-15 interchange, alongside ongoing North Apple Valley Specific Plan (NAVISP) industrial capitalization. Sellers anticipating post-station value are holding firm on asking prices even as transaction volume stays thin.
Buyers willing to negotiate and wait for the right parcel can acquire entitlement-ready land well below replacement cost. Read the full Sovereignty Matrix framework for how this maps to Title 9 zoning, will-serve verification, and parcel-specific net rights.
Apple Valley market data — frequently asked questions
Answers to the market questions buyers and sellers ask most. For deeper questions about zoning, NAVISP, water service, and jurisdiction, see the FAQ section further down this page.
Is Apple Valley CA a buyer's or seller's market in 2026?
Apple Valley is a split market as of May 2026. Single family homes are in a seller's market with 3.18 months of inventory and a 100.5% sold-to-list ratio, though inventory has eased from April's 2.89. Lot and land is in a deep buyer's market with 29.59 months of inventory.
What is the average home price in Apple Valley CA?
The median sold price for a single family home in Apple Valley was $447,000 in May 2026, down 0.67% month-over-month but up 2.76% year-over-year. Median estimated value is $467,930 and median active list price is $485,000.
How long do homes stay on the market in Apple Valley?
Median days on market for sold single family homes in Apple Valley was 30 days in May 2026, down 14.3% from the prior month. New pending listings cleared in a median of 29 days.
What is the price per square foot in Apple Valley CA?
The median sold price per square foot in Apple Valley was $236 in May 2026 for single family residences. Active listings carry a median of $249 per square foot.
Are home prices rising in Apple Valley CA?
Apple Valley single family values are essentially flat year-over-year. Median estimated value slipped 0.94% over the trailing 12 months, while median sold price rose 2.76%. Over 36 months, median sold price has appreciated 7.84%.
How much does land cost in Apple Valley CA?
Median estimated value for a lot or parcel in Apple Valley is $106,000, up 15.22% over the trailing 12 months. Median active list price is $100,000. May 2026 sold price was $38,000 on a small nine-closing sample, so single-month land figures are volatile.
Are there foreclosures in Apple Valley CA?
Apple Valley had 10 distressed single family properties in active foreclosure-related status in the last 90 days as of May 2026, including Notice of Default, Notice of Foreclosure Sale, and Short Sale filings, plus 2 distressed land parcels. Combined distressed volume was approximately $4.88 million.
What is the months of inventory in Apple Valley CA?
Apple Valley single family residence months of inventory was 3.18 in May 2026, up from 2.89 in April. A balanced market sits at 5–6 months, so Apple Valley remains a seller's market. Land months of inventory is 29.59, a severe buyer's market.
Compiled and reviewed by Jeremy Wilson, REALTOR®, RE/MAX — California DRE #01998524. Market data independently sourced from Realtors Property Resource (RPR). Published .
Free, parcel-specific, includes zoning overlays and Brightline-proximity impact.
Data source: Realtors Property Resource (RPR), Town of Apple Valley market area (ZIP 92307 and 92308), monthly market activity report pulled covering May 2026 transactions. Medians displayed are not formal appraisals. Land sold price reflects a small May sample (9 closings) and is sensitive to month-over-month composition; refer to the estimated lot value and active list median for a stable pricing reference. Mortgage rate: Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, week of June 4, 2026. Next data refresh: .
Apple Valley, CA Real Estate Zoning & Land Rights:
What the Listing Doesn't Tell You
The intro above names the contradictions — equestrian acreage and logistics warehouses, Town jurisdiction and County jurisdiction, the highest water rates and the biggest employment pipeline. This section is where those contradictions become parcel-level variables that determine what you can legally build, what water service you’ll receive, and what your property is actually worth.
THE SOVEREIGN BUILDABILITY TEST
On every Apple Valley real estate property, I verify three things:
- Is the property inside Liberty Utilities' certificated water service boundary, or does it require well or extension?
