Hesperia · 92344 · 92345 · San Bernardino County
Hesperia Real Estate: Homes, Land & Net Rights Analysis
Brightline West station confirmed • Silverwood master plan underway • Amazon Commerce Center nearly operational. I run a net rights analysis before you make an offer.
The Hesperia Infrastructure Position
The Hesperia, CA real estate market is currently the High Desert’s tightest seller’s market.
- Why you should care: Every major driver of demand in Hesperia comes with real costs and risks — but there are real ground-floor opportunities. Billions of dollars in committed capital from Amazon, Silverwood, Brightline West, and Maersk are already here and reshaping the area. See the full picture in “Committed Capital & Path of Progress” below.
Silverwood Master Plan: 15,633 Homes Coming — What It Means for Your Parcel
The largest master-planned community in Southern California is already under construction, creating massive long-term demand pressure on housing, schools, water, and roads.
- 15,633 homes planned across 9,366 acres
- Broke ground March 2025; first move-ins began early 2026
- $1.6B+ total infrastructure commitment (including $160M in road improvements)
- This is a generational absorption event — the biggest single driver of future appreciation in Hesperia
Source: City of Hesperia General Plan updates and Silverwood official project filings, 2025–2026
Crime Trends in Hesperia
Overall crime is below the national average, but violent crime and homicides have risen sharply — a key factor affecting quality of life, insurance costs, and long-term resale value.
- Overall crime rate 14% below national average
- Violent crime runs above the national average in parts of the city
- Homicides increased significantly year-over-year (from 1 to 8 in recent reported data)
- West and southwest neighborhoods remain noticeably safer
Source: NeighborhoodScout & CrimeGrade 2024–2025 reports
Schools in Hesperia: What the Grades Really Mean
How Value is affected: School quality directly affects family decisions and resale value — Hesperia Unified is average, while nearby options perform better.
- Hesperia Unified School District: B-minus overall (Niche)
- Math proficiency ~16%, reading ~28%
- Snowline Joint Unified (serving parts of 92344): B-minus with noticeably higher proficiency rates
- Several families in the area choose Snowline for better performance
Source: Niche.com School Ratings, 2026
Very High Fire Hazard Zone & Insurance Costs
Why you should care: Hesperia is in a Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone — this dramatically impacts insurance costs and long-term affordability.
- Designated Very High Fire Hazard Severity Zone by CAL FIRE
- FAIR Plan premiums in high-risk areas now range $5,000–$15,000/year
- Premiums have risen sharply from $2,000–$4,000 two years ago
- Private insurers are now required to pay a portion of FAIR Plan losses, which has driven up private insurance rates and added surcharges across high-fire zones
- Defensible space requirements and home hardening can help reduce rates
Source: CAL FIRE Fire Hazard Severity Zone maps, FAIR Plan rate data, and California Department of Insurance reports (2025–2026)
Single-Corridor Commute: Cajon Pass Reality
Why you should care: Hesperia has only one major route in and out — Cajon Pass — which creates real daily friction and occasional shutdowns.
- Single-corridor commute via I-15 / Cajon Pass
- Typical clear-weather drive to Ontario: 44 minutes
- Frequent zero-visibility fog closures in winter
- Major congestion risk during peak hours and weather events
Source: Caltrans traffic data and City of Hesperia transportation reports, 2025
Water Supply & Adjudicated Basin Limits
What this means to residents: Hesperia is 100% reliant on groundwater in an adjudicated basin with strict pumping limits — this is one of the biggest long-term constraints on growth and property value.
- 100% groundwater from 15 city wells in the Mojave Basin (Alto Subarea)
- Production Allowance lease prices have risen ~12.6% annually for over a decade
- Mojave River Alto Subarea has hard pumping caps
- Private wells on unincorporated parcels are a key net rights advantage
Source: Mojave Water Agency Adjudication reports and City of Hesperia water master plan, 2025
Seller’s market momentum meets rising costs and constraints. The pricing gap in Hesperia is driven by infrastructure pressure, but real opportunities exist in that gap — exactly where a Net Rights Analysis matters most.
Who buys Hesperia real estate? Why it changes the strategy
Three buyer profiles drive Hesperia 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 City of Hesperia zoning verification, different proximity logic to Silverwood and the Brightline West station, different comparable sales framework. This is what I evaluate on your behalf.
