Los Altos is not a momentum market—it is a structural one. Defined by land scarcity, school-driven demand, and long-term homeowner stability, Los Altos continues to outperform across market cycles. While other Silicon Valley markets rise and fall with speculation, Los Altos behaves like a blue-chip asset, offering durability, lifestyle quality, and capital preservation for buyers who think in decades, not headlines.
Read MoreExplore the 2025 Bay Area neighborhoods poised for growth – Silicon Valley’s Los Altos (94022), Sunnyvale (94087), Cupertino (95014), Palo Alto (94301), Los Gatos (95030), and Saratoga (95070). Our deep-dive covers history, demographics, schools, attractions, architectural styles and market trends, with data and expert analysis on luxury homes and ZIP code insights.
Read MoreThe Eichler homes of Los Altos are among the rarest and most architecturally refined in Silicon Valley. Built at the height of Joseph Eichler’s career, these homes in Fallen Leaf Park and San Antonio Court represent the final, most luxurious evolution of mid-century modern design. With large atrium models, quarter-acre lots, and access to top-tier schools, they offer not just a home but a heritage. Represented by Eric and Janelle Boyenga of Compass—Silicon Valley’s trusted Eichler home experts—these properties deliver history, prestige, and protected architectural value in one of California’s most coveted real estate markets.
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