- Does the parcel fall inside the Apple Valley MSHCP Plan Area, and what mitigation obligations attach when the Plan is adopted?
- If the buyer wants to place a manufactured home, does it meet the Town's age-of-manufacture requirement under §9.29?
If all three resolve cleanly, those are material advantages priced into my analysis. If any is unresolved, you need to know before you’re in escrow.
Liberty Utilities Water Service vs. Private Well
Liberty Utilities (Apple Valley Ranchos Water) serves the majority of incorporated Apple Valley across both 92307 and 92308. Properties on the periphery of the Town and outside the certificated service boundary frequently require a private well or shared agricultural water. A confirmed Will Serve letter from Liberty Utilities is a material document. Its absence is an unresolved constraint, not a neutral condition.
Apple Valley Base Zoning Districts
Apple Valley’s Town Development Code (Title 9) defines zoning across eight district categories, each with distinct permitted uses, density standards, and encumbrance profiles. Expand each category below for the material details that affect offer value.
Very Low Density & Estate Residential — R-VLD, R-A, R-LD, R-E, R-E ¾, R-EQ
Six rural and estate-grade residential districts with minimum lot sizes ranging from 5 gross acres (R-VLD) to 0.4 net acres (R-EQ). All six permit manufactured homes, equestrian uses, and agricultural animal keeping by right. R-A (Residential Agriculture, 2.5 ac min) applies primarily to the Deep Creek area south of Bear Valley Road. Suffixes /10, /20, and /40 on R-VLD designate 10-, 20-, and 40-acre minimums for parcels in the Town’s sphere of influence outside the Town limits.
Single & Multi-Family Residential — R-SF, R-M, MHP
R-SF (Single Family) requires 18,000 sf minimum lots. R-M (Multi-Family) permits up to 20 units per acre on the same minimum. The Mountain Vista neighborhood north of Otoe Road operates under separate standards with 10,000 sf minimums. MHP (Mobile Home Park) applies only to mobile home parks existing at General Plan adoption — new mobile home parks require a zone change. Manufactured homes are permitted in all three districts.
Mixed Use & Planned Residential — M-U, PRD
M-U requires integrated commercial-residential master-planned projects with 4 to 30 dwelling units per acre residential density and 0.5 FAR for the commercial component. PRD (Planned Residential Development) provides flexibility through the Planned Development Permit process; density must remain consistent with the General Plan unless a specific plan is adopted concurrently.
Commercial & Office — O-P, C-G, C-S, C-R, C-V
Five commercial districts ranging from Office Professional (O-P, 1.0 FAR) as a residential buffer use to Regional Commercial (C-R, 1.0 FAR) along the I-15 corridor. A 978-acre block of C-R bounded by I-15 to the west, Dante Road to the south, and Caplet Street to the north is approved for eCommerce fulfillment and distribution centers. Service Commercial (C-S) permits limited light industrial activity. Village Commercial (C-V) covers the historic downtown “Village” revitalization area.
Industrial — I-P, I-RE
Planned Industrial (I-P) covers manufacturing, distribution, and warehousing uses. Resource Extraction (I-RE) permits surface mining under California’s Surface Mining and Reclamation Act (SMARA). The North Apple Valley Industrial Specific Plan (NAVISP) overlays I-P designation across 6,220 acres along Dale Evans Parkway. NAVISP qualifying industrial uses can clear Site Plan Review in 45 days through administrative approval — fastest entitlement environment in the High Desert corridor.
Public Facilities & Open Space — P-F, OS-C, OS-R
Public Facilities (P-F) covers schools, government buildings, libraries, and civic uses. Open Space Conservation (OS-C) protects environmentally sensitive lands including washes, slopes, fault zones, and habitat corridors. Open Space Recreation (OS-R) covers parks and recreational facilities. None of these districts permit residential development. OS-C designation can constrain otherwise developable acreage and is a verification step on any parcel adjacent to the Mojave River corridor or Bell Mountain.
