Live Huntington Beach Condo & Townhome Listings

Huntington Beach Condos.

The realistic way into Surf City USA — condos and townhomes from the sand to the harbour. Live listings, plus the guide the portals don't have: a complex-by-complex breakdown of Huntington Beach's condo communities with approximate price ranges and HOA fees — Pier Colony, Huntington Pacific, Pacific Ranch, Beachwalk, Portofino Cove, Huntington Landmark, and more. From a licensed California broker who lives and works here.

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The One Thing Condo Buyers Learn Too Late

Buying a condo is buying the association.

Two identical units in two different complexes are not the same purchase. One association has funded reserves, a current SB-326 balcony inspection, a healthy master insurance policy, and dues that cover real maintenance. The other has deferred repairs, a special assessment brewing, and an insurance renewal about to shock the budget. The unit tour won't tell you which is which — the association's documents will.

California's Davis-Stirling Act requires those documents to be delivered in escrow: the budget, the reserve study, the CC&Rs, the meeting minutes, the insurance declarations. Most buyers skim them. The buyers who read them — or work with a broker who does — are the ones who never get surprised by the assessment letter in year two.

That's the real value of complex-level knowledge in Huntington Beach: knowing not just the price ranges below, but which associations are run well. That part doesn't fit in a table — it comes from working these buildings.

1
Call or text Kiri firstTell him the budget and the lifestyle — beach-close, harbour, gated, or 55+. Two minutes starts the shortlist.
2
Shortlist complexes, not just unitsPrice range + HOA dues + association health + FHA/VA status, matched to what you actually need.
3
Tour with the documents in mindOffers structured with a real HOA-document review period — and read when they arrive.
4
Close with no year-two surprisesReserves, insurance, inspections, and rules — understood before you sign, not after.
Market Pulse · As Of Mid-2026

The Huntington Beach condo market, at a glance.

Ten miles of coastline, roughly 200,000 residents, and a detached-home market priced well past $1.3M — which makes condos and townhomes the realistic coastal entry point for most buyers. Inventory is modest and the popular complexes turn over slowly.

Median Condo Listing$750KCitywide · verify vs. Redfin monthly
Downtown HB Condos$1.24MMedian listing near the pier & Main Street
Median Townhome Listing$1.26MCitywide · larger attached product
Typical Days On Market~40~96 condos active citywide
Figures deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Verify current numbers against Redfin, Zillow, or the MLS before any offer or listing decision.
The Complex-By-Complex Guide

Huntington Beach condo communities — approximate prices & HOA fees.

The guide the portals don't publish. Every figure below is an approximate range as of mid-2026 — sale prices change with every closing and HOA dues change with every association budget. Treat this as orientation, then verify the current numbers for any specific complex before offering.

ComplexArea / CharacterApprox. Price RangeApprox. HOA / Mo.
Beachfront & Downtown
Huntington PacificDirectly on the sand — the city's rare oceanfront condo building$1.1M – $2.5M+$700 – $1,100
Pier ColonyAcross from the pier; walk to Main Street & Pacific City$900K – $1.5M$500 – $700
TownsquareDowntown village setting, blocks to the beach$800K – $1.2M$500 – $700
BoardwalkNewer construction near the Pacific City corridor$900K – $1.4M$400 – $600
Villa St. CroixMediterranean-style, inland of downtown$700K – $950K$400 – $550
Pacific RanchGated, greenbelt streams & pools, near SeaCliff$750K – $1.05M$500 – $700
Huntington Harbour & Waterfront
Portofino CoveHarbour waterfront; some units with boat slips$800K – $1.6M$600 – $900
Sea HarbourWaterfront community with dock access$900K – $1.8M$600 – $900
BroadmoorEstablished Huntington Harbour townhomes, some on water$850K – $1.6M$600 – $900
Seabridge VillageLagoon setting near the harbour, resort-style grounds$600K – $900K$450 – $650
Interior & Family Value
BeachwalkAtrium-style homes near Goldenwest, walkable toward the beach$850K – $1.3M$500 – $700
SurfcrestSeaCliff-adjacent townhomes near the golf corridor$900K – $1.3M$400 – $600
Cabo del MarNear the wetlands, southeast side; strong entry-mid value$600K – $850K$450 – $600
La CuestaCentral townhome community, family-oriented$650K – $900K$350 – $500
Entry & 55+
Huntington ContinentalClassic entry townhomes, east side$500K – $680K$350 – $500
Huntington Creek / Villa PacificAttainable interior communities$550K – $750K$350 – $550
Huntington Landmark (55+)The city's established gated senior community, extensive amenities$600K – $950K$550 – $750
All ranges approximate as of mid-2026, compiled from broker knowledge and public sale data · Prices change with every closing; HOA dues change with every budget cycle · Verify current figures per complex via the MLS and the association before making any decision · No association affiliation or endorsement implied

Condo vs. townhome vs. detached in HB — the honest comparison.

