A recent report from CoreLogic showed median home prices had gone up 8.6 percent in Southern California on a year-over-year basis, from November 2016 to November 2017.

Leading the way was Ventura County, which rose 10.5 percent to $580,000. Orange County actually displayed the lowest climb, at “just” 6.1 percent. However, it maintained the highest median sale price in the region, at $700,000 ($120,000 higher than Ventura, the second-most expensive county). Los Angeles County rose an even seven percent in the timeframe, to $567,000.

As the Los Angeles Times points out, it’s been over five years since Southern California’s home prices dropped year-over-year.

While it was a joint effort across the region guiding the increase, some select zip codes increased by far more than the rest. In LA, Pasadena (91106) median home prices climbed over 100 percent for single-family homes since last November, while Bel Air (90077) ballooned by nearly 502 percent in the same stretch. Both areas had fewer than 15 sales in the time period, however.

Dana Point (92629) was the leading zip code in Orange County, with a 69 percent increase. Homeland (92548) led Riverside County with 1,550 percent and Oro Grande (92368) was the highest riser in San Bernardino County — though it also had just one sale in the time. San Diego County was paced by Pauma Valley (92061) at 147.2 percent on two sales, Santa Barbara saw Guadalupe (93434) lead with 43.7 percent growth, and Ojai (93023) in Ventura County grew by 29.2 percent.