Overlay Districts — Airport (A-1, A-2), Flood Hazard (FH), Seismic Hazard (SH), Ranchos Residential (RRO)
Airport Overlay (A-1, A-2) imposes height and use restrictions on parcels near Apple Valley Airport — directly relevant to the NAVISP corridor. Flood Hazard (FH) under Chapter 9.62 imposes FEMA-aligned construction standards. Seismic Hazard (SH) covers fault-zone parcels under Chapter 9.64. Ranchos Residential Overlay (RRO) applies to parcels from the original Apple Valley Ranchos subdivision recorded in San Bernardino County between March 1, 1948 and January 1, 1987 — RRO can modify setbacks based on the recorded Final Map. This overlay is unique to Apple Valley and traces back to the 1946 founding of the Town as a planned community.
Specific Plans — NAVISP, Apple Valley Commercial Specific Plan, Jess Ranch
Specific Plans supersede base zoning where adopted. The North Apple Valley Industrial Specific Plan covers the 6,220-acre industrial corridor. The Apple Valley Commercial Specific Plan (Ord. 420, April 2011) covers commercial development at the Dale Evans Parkway and Thunderbird Road intersection. Jess Ranch Specific Plan covers the Deep Creek master-planned community south of Bear Valley Road.
Conservation & Habitat Plans — Apple Valley MSHCP/NCCP
The Apple Valley Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan and Natural Community Conservation Plan (MSHCP/NCCP) is being jointly developed by the Town of Apple Valley and the County of San Bernardino, with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Bureau of Land Management. When adopted, the Plan will authorize 30-year incidental take of covered species under the federal Endangered Species Act and the California Natural Community Conservation Planning Act, and will establish Plan Area boundaries that determine where development triggers mitigation requirements. The MSHCP/NCCP is filed under CEQAnet ID 2021030677 and remains in development as of April 2026. Buyers acquiring undeveloped acreage now should expect compliance obligations once the Plan takes effect — biological surveys, mitigation fees, and potential conservation set-asides on parcels within the eventual Plan Area. This regulatory layer does not exist in Hesperia or other High Desert markets and is a verification step I work through with title and the Town Planning Division on every Apple Valley land transaction.
Unincorporated Apple Valley — County Jurisdiction Parcels
Not every parcel with an Apple Valley address falls under Town zoning. Sections along the south and east boundaries — and scattered pockets within the Town’s sphere of influence — are governed by San Bernardino County Development Code, not Title 9.
The difference is material:
- Setbacks — County standards differ from Town standards on the same road
- Allowed uses — County RL (Rural Living) and RC (Resource Conservation) zones don’t mirror Town R-E or R-A designations
- Permitting — County Land Use Services in San Bernardino, not Town Community Development in Apple Valley. Different office, different timeline, different fee schedule.
- Annexation risk — parcels inside the Town’s sphere of influence can be annexed, converting County zoning to Town zoning and changing the entitlement framework mid-ownership
A parcel search on the SBC Assessor site confirms jurisdiction. I verify this on every Apple Valley property before running the buildability test above — because the entire test changes if the parcel answers to the County instead of the Town.
Flood Zone Verification
Portions of Apple Valley real estate fall within FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas, particularly along the Mojave River corridor on the western boundary and the Apple Valley Wash. I pull FIRM panel data and confirm Base Flood Elevation as a standard step before any land offer.
Every Apple Valley parcel deserves this analysis before an offer.
Apple Valley Neighborhood Breakdown: 92307 vs. 92308
The two Apple Valley ZIP codes represent two distinct real estate markets. 92307 is North Apple Valley — Bell Mountain, Mountain Vista, the NAVISP industrial corridor along Dale Evans Parkway, and the Mojave River western boundary. 92308 is South Apple Valley — Jess Ranch, Sun City, Solera, the Bear Valley Road commerce spine, and the original 1946 Apple Valley Ranchos Land Co. development footprint that became the Town. The buyer who fits one rarely fits the other. Here’s how they differ.