Condo · Roughly $500K – $1.5M

The coastal entry point

You own the airspace plus a shared interest in the building; the association maintains the exterior. Lowest entry prices in the city, lock-and-leave living, and the trade-off is dues and governance. Most of HB's condo stock is 1960s–1980s — association health matters as much as the unit.

Townhome · Roughly $650K – $1.5M

More space, often PUD-structured

Attached living with more square footage, often a small yard or patio, and frequently structured as a planned development (you own the lot) — which can sidestep FHA/VA condo-approval hurdles. HB's townhome median runs near $1.26M for the larger coastal product; interior communities run well below.

Detached House · Typically $1.3M+

Everything — at HB's full price

No dues, no association, full control — and the citywide detached market prices hundreds of thousands above the condo median. For many buyers the honest math is: condo now with coastal equity, detached later. For others, dues-free ownership is worth the premium today.

The Deciding Line

Monthly all-in, not list price

Compare payment + dues + insurance across all three, not list prices alone. A $750K condo with $600 dues and a $950K PUD townhome with $250 dues can land closer than they look — and the association's health decides whether that dues number holds. Run the full column before choosing.

Four Condo Lifestyles · One City

Where you land in HB is a lifestyle choice first.

Same city, four distinct ways to live in it. Match the tier to your life, then shortlist complexes inside it.

1
Beachfront & Downtown
Walk to the pier, Main Street, and Pacific City.
Huntington Pacific Pier Colony Townsquare Boardwalk

The premium tier — the Downtown HB condo median runs near $1.24M, and oceanfront units at Huntington Pacific are the rarest product in the city. Salt air is real here: SB-326 balcony status, corrosion-aware maintenance, and master insurance health deserve extra attention in every downtown association. When a well-priced unit hits this tier, it moves.

2
Huntington Harbour & Waterfront
Docks, lagoons, and water out the window.
Portofino Cove Sea Harbour Broadmoor Seabridge Village

The harbour's condo communities put boats and water at the center — some units convey slips or dock rights, which price accordingly and must be verified (what conveys varies unit by unit). Harbour associations maintain seawalls, docks, and waterfront commons, so dues run higher and reserve studies matter more. Seabridge Village nearby offers the lagoon lifestyle at a friendlier entry.

3
Interior & Family Value
The volume middle — space per dollar, minutes to the sand.
Beachwalk Pacific Ranch Surfcrest Cabo del Mar La Cuesta

Where most HB condo living actually happens — established communities with pools, greenbelts, and real floorplans, roughly in the $600K–$1.3M band. Beachwalk's atrium homes and Pacific Ranch's gated stream-and-greenbelt setting have loyal followings; Cabo del Mar borders the wetlands. Association quality varies community by community — this is the tier where document review pays off most.

4
Entry & 55+
First purchases and right-sized living.
Huntington Continental Huntington Creek Villa Pacific Huntington Landmark (55+)

The most attainable ownership in the city — entry townhomes historically starting in the $500Ks — plus Huntington Landmark, the city's established 55+ gated community with extensive amenities. For first-time buyers, FHA/VA project approval status and association health matter as much as price. For Landmark, verify current age-qualification rules and what the dues include.

The Condo Purchase Timeline · Educational

From shortlist to keys — with the HOA review where it belongs.

The general sequence below reflects a typical California condominium purchase. Every association is different — documents, rules, financials, and timelines vary by community. Quick reads: the document review stage is where condo purchases are won.

Stage 1 · Before You Tour

Pre-approval — with the condo wrinkle handled

Get pre-approved with a lender of your choosing, and if FHA or VA financing is part of the plan, check project-approval status for your shortlisted complexes now — not in escrow. Non-warrantable findings (litigation, high investor ratios, insurance gaps) surface early when your broker asks the right questions up front.

Stage 2 · Shortlist

Complexes first, units second

Filter by budget, dues, lifestyle tier, and what's known about association health. Ten complexes become three; then the right unit in a well-run building beats the perfect unit in a troubled one. This is where complex-level knowledge earns its keep.

