If you are watching Simi Valley for a home to come on the market, the difference between seeing a listing the day it hits the MLS and seeing it three days later is often the difference between writing an offer and reading the sold notice. This page covers what is hitting the Simi Valley market this week, how to set up MLS alerts that catch new listings within minutes, and which Simi Valley sub-tracts are the most-competed right now. I am Brian Cooper, REALTOR(R) at eXp Realty (DRE# 01434286).
What is hitting the Simi Valley market this week
This page updates weekly. As of the May 2026 snapshot, the Simi Valley market is showing about 2.1 months of inventory with a median list near $795,000. Most new listings come on the MLS Thursday through Saturday morning so they show up for weekend open houses.
For the live list of what is on the market right now in Simi Valley, the cleanest path is an MLS alert tied to your price range, bedroom count, and sub-area. Public portals like Zillow and Redfin lag the MLS by anywhere from a few minutes to a full day, and they sometimes miss listings that go pending before they syndicate.
If you want me to set the alert for you, send me your criteria. The alert is free, you can cancel anytime, and you control the email cadence — instant, daily digest, or weekly summary.
How to set up MLS alerts for Simi Valley
An MLS alert is a saved search that emails you the moment a listing matching your criteria hits the local MLS. The alert is sourced directly from the MLS feed, not from a portal that refreshes on a schedule, so it is typically the fastest way to see new Simi Valley inventory.
Three settings matter most for Simi Valley. First, draw a polygon around the specific neighborhoods or streets you want — not just the city. Second, set a realistic price ceiling above your target so you do not miss listings that come on a little high and reduce. Third, choose instant alerts rather than daily digests if you are actively shopping.
- Use a polygon or sub-area filter, not just city = Simi Valley
- Set the price ceiling 5-10% above your target to catch reductions
- Choose instant alerts when you are actively writing offers
- Include bed/bath minimums but leave sq.ft. wider than you think
- Re-tune the alert every 30 days as your criteria sharpen
Simi Valley inventory pattern — what to expect by month
Simi Valley inventory follows a seasonal pattern that is steady year over year. New listings peak in April through June, soften in July and August, and tick back up in September. The lowest inventory month is typically December.
If you are in no rush, the December through February window often gives you less competition per listing — but the trade-off is fewer choices. If you want maximum selection in Simi Valley, the May through July window is when the most homes hit the market.
| Month range | Typical pattern | Buyer note |
|---|---|---|
| Mar-Apr | Inventory ramps up | More selection, more competition |
| May-Jul | Peak new listings | Best selection of the year |
| Aug-Sep | Soft pocket | Fewer new homes, motivated sellers |
| Oct-Nov | Second small wave | Holiday-timed listings, faster decisions |
| Dec-Feb | Lowest inventory | Less competition per listing |
The three most-competed Simi Valley sub-tracts right now
Across the Simi Valley market as of May 2026, three sub-tracts consistently draw multiple offers when priced accurately: Wood Ranch (hillside master-planned), Big Sky (newer hillside), and Bridle Path (equestrian-zoned). These are the segments where I tell buyer clients to be ready to write within 48 hours of a listing going live.
In Wood Ranch, listings often go pending in under two weeks when condition matches the asking price. In Big Sky, the buyer pool is deeper for updated homes than for original-condition stock. Bridle Path varies more — a wide price range and a wider days-on-market range depending on condition.
If your search is targeted at one of these sub-tracts, your alert should be a polygon around that tract specifically, not the whole city. That is the single biggest difference between buyers who see Simi Valley listings first and buyers who see them third.
Reading a new listing in the first 10 minutes
When a Simi Valley listing hits your alert, the first 10 minutes are what separates a serious buyer from a tire-kicker. Check three things: comparable closed sales within a half-mile in the last 90 days, the listing's price per square foot against those comps, and the photos for signals about condition and updates.
If the price per square foot is at or under the recent comps and the photos show the home is market-ready, expect competition. If the price is above the comps, it may sit — but you also have time to inspect, ask questions, and negotiate.
Why I do not paste live MLS listings on this page
Listings change by the hour. A page that hard-codes 'this week's new Simi Valley listings' goes stale by Monday and misleads by Friday. The honest version is to send you to a live MLS alert that updates in real time with the same data the MLS member portals use.
If you want a curated weekly email from me with the new Simi Valley listings filtered to your criteria — instead of an automated raw alert — I do that too. It is the same data, just with a human filter on top.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I see new Simi Valley listings this week?
Set an MLS alert tied to your price range and sub-area. The alert pulls directly from the local MLS feed and emails you the moment a Simi Valley listing goes live — typically minutes to hours faster than Zillow or Redfin.
What day do new Simi Valley listings hit the MLS?
Most new Simi Valley listings come on the MLS Thursday through Saturday morning so they show up in time for weekend open houses. Listings can post any day, but Thursday and Friday are the heaviest.
How much inventory does Simi Valley have right now?
As of May 2026, Simi Valley carries about 2.1 months of inventory at a median sale price near $795,000. Inventory below four months is generally considered a seller-leaning market.
Are Zillow and Redfin behind the MLS for Simi Valley?
Yes, usually. Public portals syndicate from MLS feeds on a schedule and can lag from a few minutes to a full day. During peak listing times in Simi Valley, that lag can be the difference between writing an offer and reading the sold notice.
Can I get a weekly digest of new Simi Valley listings by email?
Yes. I send a curated weekly digest filtered to your criteria, in addition to the automated MLS alert. Send me your price range, sub-area, and bed/bath count to set it up.
Which Simi Valley sub-tracts move fastest?
As of May 2026, the three most-competed Simi Valley sub-tracts are Wood Ranch (hillside master-planned), Big Sky (newer hillside), and Bridle Path (equestrian-zoned). Listings priced to condition in these tracts often go pending in the first two weeks.