The master-planned new-home buyer
Buying into Hesperia's master-planned community pipeline — Silverwood, Tapestry, and the new-construction tracts from K. Hovnanian, Century 21 Masters builders, and Coldwell Banker new-build sections. Acquiring 2025-2026 vintage product, typically 1,500 to 2,500 square feet, in 92344 and 92345 corridors with HOA-administered amenities and CFD/Mello-Roos special tax overlays.
Verification layer
- Builder allowance vs. aftermarket buyer changes
- HOA budget review, reserve study, and CC&R exposure
- CFD / Mello-Roos special tax disclosure and pay-down timing
- Solar lease vs. owned status (common in 2024–2026 vintage)
- Builder warranty period and post-close service expectations
Target corridors: Silverwood phases, Tapestry expansion area, K. Hovnanian Hesperia tracts, Century 21 Masters new construction in 92344 and 92345.
Targeting 55+ master-planned communities with finished amenities instead? Also evaluate Apple Valley (Sun City, Solera, Jess Ranch, Del Webb).
The Brightline-adjacent investor
Acquiring SFR rental or raw acreage within the catalyst zone of the Brightline West Hesperia station at I-15 and Joshua Street. Underwriting the 2028–2029 station opening, 90-minute Las Vegas connectivity, and the Silverwood entitlement pipeline driving residential demand. The investment thesis is appreciation through transit-induced demand combined with the largest entitled-development corridor in California.
Verification layer
- Parcel distance to confirmed station footprint
- City of Hesperia zoning designation and overlay status
- Hesperia Water District service boundary verification
- Easement, access, and arterial-frontage analysis
- Silverwood and Tapestry phase-line proximity
Target corridors: Joshua Street, Mariposa Road, Ranchero Road, Main Street, and the I-15 frontage between Bear Valley Road and Summit Valley.
Targeting institutional path-of-progress across multiple stations? Also evaluate Apple Valley (Brightline West station at Dale Evans Parkway plus NAVISP industrial) and Victorville (BNSF Barstow International Gateway plus SCLA logistics).
The affordable entry-level & first-time buyer
Hesperia carries the deepest sub-$450,000 inventory in the Victor Valley alongside Silverwood's new-construction price points and a substantial established inventory of 1970s–1990s ranch-style homes in 92345. Target buyer is first-time, VA-eligible, FHA conforming, or move-up from rental. Median April closings include several below $400,000 — entry points that don't exist at this volume in Apple Valley or Oak Hills.
Verification layer
- Pest, mold, HVAC, and roof inspection on 1970s–1990s inventory
- FHA / VA appraisal-readiness assessment (cosmetic conditions, peeling paint, handrails)
- Septic vs. sewer service verification
- Distressed sale status (Notice of Default, short sale, foreclosure)
- Hesperia Water District water-rate impact on monthly carrying cost
Target corridors: Hercules Street, Newhall Avenue, Sequoia Street, Live Oak Street, Hawes Court, Pico Avenue, and the older 92345 grid south of Main Street.
Targeting entry-level inventory at similar price points but with more space? Also evaluate Victorville, which carries comparable affordability with Spring Valley Lake and Eagle Ranch corridor options.
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.
Hesperia Real Estate Market Data — May 2026
Single family residence and lot/land snapshots for ZIP codes 92344 and 92345. 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
The tightest seller's market in the Victor Valley, and it tightened further. Inventory fell to 2.62 months from 2.82 in April, homes sold in a median of 22 days — 12 days faster than April — and sellers captured 99.9% of asking.