Stage 3 · Offer

Structured with a real review period

Your offer includes contingencies for investigation, appraisal, loan, and — critically — review of the HOA documents the seller must deliver under Davis-Stirling. Competitive doesn't have to mean careless; the review period is standard and worth protecting.

Stage 4 · Escrow

Read the association, inspect the unit

The document package arrives: budget, reserve study, CC&Rs and rules, meeting minutes, insurance declarations, SB-326 status. Read the minutes — boards discuss the problems there before they hit the budget. Meanwhile, a standard unit inspection plus attention to plumbing age, panel type, and balcony condition covers the physical side.

Stage 5 · Close

Keys, dues, and no surprises

Close with your HO-6 policy aligned to the master policy's deductible, the dues autopay set, and — because you read the documents — a clear picture of the association's next five years. That's the difference between buying a unit and buying into a community you understand.

Important: California common-interest developments are governed by the Davis-Stirling Act (Civil Code §§ 4000 et seq.), including mandatory document disclosures in escrow, and SB-326 (Civil Code § 5551) balcony-inspection requirements. Association rules, budgets, and timelines vary by community and change frequently. This overview is educational only — have documents reviewed with your own professionals, and verify every material fact with the specific association in writing.
Before You Write An Offer

Six things every HB condo buyer should check.

Condo purchases reward buyers who read. Please review the following before offering on any Huntington Beach condominium or townhome.

1. The Reserve Study Tells The Future

A funded reserve means the association has been saving for the roof, the plumbing, the paint. An underfunded one means those costs are coming to you as dues increases or special assessments. Ask for the funding percentage — and read it next to the age of the buildings.

2. SB-326 Status, Especially Near The Water

Balcony and elevated-walkway inspections are mandatory for California condo HOAs, and salt air accelerates exactly the corrosion they look for. Ask for the inspection report and the repair status — unresolved findings can block financing and foreshadow assessments.

3. The Master Insurance Declarations

What does the association insure, at what deductible, through what carrier? California condo master policies have repriced sharply; rising premiums flow into dues, and rising deductibles shift risk onto your HO-6 policy. Align the two before closing.

4. FHA / VA Project Approval — Early

If your financing depends on FHA or VA, the complex itself must be approved — and status changes over time. Verify the specific complex before falling in love. PUD-structured townhomes often sidestep the requirement entirely.

5. The Rules You're Actually Buying

Rental caps and minimum lease terms, pet limits, parking rules, remodel approvals — the CC&Rs and current rules govern your ownership. Investors especially: many HB associations restrict rentals, and the city restricts short-term rentals by ordinance.

6. The Minutes Tell The Truth

Board meeting minutes discuss the plumbing problem, the insurance quote, the assessment debate — months before any of it reaches the budget. Read the last year of minutes; it's the closest thing to a crystal ball a condo buyer gets.

The Fine Print · Educational

Six line items most HB condo buyers underestimate.

None of these are reasons to avoid condo ownership — they are reasons to read before offering, in a city where most condo stock is 40–60 years old and a block from salt air.

Dues Trajectory & Special Assessments

The dues number on the listing is today's number. Aging buildings, repriced insurance, and SB-326 repairs have pushed many California associations into multi-year dues increases or one-time assessments. The budget, reserve study, and minutes tell you which direction this association is headed.

Underwrite dues growth — not just today's figure — and ask directly about planned or discussed assessments.

SB-326 In Salt Air

Coastal corrosion is exactly what balcony inspections exist to catch, and HB's beach-close buildings feel it first. Associations that deferred inspections or repairs face concentrated costs — and buildings with unresolved structural findings can become temporarily unfinanceable.

Request the SB-326 report and repair status on any beach-close complex before removing contingencies.

The Master Insurance Squeeze

Condo master-policy premiums across California have risen sharply, and some associations have moved to higher deductibles or non-standard carriers to keep coverage. Those choices flow directly into your dues and your personal HO-6 exposure.

Read the declarations page; size your HO-6 policy to the master deductible with an insurance agent's help.

1970s Systems In 2026 Buildings

Most HB condo stock dates to the 1960s–1980s: original galvanized or polybutylene plumbing in some communities, aging electrical panels, and roofs on their second or third cycle. Inside the unit, remodel history and permits matter; outside it, the association's replacement schedule does.

Inspect the unit AND ask what major systems the association has replaced — and what's next on the list.

