As prestige properties command premiums across Georgetown and Capitol Hill, the data reveals which neighbourhoods are delivering real yields—and which are betting on appreciation alone.
With median prices holding at $700,000 and competition fierce, first-time buyers need to know exactly where grants live and how to position themselves in neighborhoods from H Street to Navy Yard.
With the median home price holding steady at $700,000, DC's first-time homebuyers have more tools than ever—but knowing where to look and what programs exist can mean the difference between priced out and property owner.
A wave of mixed-use projects from Navy Yard to H Street is flooding the market with supply, but scarcity in established neighbourhoods is keeping Georgetown and Capitol Hill prices firmly above $1 million.
Once overlooked, the neighbourhood along Georgia Avenue is attracting serious capital as transit access and cultural momentum reshape its investment profile.
Ambitious mixed-use projects along H Street and Navy Yard are flooding the market with fresh inventory, giving tenants rare leverage in a city where median rents near $2,200 for a one-bedroom.
As grants expand and financing options widen, Petworth is reshaping itself from overlooked to unmissable—and early movers are capitalizing on prices still below the city median.
As Washington's median home price climbs toward $750,000, patient capital backing mixed-income developments is delivering steady returns while reshaping neighborhoods from H Street to Anacostia.
From Waterfront to Midtown, a wave of ultra-premium projects is redefining where Washington's wealthiest choose to live—and what they're willing to pay.
As yields tighten and competition intensifies, savvy landlords are shifting strategy to survive in a market where the median sits at $700k and rising rents no longer guarantee returns.
Stricter affordable housing mandates for new projects are already forcing builders to recalibrate—with ripple effects across the city's most coveted neighborhoods.
With median prices still 20% below Capitol Hill and a pipeline of mixed-use projects reshaping Georgia Avenue, Petworth is attracting investors who missed the H Street boom.
With vacancy rates falling and rents climbing across the District, property investors are seeing returns that haven't materialized since 2021—but the numbers tell a more complex story than headlines suggest.
With median prices hovering around $700k and yields compressed across the District, newcomers need a strategic playbook to find cash flow in this competitive market.