| Metric | May 2026 | Month over Month | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Estimated Property Value | $479,680 | −0.56% | AVM, full market |
| Median Sold Price | $477,000 | +0.42% | 86 closings, MLS |
| Median List Price (active) | $499,999 | 0% | 225 active, MLS |
| Median List Price (new listings) | $490,750 | +0.68% | 104 new in May |
| Sold-to-List Price Ratio | 99.9% | +0.3 pts | Near full ask |
| Months Supply of Inventory | 2.62 | −7.1% | Tightest in Victor Valley |
| Median Days on Market (sold) | 22 | −35.3% | Sharply faster |
| Median Days on Market (new pending) | 31 | +3.3% | Pending velocity |
| Median Price per Sq Ft (sold) | $254 | −0.39% | Closed listings, MLS |
| Median Price per Sq Ft (active) | $260 | +1.56% | Active listings, MLS |
| New Pending Listings (May) | 95 | +8.0% | Absorption signal |
| Closed Sales (May) | 86 | 0% | Flat vs April |
Hesperia sits at the convergence of the High Desert's biggest demand catalysts: the $4 billion BNSF Barstow International Gateway, unanimously approved by the Barstow City Council on (4,500 acres, roughly 20,000 jobs, construction targeted for late 2026 / early 2027); the Brightline West high-speed rail station confirmed at the I-15 / Joshua Street interchange; and the 15,633-home Silverwood master plan now selling. With Freddie Mac's 30-year fixed at 6.48% as of (down from 6.85% a year earlier), buyer demand against thin supply continues to favor sellers on well-priced homes.
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) | $479,680 | $477,000 | $499,999 |
| Last Month | $482,360 (−0.56%) | $475,000 (+0.42%) | $499,999 (0%) |
| 3 Months Ago | $469,590 (+2.15%) | $475,000 (+0.42%) | $494,999 (+1.01%) |
| 12 Months Ago | $475,580 (+0.86%) | $485,000 (−1.65%) | $499,998 (0%) |
| 24 Months Ago | $463,090 (+3.58%) | $460,000 (+3.70%) | $485,000 (+3.09%) |
| 36 Months Ago | $435,030 (+10.26%) | $419,500 (+13.71%) | $472,500 (+5.82%) |
Recently sold Hesperia homes — May 2026 closings
Seven representative arms-length closings from the 86 single family sales recorded in May 2026. This sample spans $362,000 to $624,000; the median of all 86 closings was $477,000.
| Address (ZIP) | Beds/Baths | Sq Ft | Sold Price | $/Sq Ft | DOM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 12913 Tehachapi St (92344) | 4/3 | 3,147 | $624,000 | $198 | 13 |
| 14327 Chaffey Ave (92344) | 4/3 | 2,583 | $544,915 | $211 | 4 |
| 16124 Palm St (92345) | 4/2 | 1,641 | $480,000 | $293 | 89 |
| 10312 Hawthorne Ave (92345) | 3/3 | 1,900 | $450,000 | $237 | 78 |
| 18641 Fairburn St (92345) | 3/2 | 1,800 | $449,000 | $249 | 18 |
| 9317 Sabina Ave (92345) | 3/2 | 1,428 | $432,500 | $303 | 16 |
| 11906 Bornite Ave (92345) | 3/2 | 1,368 | $362,000 | $265 | 1 |
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 86 closings was $477,000.
Lot and land — May 2026 headline metrics
Still a buyer's market, but tightening. Inventory fell to 24.38 months from 26.63 in April. Active list pricing held near $195,000 while the small pool of May closings pushed the monthly sold median to $105,500 — a figure that swings hard on a handful of sales.
| Metric | May 2026 | Month over Month | Methodology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median Estimated Lot Value | $160,000 | +3.9% | AVM, full market |
| Median List Price (active) | $195,000 | −1.02% | 195 active, MLS |
| Median List Price (new listings) | $174,000 | +18.4% | 22 new in May |
| Median Sold Price (May) | $105,500 | +17.22% | 10 closings, small sample |
| Sold-to-List Price Ratio | 89.4% | −4.4 pts | ~11% under ask |
| Months Supply of Inventory | 24.38 | −8.45% | Buyer's market, tightening |
| Median Days on Market | 74 | +164% | Slow absorption |
The dual-market position — single family vs. land
Hesperia runs at two speeds. Single family homes absorb in under three months; raw land in roughly two years. Single family estimated values are essentially flat year-over-year (+0.86%); the land year-over-year figure is distorted by small-sample noise and is omitted here rather than reported as a trend.
| Indicator | Single Family | Lot / Land | Implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Market Type | Seller's Market | Buyer's Market | Two-speed market |
| Months of Inventory | 2.62 | 24.38 | ~9x more land supply |
| Sold-to-List Ratio | 99.9% | 89.4% | Land buyers negotiate |
| 12-Month Est. Value Trend | +0.86% | n/a* | *Land sample too thin |
| New May Inventory | 104 homes | 22 parcels | Homes dominate flow |
Distressed market activity — last 90 days
Hesperia distressed activity remains within historical norms and is confined to the single family segment. Distressed properties can represent opportunity for buyers and investors prepared to navigate Notice of Default, foreclosure, short-sale, or probate processes.