FHA/VA Eligibility Can Lapse

Project approvals expire and conditions change — litigation, investor concentration, insurance gaps, or budget issues can knock a complex off the approved lists. A complex that financed fine for the last buyer may not for you, and vice versa.

Verify current FHA/VA project status for your specific complex at the shortlist stage, not in escrow.

Rental Caps & The STR Reality

Many HB associations impose minimum lease terms or cap the share of rented units — and the City of Huntington Beach restricts short-term rentals by ordinance, with most condos ineligible for STR permits. Investor underwriting built on Airbnb income usually doesn't survive contact with the CC&Rs.

Read the CC&Rs' rental provisions and verify the city's current STR ordinance before underwriting any rental plan.
Investor Corner · Educational

The honest HB condo investor math.

Huntington Beach price-to-rent ratios sit near Orange County's — among the least favorable in the country — and HOA dues push against cash flow further. The realistic play here is coastal equity and tenant quality, not monthly income. Worth stating plainly.

What an HB condo offers the investor: coastal scarcity exposure (ten miles of built-out coastline; supply is structurally capped), premium tenant demand (beach-adjacent rentals lease quickly, to strong-covenant tenants, with low turnover), and minimal exterior maintenance (the association handles the envelope — for a monthly fee that must be in your pro forma).

The honest counterweights: dues are an every-month cost against rent and they trend upward; many associations cap rentals or set minimum lease terms; the city's STR ordinance takes short-term income off the table for most units; and at HB prices, financed purchases generally run negative on monthly cash flow. Investors who need income look inland; investors who want a coastal asset with durable tenant demand are the realistic buyer here.

The educational example on the right — a mid-tier HB condo with real dues — shows the honest math deliberately. Verify everything with your CPA, read the CC&Rs' rental provisions, and confirm rent comps for the specific complex before committing capital.

Investor consultation available — call or text (562) 276-8413.

Illustrative pencil · Placeholder numbers

Purchase price (mid-tier HB condo)$750,000
Monthly rent (est.)$3,300
Property tax (est. 1.05%)−$656
HOA dues (est.)−$550
Insurance — HO-6 (est.)−$70
Property management (8%)−$264
Reserves & vacancy (8%)−$264
Net operating income (monthly)$1,496
Educational only. Numbers are illustrative placeholders — and note this NOI is before any financing cost, which at current HB prices typically exceeds it. That is the honest math, and it is why the HB thesis is coastal equity and tenant quality rather than cash flow. Verify a full pro forma with a licensed CPA before committing capital.
Why Work With Kiri

A licensed broker who lives where you're buying.

Condo purchases run on association documents, complex-level knowledge, and reading between the lines of a reserve study. Having a licensed broker who works these exact buildings — and lives in this exact city — is the easiest advantage an HB condo buyer can take.

Licensed CA Broker

Kiri holds a California real estate broker's license (CA DRE #01408082) — a higher-level credential than a salesperson license. On Davis-Stirling document review, SB-326 status, insurance declarations, and FHA/VA project questions, that depth matters.

Huntington Beach Is Home

Kiri is based in Huntington Beach — this is his home market, not a territory on a map. Complex-level knowledge here isn't researched for the occasion; it's accumulated from working these buildings, these boards, and these streets year-round.

Complex-Level Intelligence

Which associations are well-run, which buildings just finished their big project (and which haven't started), where dues are headed, and which small buildings almost never list. The table above is the public version — the working version is deeper.

Both Sides Of The Transaction

Buying into a complex or selling out of one — Kiri represents both. Sellers get positioning that speaks to what condo buyers actually screen for (dues, documents, association health); buyers get offers structured to compete without skipping the review that protects them.

Important disclosures — please read.

Educational purpose only. All content on this page — market statistics, the complex directory, price and HOA ranges, tier descriptions, process overviews, investor examples, and FAQ answers — is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It should not be interpreted as guidance on any specific property, complex, association, or personal financial situation.

Price ranges and HOA fees are approximate and may be inaccurate. The complex directory reflects approximate ranges compiled from broker knowledge and public sale data as of mid-2026. Sale prices change with every closing; HOA dues change with every association budget cycle; special assessments can be adopted at any time. Every figure on this page may be out of date at the time of viewing and must be independently verified — via the MLS and the specific association — before being relied upon in any decision.

Every association is different. Each homeowners association sets its own budget, dues, reserves, rules, rental provisions, insurance program, and disclosure practices — and these change frequently. Anything described on this page represents general or typical patterns only. Complex names are used factually to describe location and market context; no affiliation with or endorsement by any association is implied.

