California shoppers bucked a national trend, pushing up one consumer optimism measure to a new high in its biggest surge since 2012.

The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index for California rose to a record 138.2 for March, up from 107.1 in February and 130.3 a year ago. That is the largest one-month increase since July 2012 and the highest reading in Conference board state data that dates to 2007.

Driving California’s good vibes are better feelings about consumers’ “present situation.” That statewide index hit 177.6 for March vs. 147.9 in February and 158.6 a year ago. Californians also have a sunny outlook — the expectations index hit a record 111.9 for March — up sharply from February’s 80 but just a smidge above 111.4 of a year earlier.

Workers across the Golden State are enjoying slower-yet-continued hiring and rising wages. Increased consumer optimism could help explain what appears to be a decent start to the annual homebuying rush and should be good news to folks who earn a living selling goods and services to the masses.

Californians in March are decidedly more upbeat than most Americans.