| Property Type | Distressed Count | Median List / Est. Value | Total Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single Family Residence | 10 properties | $411,890 | $4,258,357 |
| Lot / Land | 0 parcels | — | — |
Distressed single family types observed include Notice of Default, Notice of Foreclosure Sale, Notice of Lis Pendens, Short Sale, and Probate filings across 92344 and 92345, at a median of roughly $257 per square foot. No land parcels were in distressed status during the period.
What this market means for buyers and sellers
If you're buying a single family home
Expect to pay at or very near list price and to move fast. A 99.9% sold-to-list ratio and a 22-day median mean well-priced homes clear in days, not weeks. Get fully underwritten before you tour.
Supply is the tightest in the Victor Valley at 2.62 months. The 104 new May listings were absorbed quickly, so set alerts and be ready to write same-week.
If you're selling a single family home
This is your leverage window. Price within 1–2% of recent comparable closings and you can realistically expect near-full ask in about three weeks. The active list median ($499,999) sits well above the sold median ($477,000), so overpricing still costs you time.
Estimated values are flat year-over-year (+0.86%), so the advantage right now is speed and competition, not rapid appreciation.
If you're buying land
You have leverage, but it is narrowing. An 89.4% sold-to-list ratio means offers around 10–15% under ask remain within market norms, and 24.38 months of inventory keeps pressure on sellers — though that is down from 26.63 a month ago.
Verify net rights before submitting. Hesperia Water District Will-Serve confirmation (or private-well feasibility), Title 16 zoning, and Specific Plan overlays vary parcel to parcel.
If you're selling land
Price to the comps, not to a single hot month. The May $105,500 sold median came from just ten closings and is not a durable benchmark; the active list median is $195,000 and inventory still runs over two years.
Parcels along the I-15 corridor, near Silverwood, or with documented RC entitlement and water service hold measurable pricing power against the broader land softness.
Net Rights interpretation. Hesperia is the High Desert's clearest path-of-progress play. Three institutional-scale catalysts converge on the I-15 corridor: the $4 billion BNSF Barstow International Gateway (approved June 2, 2026), the Brightline West high-speed rail station confirmed at I-15 and Joshua Street, and the 15,633-home Silverwood master plan now selling. Together they are the primary engine behind both the tightest housing market in the Victor Valley and rising land values.
The land segment lags the catalysts on paper — 24.38 months of inventory, closings around 11% under ask — but the gap is the opportunity. Estimated lot values rose 3.9% month-over-month, and inventory is tightening. Buyers who verify water service (Mojave Basin adjudicated rights and a Hesperia Water District Will-Serve letter) and RC or Specific Plan entitlement can still acquire corridor-adjacent land ahead of the demand curve.
Read the full Sovereignty Matrix framework for how this maps to Title 16 zoning, Will-Serve water verification, and parcel-specific net rights.
Hesperia market data — frequently asked questions
Answers to the market questions buyers and sellers ask most. For deeper questions about zoning, Silverwood, water service, and Specific Plans, see the FAQ section further down this page.
Is Hesperia CA a buyer's or seller's market in 2026?
Hesperia is the tightest seller's market in the Victor Valley as of May 2026. Single family inventory sits at 2.62 months of supply with a 99.9% sold-to-list ratio, meaning sellers captured nearly full asking price. Lot and land remains a buyer's market at 24.38 months of inventory and an 89.4% sold-to-list ratio. A balanced market typically sits at 5–6 months.
What is the median home price in Hesperia CA?
The median sold price for a single family home in Hesperia was $477,000 in May 2026, up 0.42% month-over-month. The median estimated property value is $479,680 and the median active list price is $499,999. These three values measure different things: sold price reflects closed transactions, estimated value is an automated valuation across all properties, and list price is what sellers are asking.
How long do homes stay on the market in Hesperia?
The median days on market for sold single family homes in Hesperia was 22 days in May 2026, down sharply from 34 in April. New pending listings cleared in a median of 31 days. Active listings carry a median of 56 days, reflecting longer-tail inventory above the $499,999 list median.