Independent verification is required. Buyers must independently verify every material fact — including current pricing, dues and what they cover, reserve funding, SB-326 inspection status, master insurance terms, FHA/VA project approval, rental and pet restrictions, and pending or discussed assessments — with the association, the listing broker, the county, and their own professionals before making any offer.

Not legal, tax, or financial advice. California common-interest developments are governed by the Davis-Stirling Act (Civil Code §§ 4000 et seq.) and related law including SB-326 (Civil Code § 5551). Nothing on this site constitutes legal representation, tax advice, or financial planning. Independent counsel — a licensed real estate attorney for document questions and a CPA for tax questions — is recommended. This site contains no mortgage or lending advice; consult a licensed loan officer of your own choosing. Kiri Suykry acts as a real estate professional only.

Frequently Asked Questions

Huntington Beach condos — commonly asked questions.

Clear, professional answers to the questions condo buyers most frequently ask. All information below is educational only; all figures are approximate and must be verified.

How much do condos cost in Huntington Beach?

As of mid-2026, the citywide median condo listing price is roughly $750,000, with townhomes around $1.26M and Downtown HB condos around $1.24M (verify current figures with Redfin or the MLS). The range is wide: entry complexes like Huntington Continental start in the $500Ks, mid-tier communities like Cabo del Mar and Seabridge Village run roughly $600K–$900K, downtown and SeaCliff-area communities run roughly $800K–$1.5M, and oceanfront units at Huntington Pacific can exceed $2M. Every figure changes with each closing — verify per complex.

What are typical HOA fees for Huntington Beach condos?

Approximate monthly dues range from roughly $350–$500 at entry and interior complexes to roughly $500–$700 at downtown and gated communities, and roughly $600–$1,100 at waterfront and oceanfront communities such as Portofino Cove, Sea Harbour, and Huntington Pacific — where dues often cover more (master insurance, exterior maintenance, docks or beach frontage, amenities). Dues change with every budget cycle; always verify the current amount, what it covers, and any approved increases or assessments before offering.

What condo complexes are near the beach or downtown?

The best-known beach-close communities include Huntington Pacific (directly on the sand — one of the only oceanfront condo buildings in the city), Pier Colony (across from the pier), Townsquare (downtown), Boardwalk (near the Pacific City corridor), Villa St. Croix, and Pacific Ranch (gated, greenbelt setting near SeaCliff). Downtown units command a premium — the Downtown HB condo median runs well above the citywide figure.

What waterfront condo options exist in Huntington Harbour?

Huntington Harbour's condo communities include Portofino Cove and Sea Harbour (some units with boat slips or dock access), Broadmoor, the Bay Club area, and Seabridge Village nearby. Waterfront and dock-access units price meaningfully above interior units, and harbour-area dues typically run higher because associations maintain seawalls, docks, and waterfront commons. Slip rights vary by unit — verify what actually conveys.

Is there a 55+ condo community in Huntington Beach?

Yes — Huntington Landmark is the city's established 55+ community, a large gated senior community near the southeast side with extensive amenities, operating as a legally recognized housing-for-older-persons community. Pricing typically runs below comparable all-ages coastal product, with dues that fund substantial amenities. Verify current age-qualification rules, pricing, and dues with the association and MLS.

Why do HOA documents matter so much when buying a condo?

When you buy a condominium, you are buying into the association as much as the unit. California's Davis-Stirling Act requires sellers to deliver the association's governing documents, budget, reserve study, and disclosures during escrow. Those documents tell you whether dues are about to rise, whether an assessment is coming, whether reserves are funded, whether litigation is pending, and what the rules actually allow. Read them during your review period — a licensed broker and, where needed, an attorney can help you interpret them.

What is SB-326 and why does it matter here?

SB-326 (Civil Code § 5551) requires California condo HOAs to complete recurring structural inspections of balconies, decks, and elevated walkways. Associations that deferred inspections or repairs may face large special assessments, and lenders may decline financing in buildings with unresolved findings. In coastal Huntington Beach, salt-air corrosion makes this especially relevant for older buildings. Ask for the SB-326 report and repair status before removing contingencies.

Can I use FHA or VA financing on an HB condo?

Only in projects approved by the respective agency. FHA and VA maintain condo project approval lists, and status changes over time — a complex approved years ago may not be today, and vice versa. If FHA or VA financing is part of your plan, verify the specific complex's current status early, and consult a licensed loan officer of your choosing. PUD-structured townhomes often avoid the project-approval requirement entirely.

