As developers break ground on ambitious developments from Navy Yard to Buzzard Point, the question looms: will new supply finally ease pressure on the District's $700k median home price?
As mixed-use towers rise along H Street and the waterfront, investment property returns are shifting dramatically across Washington DC's neighborhoods.
As projects from Navy Yard to H Street corridor near completion, yield data reveals which neighbourhoods are rewarding patient capital—and where returns are stalling.
Recent property sales data reveals a sobering message: the gap between market value and genuine affordability in Washington is widening, and developers are feeling the squeeze.
Major developments along H Street and Navy Yard are adding thousands of units to the market, signalling meaningful relief for tenants after years of tight supply.
As the capital's median home price hovers near $700,000, a perfect storm of supply constraints, rising institutional investment, and demographic shifts is reshaping who can afford to live here.
As the District's median hits $700k and neighborhoods like H Street reshape their identities, investors face a changed market where timing, location intelligence, and realistic yield expectations matter more than ever.
As Georgetown prices plateau and Capitol Hill inventory tightens, affluent buyers and institutional investors are reshaping Bethesda's high-end market into a formidable alternative.
Major construction initiatives along H Street and Navy Yard are transforming long-overlooked corridors into premium residential zones—but residents and investors face an uncertain timeline.
With projects sprouting across H Street and Navy Yard, understanding approval timelines and pre-construction pricing is now essential for entering the market.
As properties linger longer on the market and median prices hold steady, local auction houses and MLS data reveal a market cooling from its pandemic peak—but with stark neighbourhood divides.
Landlords betting on yield need to understand the District's evolving planning landscape—from transit-oriented development incentives to short-term rental caps.
As Capitol Hill prices soar past $1m, developers and nonprofits are betting big on Northwest DC's overlooked neighbourhood—and early signs suggest they're right.
As marquee residential towers rise across H Street and Navy Yard, the city's traditional power enclaves face a reckoning over exclusivity, accessibility, and what premium real estate means in 2026.