What is the price per square foot in Hesperia CA?
The median sold price per square foot in Hesperia was $254 in May 2026 for single family residences. Active listings carry a median of $260 per square foot, and new pending listings a median of $266 per square foot.
Are home prices rising in Hesperia CA?
Hesperia single family values are essentially flat year-over-year on the valuation index (+0.86%) but the sold median is up 13.71% over 36 months. Estimated value eased 0.56% in the latest month while the sold median rose 0.42%. The market's current advantage is speed and competition rather than rapid appreciation.
How much does land cost in Hesperia CA?
The median estimated value for a lot or parcel in Hesperia is $160,000, up 3.9% month-over-month. The median active list price is $195,000. The May 2026 sold median was $105,500 on a small ten-closing sample, so single-month land sold figures are volatile. Land inventory is 24.38 months, giving buyers sustained leverage at roughly 10–15% under ask.
Are there foreclosures in Hesperia CA?
Hesperia had 10 distressed single family properties in active foreclosure or pre-foreclosure status in the last 90 days as of May 2026, including Notice of Default, Notice of Foreclosure Sale, Notice of Lis Pendens, Short Sale, and Probate filings across 92344 and 92345, at a median near $257 per square foot. No land parcels were in distressed status.
What is the months of inventory in Hesperia CA?
Hesperia single family residence months of inventory was 2.62 in May 2026, down from 2.82 in April — the tightest in the Victor Valley and well below the 5–6 month balanced threshold. Land months of inventory is 24.38, down from 26.63, still a buyer's market but tightening.
What infrastructure is driving Hesperia land values?
Three institutional-scale projects converge on the I-15 corridor: the $4 billion BNSF Barstow International Gateway (unanimously approved June 2, 2026; 4,500 acres; roughly 20,000 jobs), the Brightline West high-speed rail station confirmed at I-15 and Joshua Street, and the 15,633-home Silverwood master plan now selling. Together they are the primary long-term drivers of Hesperia land value.
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 Will-Serve water, Title 16 zoning, and I-15 corridor impact.
Data source: Realtors Property Resource (RPR), City of Hesperia market area (ZIP 92344 and 92345), monthly market activity report pulled covering May 2026 transactions. Medians displayed are not formal appraisals. Land sold price reflects a small May sample (10 closings) and is sensitive to month-over-month composition; the trailing-12-month land valuation carries a small-sample artifact and should not be read as a trend. Mortgage rate: Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, week of June 4, 2026. BNSF figures: City of Barstow, June 2, 2026 approval. Next data refresh: .
Committed Capital & Path of Progress in Hesperia
Hesperia, CA real estate is in the path-of-progress. Billions in institutional money and infrastructure are already locked in the High Desert. These companies don’t guess and their major projects will drive the next decade of appreciation — but not in the same for every home.
Amazon Hesperia Commerce Center
Amazon’s largest investment in the region is already under construction — this is the first major institutional capital commitment that will drive long-term demand for land and logistics-support properties.
- 2.5 million sq ft facility on 195 acres
- $161.9 million land acquisition in December 2024
- Under construction; targets 1,000 full-time jobs
- First Middle Mile hub of its kind on the West Coast
Source: Victor Valley News (Dec 13, 2024) and Bisnow (Dec 10, 2024)
Silverwood Master-Planned Community
This is the largest master-planned community currently under development in Southern California and will create generational absorption pressure on housing, schools, water, and infrastructure.
- 15,633 homes planned across 9,366 acres
- Broke ground March 2025; first move-ins began early 2026
- $1.6B+ total infrastructure commitment (including $160M in road improvements)
Source: Silverwood official project filings and Victor Valley News (2025–2026)
Brightline West Station
Why you should care: High-speed rail service will dramatically improve connectivity to Southern California and Las Vegas, increasing property values along the I-15 corridor.
- Station located in the I-15 median at the Joshua Street interchange
- Geotechnical work confirmed; targeted service September 2029 at 200 mph
- Will provide local commuter service for High Desert residents
Source: Brightline West official construction updates (2024–2026)
Maersk Logistics Expansion
Maersk is one of the largest private employers in Hesperia and its expansion signals growing industrial demand along the logistics corridor.