Do HB condos allow rentals or short-term rentals?

It varies by association and by city rule. Many HOAs impose minimum lease terms (commonly 30 days to 6 months) and some cap the share of units that may be rented. Separately, the City of Huntington Beach restricts short-term rentals by ordinance — most condo units are not eligible for STR permits. Read the CC&Rs and current rules, and verify the city's current ordinance, before underwriting any rental strategy.

What should I check about an association's insurance?

Request the master policy declarations: what the association insures (bare walls vs. all-in), the deductible (rising deductibles shift risk to owners), and the carrier. California condo master premiums have risen sharply, and those costs flow into dues or assessments. Your own HO-6 policy should be sized to the master policy's deductible and gaps — an insurance agent can align the two.

Are special assessments common in older HB complexes?

They happen — most of HB's condo stock dates to the 1960s–1980s, and coastal buildings face roofing, plumbing, balcony, and seawall projects on a recurring cycle. The reserve study tells you whether the association has been saving or deferring. A complex with healthy reserves and a recently completed major project can be a better buy than a lower-priced complex with an assessment on the horizon.

Condo vs. townhome vs. house in HB — what's the real difference?

Legally: a condo conveys airspace plus a shared interest; a PUD townhome typically conveys the structure and lot with an HOA maintaining commons; a detached house conveys everything — at a much higher HB price. Practically: condos trade yard work and exterior maintenance for dues and governance. In Huntington Beach, condos and townhomes are the realistic coastal entry — the condo median sits hundreds of thousands below the detached median.

Do Huntington Beach condos have Mello-Roos?

Mostly no — unlike new master-planned communities inland, most HB condo stock predates Community Facilities Districts, so effective tax rates near the ~1% base are common. A few newer developments may carry assessments. Verify the total tax rate on the specific parcel via the preliminary title report before assuming.

Which complexes are best for first-time buyers?

On price alone, the most attainable entries have historically been complexes like Huntington Continental, La Cuesta, Huntington Creek, Villa Pacific, and Cabo del Mar — roughly the $500K–$850K band, though every figure must be verified. The better question is price plus association health: dues level, reserve funding, insurance status, and FHA approval if you need it. A slightly higher-priced unit in a well-run association is frequently the stronger first purchase.

How fast do HB condos sell?

As of mid-2026, Huntington Beach listings typically go pending in roughly 40 days, with roughly 96 condos active citywide (verify current figures with Redfin). Well-priced units in the popular complexes move faster — and the best units in small buildings like Huntington Pacific or Pier Colony surface rarely, which is why complex-specific alerts matter.

How do I find current HB condo and townhome listings?

The live search portal linked on this page pulls condo and townhome listings directly from the California Regional MLS, filtered to Huntington Beach. It refreshes daily. You can also request complex-specific alerts by leaving your name, cell phone, and email — Kiri tracks the complexes directly and flags new listings the moment they hit.

Kiri Suykry — Real Estate Broker, Keller Williams Huntington Beach, Huntington Beach condo specialist
Your Broker

Kiri Suykry

A licensed California real estate broker based in Huntington Beach — representing condo and townhome buyers and sellers in his own home market, with complex-level knowledge and candid professional guidance.

Kiri Suykry is a licensed California real estate broker with Keller Williams Huntington Beach. This city is home — which means the complex directory above isn't research, it's his working market: the beachfront and downtown buildings, the Huntington Harbour waterfront communities, the interior family villages, and the entry and 55+ communities. He coordinates every purchase with your inspector, your lender of choice, escrow, title, and — where association documents raise questions — your attorney.

An initial consultation is complimentary, private, and time-efficient. Whether you're shortlisting complexes by budget and dues, weighing a condo against a townhome, selling a unit and wanting it positioned for what buyers actually screen for, or watching a specific small building for the rare listing — Kiri will give you a candid read on what's realistic, with no sales pressure.

Licensed Broker
Keller Williams
Huntington Beach
CA DRE #01408082 · REALTOR®
Specialty
Huntington Beach
Condos & Townhomes
Beachfront · Harbour · Interior · 55+
(562) 276-8413 kirisuykry@gmail.com Huntington Beach, CA

Which complex fits your budget? Ask someone who works them all.

Live listings, complex-specific alerts, or a private consultation — from a broker based right here in Huntington Beach.