Georgetown and Capitol Hill auction data reveals mixed signals in DC's luxury market. Properties above $3M show resilience while sellers adjust pricing expectations downward.
Explore expanded DC first-time buyer programs targeting Navy Yard and H Street. New grants and financing options make homeownership 15-20% more affordable in emerging neighbourhoods.
New data shows investors backing social housing in Ward 7 and Ward 8 are hitting 4-6% yields while addressing the city's deepening affordability crisis.
As Capitol Hill prices soar past $900k, savvy first-home investors are discovering grants and financing strategies that make Petworth's tree-lined blocks the region's smartest play.
As Washington's high-end rental market tightens, both affluent renters and institutional investors are reckoning with a new reality where neither side holds all the cards.
As vacancy rates climb in select neighbourhoods, both renters and property owners face a dramatically altered landscape that's reshaping power dynamics and pricing strategies throughout the District.
Falling vacancy rates across Capitol Hill and H Street mask a deeper story—auction results suggest landlords are tightening, and savvy renters need to read between the lines.
With the median home price holding steady around $700,000, savvy property investors across Washington DC are posting encouraging yields that suggest the region remains a stable wealth-building play despite affordability pressures.
As the district's median home price hovers near $700,000, emerging neighbourhoods are delivering double-digit yields—but only for investors who read the data correctly.
As the waterfront corridor transforms from industrial past to residential future, savvy property buyers are unlocking double-digit yields—and the data shows why.
With permits up across H Street, Navy Yard, and beyond, newcomers to Washington's real estate landscape need to understand how ongoing projects affect pricing, timelines, and neighborhood stability.
With rental vacancy climbing across Washington DC neighborhoods, prospective homeowners face a different landscape—here's what you need to know before making your move.
Proposed changes to building height restrictions and mixed-use development policies are already influencing property values across the District, with winners and losers emerging in unexpected places.
Zoning reform, commercial conversion, and persistent supply shortages are reshaping Washington's property landscape—here's what prospective homeowners need to understand.