- 1M+ additional industrial square feet under management
- Potentially 1,000+ total employment positions
- Positioned as a major logistics player supporting the broader path-of-progress
Source: Victor Valley News (March 2024) and local economic development reports
Ranchero Road Corridor
Why you should care: Major road and interchange improvements are unlocking better access and supporting commercial growth along one of Hesperia’s key east-west corridors.
- Designated as a Super Arterial with 140-foot right-of-way
- Designed to link local traffic with the regional highway system and adjacent cities
- Center landscape median enhances aesthetics and separates traffic flow
- Phases 1 (BNSF underpass) and 2 (I-15 interchange) are complete
Source: City of Hesperia General Plan 2025 – Circulation Element, pp. 19, 32 (Table CI-2 and Exhibit CI-16)
10400 Amargosa Road
Why you should care: This Class A industrial development shows continued private investment in modern logistics facilities along the I-15 corridor.
- 428,185 sq ft Class A industrial building
- $33.8 million construction financing secured (February 2026)
- 36-foot clear heights, rear-load capabilities, secure truck court
Source: JLL Capital Markets and Victor Valley News (February–March 2026)
Algorithm-driven valuations and standard comps completely miss committed capital that hasn’t closed yet. The General Plan reclassification (effective August 19, 2025) and parcel-by-parcel zoning create real value gaps that don’t show up in the numbers.
A verified Net Rights Analysis — current zoning designation, FEMA flood status, utility proximity, General Plan compliance — is the only protection for an offer in 92344 or 92345.
See exactly how these projects affect your specific property’s net rights and long-term value.
Hesperia, CA Real Estate Zoning & Land Rights:
What the Listing Doesn't Tell You
Zoning is not just a code — it is your legal permission slip for everything you want to do with the property (livestock, ADUs, home business, future resale value)…YOUR SOVEREIGNTY. This is where most people lose money in the High Desert. Use the Zoning Sovereignty Matrix to score a homes Net Rights against the buyer profile that fits your goals.
THE SOVEREIGN BUILDABILITY TEST
On every Hesperia real estate land parcel, I verify three things:
- Can the buyer place a manufactured home without a Conditional Use Permit?
- Can the buyer drill a private well without a CUP?
- Can the buyer build a workshop or outbuilding without a CUP?
If all three are “yes,” those are material advantages priced into my analysis. If any are “no,” you need to know before you’re in escrow.
Hesperia Water District vs. Private Well
Hesperia Water District serves parcels inside city limits across both 92344 and 92345, drawing from 15 wells in the Alto Subarea of the Mojave River Groundwater Basin — the same regulated basin that serves Oak Hills‘ CSA 70J. Properties on the Mesa, in the Summit Valley area, and in unincorporated pockets within either ZIP frequently fall outside the district boundary — requiring a private well or shared agricultural water. A confirmed Will Serve letter from Hesperia Water District is a material document. Its absence is an unresolved constraint, not a neutral condition.
Hesperia Base Zoning Districts
Hesperia’s zoning matrix spans 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.
Agricultural (A1, A1-2½, A2)
These are Hesperia’s farming and ranching zones under Title 16 §16.16.075. A1 covers parcels of 1 acre or larger. A1-2½ requires 2.5 acres minimum. A2 requires 5 acres minimum.
A1 permits one single-family home, ADUs, livestock, orchards, and accessory buildings to keep animals. Animal allowances run up to 4 horses per acre, 4 cattle per acre, and 150 fowl per acre.
A2 permits everything A1 does, plus dairies, hay yards, dude or guest ranches, and commercial poultry operations on minimum acreage thresholds.
Maximum lot coverage is 40%. Maximum height is 35 feet. Animal buildings must sit 35 feet from any “R” residential boundary. Source: Hesperia Municipal Code Title 16, Ord. 2025-06.
Rural Residential — RR-2½, RR-1, RR-20000, RR-SD, RER, VLR
Rural Residential zones under Title 16 §16.16.075 are designed for detached single-family homes on parcels that protect animal keeping. RR-2½ requires 2.5 acres. RR-1 requires 1 acre. RR-20000 requires 20,000 square feet.
RR-SD applies to the Summit Valley area and requires Specific Plan compliance before development.
Animal allowances under §16.20.680(B) include 1 horse per 10,000 square feet, 4 cattle per acre on parcels 1 acre or larger, and up to 8 dogs and cats on parcels 1.5 acres or larger. Hogs are not permitted.
