With median prices hovering near $700k and major developments reshaping H Street and Navy Yard, understanding the approval process and emerging neighbourhoods is essential for newcomers.
As marquee residential towers rise along the waterfront and in emerging corridors, Washington's ultra-high-net-worth buyers are recalculating where prestige—and investment returns—actually live.
As purchase prices plateau, rental markets are fracturing—creating windfalls for some property owners while squeezing middle-income renters across the district.
As transit upgrades, mixed-use development, and demographic shifts reshape outer neighbourhoods, savvy buyers are learning to look beyond the Capitol Hill premium.
As major mixed-use projects reshape H Street, Navy Yard, and the emerging Golden Triangle, vacancy rates are climbing for the first time in years, shifting power back to renters.
As Capitol Hill prices soar past $1m, savvy first-home investors are discovering grant opportunities and financing pathways in Petworth—where median prices hover near $550k and community momentum is accelerating.
With median prices hovering around $550k—a full $150k below the city average—the Northwest neighbourhood is attracting institutional capital and boutique builders seeking untapped potential.
As DC breaks ground on mixed-income developments along the Anacostia waterfront and near the New York Avenue Metro station, residents wonder whether thousands of new units will actually be accessible—or simply accelerate gentrification.
As Washington's multifamily vacancy climbs, savvy landlords are rethinking their return expectations and repositioning portfolios across neighborhoods with starkly different fundamentals.
As Capitol Hill rents plateau, smart money is chasing cash returns in Arlington, Ballston and emerging H Street corridors—and the numbers tell a compelling story.
As thousands of new units flood neighbourhoods from H Street to Navy Yard, landlords gain leverage while renters face steeper competition and shrinking affordability.
As the District tightens eligibility criteria for first-home grants, entire neighborhoods are falling out of reach for entry-level purchasers—forcing a reckoning with what affordability means in a $700k median market.