
If you live in Orinda, Lafayette, or Moraga, you already know the basics: great schools, beautiful lots, higher prices, and a market that can turn on a dime. What’s changed lately is what people worry about before they even tour a house.
I’ve heard the most common “buyer and seller intent” questions showing up in Lamorinda then wrote the answers the way I’d want them if I were spending seven figures (or eight figures).
“Is the Lamorinda market cooling, or is it still competitive?”
Both can be true in the same week.
Lamorinda behaves like a set of micro-markets: a turnkey home in a prime pocket, priced correctly, can still attract strong demand, while a similar home on a busier street, with deferred maintenance, or with insurance friction can sit and require reductions.
What to do with that:
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Buyers: stop thinking “city-wide trend.” Think “this exact home vs its last two comps.”
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Sellers: if you want top dollar, you need top presentation and pricing discipline from day one.
“Is wildfire risk and insurance becoming a deal-breaker in Lamorinda?”
It’s not theoretical anymore. It’s one of the first practical questions serious buyers ask, because it can change the monthly cost and even the ability to close.
A few realities:
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Some insurers have tightened underwriting or exited higher-risk areas, which pushes more people toward the FAIR Plan or other workarounds.
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California is also pushing “home hardening” and mitigation into the real estate process, including seller disclosure expectations in fire-prone areas.
Buyer move: ask about insurability before you remove contingencies.
Seller move: proactively document defensible space and mitigation work, and expect insurance questions early
“What exactly do sellers have to disclose about hazards?”
I have a personal philosophy. DISCLOSE EVERYTHING!
California requires Natural Hazard Disclosures when a property is in designated hazard zones, and that includes fire-related zones. And wildfire disclosure requirements have tightened in recent years, with AB 38-related disclosures becoming a bigger deal in practice for older homes in fire-prone areas.
Practical takeaway:
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Buyers should read disclosures like a contract, not a brochure. Don’t be scared of a disclosure, just take action to remediate it.
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Sellers should treat disclosure quality as part of your marketing, because it reduces renegotiation later.
“How do I choose between Orinda, Lafayette, and Moraga?”
This question is constant, and the subtext is usually commute + lifestyle + school fit.
Patterns that come up repeatedly:
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Commute: Moraga can be a little more “inland-feel,” and the drive to main arteries is a real consideration for some families.
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Lifestyle: Lafayette tends to feel more “downtown energy,” Orinda often feels more “quiet and tucked-away,” Moraga more “campus and valley.” (These are generalizations, but they’re useful starting points.)
- All communities are wonderful, you will fall in love with them
Best advice: pick 2–3 neighborhoods, not just a town name. Lamorinda is neighborhood-driven.
“What should I do to prep my Lamorinda home for sale?”
The question behind the question: “How do I get top dollar without living in a construction zone? (or spending a mint)”
High-impact (usually) in Lamorinda:
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Paint + lighting + staging (buyers pay for “effortlessness”)
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Clean inspection posture (or at least clean disclosure posture)
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Landscaping curb appeal, especially where lots are larger
And if you’re in a fire-prone zone: defensible space and documentation can reduce buyer anxiety and insurance friction.
“How much is my home worth right now?”
Online estimates are purely entertainment. Lamorinda pricing often hinges on:
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street and micro-location
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school assignment nuance
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lot usability
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updates and layout (not just square footage)
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insurance and hazard context
If you want a number you can act on, you need a tight comp set and an honest adjustment list. Call Vlatka for your comparative market analysis!
“What offer terms actually matter here?”
Most people think only price matters, they are wrong. Sellers have unique needs, and histories that inform who wins in a competitive situation. If a seller has had three deals fall through they may look for a secure buyer. Some sellers are motivated to move quick, others will languor.
The most common pressure points:
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inspection period length
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appraisal protection (or lack of it)
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loan contingency strength
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timing and rent-back flexibility
In California, appraisal and inspection contingencies are common tools, and shortening or removing them changes risk, not just competitiveness.
“What is a supplemental property tax bill, and when does it show up?”
This is one of the most common “surprise” costs for Bay Area buyers.
Supplemental assessments happen after a change in ownership or new construction, and they generate a bill that reflects the difference between the old assessed value and the new one.
Timing varies by county, but it’s common for buyers to receive it months after closing.
If you are budgeting monthly costs, include a buffer for this.
“Can I keep my low property taxes if I move within California?”
Note: I am not a tax professional so contact your CPA for any tax related issues. Below is just my understanding…
If you’re over 55, severely disabled, or a disaster victim, Proposition 19 can allow you to transfer a base year value to a replacement home in California, subject to rules and timing.
This is not “automatic,” and the order of sale vs purchase can matter.
Also: Prop 19 changed inherited property tax treatment significantly, so families planning intergenerational moves need to be careful.
“Why do some Lamorinda homes sit even when schools are great?”
Common causes:
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price overshoot
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cosmetic fatigue (buyers mentally subtract huge amounts for effort)
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functional issues (layout, light, slope, parking)
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hazard and insurance friction
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busy street perception
A home can be “nice” and still be “wrong for the market” at a given price.
“Is it smarter to buy a fixer or a turnkey home here?”
Turnkey often wins in Lamorinda because:
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buyer time is scarce
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contractors are expensive and scheduling is slow
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renovation uncertainty is real
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insurance and permitting questions can add friction
Fixers can still be great, but only if the discount is real and the scope is clear. If the discount is cosmetic-only and the problems are structural, it’s usually a trap.