RER and VLR are Tapestry Specific Plan zones — they look like RR designations but they’re governed by the Tapestry plan, not Title 16. Source: Hesperia Municipal Code Title 16, Ord. 2025-06
Residential — R1-18000, R1, R1-4500, R3, LDR, MDR, HDR
These are Hesperia’s standard suburban residential zones under Title 16 §16.16.075. R1-18000 requires 18,000 square feet minimum. Standard R1 requires 7,200 square feet minimum. R1-4500 allows small lot subdivisions at 4,500 square feet (up to 8 dwelling units per acre).
Horses are permitted on lots 20,000 square feet or larger. Smaller R1 lots can sometimes keep one horse with written approval from all neighboring property owners.
R3 is multi-family — townhouses, condos, duplexes, apartments. Sewer connection is required for every new R3 unit.
LDR, MDR, and HDR are Tapestry Specific Plan zones — not Title 16 base zones — and follow the Tapestry plan’s density rules. Source: Hesperia Municipal Code Title 16, Ord. 2025-06.
Commercial — C1, C2, C3, NC, RC, OC, OP, ASC, MU, CIBP
Title 16 §16.16.310 defines three base commercial zones. C1 (Convenience Commercial) is for neighborhood retail at 0.5 max FAR and 35-foot max height. C2 (General Commercial) is for citywide retail and offices at 1.0 max FAR and 50-foot max height. C3 (Service Commercial) is the buffer zone between commercial and industrial — all operations must be enclosed.
C2 also permits multi-family residential as standalone or mixed-use development.
NC, RC, OC, OP, ASC, MU, and CIBP are Main Street and Freeway Corridor Specific Plan (MSFC-SP) zones. Each carries its own permitted uses and design standards inside the Specific Plan document, separate from Title 16.
RC under MSFC-SP permits regional shopping centers, hotels, entertainment, and mixed-use multi-family at 15 to 30 dwelling units per acre. An RC parcel is not the same as a base C2 parcel — RC is governed by the Specific Plan, not Title 16. Source: Hesperia Municipal Code Title 16, Ord. 2025-06.
Industrial — I1, I2, GI
Title 16 §16.16.310 defines I1 (Limited Industrial) for lighter manufacturing, indoor production, wholesale and retail of industrial supplies, and supportive commercial like restaurants serving industrial workers. Minimum lot size is 1 acre at 1.0 max FAR.
I2 (General Industrial) permits the heaviest manufacturing, warehousing, and distribution including outdoor storage. Minimum lot size is 2.5 acres.
I1 sites consolidated to 10 acres or more can establish I2 manufacturing uses with a Conditional Use Permit.
Outdoor storage in I1 and I2 must be confined to the rear half of the property and screened from public view by walls, fencing, or landscaping. Source: Hesperia Municipal Code Title 16, Ord. 2025-06.
Public and Institutional — P-SCHOOL, P-GOVT, P-PARK/REC, PIO
These designations preserve public facilities and privately-owned facilities serving the general public. Permitted uses include schools, churches, post offices, fire stations, hospitals, civic centers, parks, museums, and government utility transmission infrastructure.
P-SCHOOL covers public school sites. P-GOVT covers government facilities. P-PARK/REC covers parks and recreation infrastructure.
PIO (Public/Institutional Overlay) preserves the same types of facilities inside Specific Plan zones — same intent, applied as an overlay rather than a standalone designation.
Overlay and Corridor Designations — FP, OS/D, RRC, AQ, UC
Overlay districts add restrictions on top of an existing base zone. The underlying zone doesn’t change — the overlay layers conditions onto it.
FP (100-Year Flood Plain) covers parcels in FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas, mostly along the Mojave River corridor. Development requires Base Flood Elevation verification and may require flood insurance.
OS/D (Open Space Drainage) marks ravines and natural watercourses that must stay undeveloped to protect city stormwater function.
AQ (Aqueduct) imposes setbacks adjacent to the California Aqueduct alignment.
UC (Utility Corridor) restricts the building envelope on parcels containing high-voltage transmission lines or regional pipelines.
RRC (Railroad Corridor) preserves rail right-of-way and adjacent buffer.
A single parcel can carry multiple overlays simultaneously.