92307
North Apple Valley
Acreage. Industrial corridor. Equestrian zoning.
Signature areas: Bell Mountain, Mountain Vista, the Apple Valley Ranchos Overlay parcels recorded between 1948 and 1987, and the North Apple Valley Industrial Specific Plan along Dale Evans Parkway. Defined by larger residential parcels (R-VLD, R-A, R-E, R-EQ districts), the 6,220-acre NAVISP industrial corridor with 45-day administrative Site Plan Review, and direct I-15 access via the Dale Evans Parkway interchange. Brightline West station is confirmed at I-15/Dale Evans, immediately inside this ZIP.
Buyers seeking maximum acreage with no city jurisdiction should also evaluate Oak Hills. Buyers prioritizing larger production acreage with by-right agricultural use rather than gated 55+ amenities should evaluate Phelan and Pinon Hills — unincorporated High Desert with AG zoning footprints not available within Apple Valley town limits.
92308
South Apple Valley
55+ communities. Bear Valley Road commerce. Established residential.
Signature areas: Jess Ranch (2,120 homes), Sun City Apple Valley (Del Webb, 1,700 homes), Solera at Del Webb, Wyndham Rose, Mountain View Villas, and the Bear Valley Road commercial corridor anchored by the Mall of Victor Valley. Defined by approximately 5,000 age-restricted homes across five master-planned communities, established single-family neighborhoods on R-SF and R-LD parcels, and the Town’s primary retail and medical infrastructure including St. Mary Medical Center and Desert Valley Hospital. Apple Valley’s original 1946 development footprint sits inside this ZIP — Ranchos Residential Overlay parcels here trace directly to the recorded Final Maps that established the community.
Buyers seeking a gated 55+ community should evaluate Sun City Apple Valley and Jess Ranch specifically.
The analysis I run differs by ZIP. CC&R verification, Specific Plan overlay review, and 55+ community resale velocity are different inputs in 92308 than in 92307 — and the comparable sales framework changes accordingly.
Search Active Apple Valley, CA Real Estate (92307 & 92308)
Every Apple Valley home and land listing below is pulled live from CRMLS. Filter by price, beds, or property type to see what matches your criteria. Before you submit an offer on any of them, I’ll verify the variables that determine what the property allows.
Recently Listed in Apple Valley
The newest Apple Valley properties on the market — residential inventory from 92307 and 92308, including established neighborhoods, 55+ communities, and equestrian corridors. Updated live from CRMLS.
Apple Valley, CA Real Estate Markets
Jess Ranch, Condos & Active Adult Living (55+)
Strategic downsizing and low-maintenance equity. Explore 55+ active adult inventory, including the highly amenitized Jess Ranch corridor, designed for buyers seeking immediate retail access, walkable infrastructure, and secure, ‘lock-and-leave’ lifestyles.
Commercial Land, Acreage, Investment Properties, & Multi-Family
The foundation of High Desert capital. Analyze raw acreage, commercial land banks near the NAVISP expansion, and multi-family investment properties. This is where syndicates and owner-operators secure long-term equity ahead of the institutional curve. Search active inventory across the High Desert for cross-community comparison.
Start Your Net Rights Analysis
Whether you’re acquiring R-A zoned acreage, evaluating a Dale Evans corridor land position, or selling a custom estate in the Bell Mountain corridor — strategy starts with the right analysis. Prefer to start with a tool? Run your parcel through the Zoning Sovereignty Matrix before we talk.
Every inquiry gets a direct response asking the best time and date to connect...not a drip campaign or a thousand calls.
"Jeremy was very knowledgeable about the city we were interested in and very clear about everything we needed to do." — Marilayn Valenzuela, Land Buyer & Seller in Phelan
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