Specific Plans — Tapestry, Summit Valley Ranch, Rancho Las Flores, MSFC
Specific Plans are master-planned regulatory frameworks that override Title 16 base zoning within their boundaries. Each one carries its own permitted uses, density rules, and design standards.
Tapestry Specific Plan (SP-2013-01) governs 9,366 acres in southeastern Hesperia, entitled for 15,663 homes and 700,000 square feet of retail. Tapestry replaced the original 1990 Rancho Las Flores Specific Plan in 2016. The active community is marketed as Silverwood by master developer DMB Development, with first homeowners delivered in mid-2025.
Main Street and Freeway Corridor Specific Plan (MSFC-SP) governs Hesperia’s commerce spine — Main Street and the I-15 frontage — and defines its own commercial, mixed-use, and residential zones (RC, MU, NC, OC, OP, ASC, CIBP) separate from Title 16.
Summit Valley Ranch Specific Plan (SP-91-003) governs the Summit Valley area southeast of the Mojave River corridor. Parcels with the RR-SD designation must comply with this plan before subdivision or development.
Rancho Las Flores Specific Plan (SP-89-01) was the original 1990 plan covering the parcels now under Tapestry. It still appears on legacy maps but was replaced by Tapestry in 2016.
Flood Zone Verification
Portions of Hesperia, CA real estate fall within FEMA Special Flood Hazard Areas, particularly along the Mojave River corridor and the lower Mesa transitional zone. I pull FIRM panel data and confirm Base Flood Elevation as a standard step before any land offer.
Every Hesperia parcel deserves this analysis before an offer.
Hesperia Neighborhood Breakdown: 92344 vs. 92345
The two Hesperia ZIP codes represent two distinct real estate markets. 92344 is West Hesperia — The Mesa, High Country, and the transition into the San Bernardino foothills. 92345 is Central and East Hesperia — the Village Ranchos, the Silverwood corridor, and the city’s commerce spine. The buyer who fits one rarely fits the other. Here’s how they differ.
92344
The Mesa & High Country
Elevation. Privacy. Custom architecture.
Signature neighborhoods: High Country, Star Valley Ranchos, Western Woods, and the foothills approach to the San Bernardino National Forest.
Defined by elevated topography (3,200+ feet), custom-built residences
on 1+ acre parcels, and micro-climate advantages above the valley inversion layer. Portions of West Hesperia fall within the Snowline Joint Unified School District — a long-term equity factor specific to this ZIP.
Buyers seeking elevation and isolation outside city jurisdiction should also evaluate Pinon Hills and Oak Hills — both unincorporated SBC County with high-elevation, sovereign-positioning profiles outside Hesperia city limits.
92345
The Village Ranchos & Silverwood
Level acreage. Infrastructure spine. Master-planned growth.
Signature neighborhoods: Silverwood, Golden Arrow Ranchos, Hesperia Palisades, and the Town Center residential hub. Defined by level, buildable topography and immediate proximity to Hesperia’s commerce corridor. Home to the 15,633-home Silverwood master-planned community underway across 9,366 acres — driving infrastructure, utility extensions, and assessed value pressure across the surrounding area. Buyers prioritizing Brightline West proximity with established town infrastructure rather than master-planned new construction should also evaluate Apple Valley’s Dale Evans corridor.
Owner-operators targeting flat acreage for equestrian or workshop use should evaluate Golden Arrow specifically.
The analysis I run differs by ZIP. School district verification, Specific Plan overlay review, and water district boundary confirmation are different inputs in 92344 than in 92345 — and the comparable sales framework changes accordingly.
Search Active Hesperia, CA Real Estate (92344 & 92345)
Every Hesperia 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 zoning, water access, and net rights — the variables that determine what the land actually gives you.
Recently Listed Hesperia, CA Real Estate
The newest Hesperia properties on the market — residential inventory from 92344 and 92345, including established neighborhoods and new-construction corridors. Updated live from CRMLS.
Active Hesperia Land & Acreage Listings
Land inventory in Hesperia (92344 and 92345), pulled live from CRMLS. Before any land offer, I verify zoning, water access, buildable envelope,
and FEMA flood designation. Select any listing below to discuss parcel-specific analysis.
Not seeing the parcel you need? The MLS updates continuously — I’ll run a custom search across zoning, acreage, and water access criteria.
Start Your Net Rights Analysis
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