We learned this morning that if you want to be able to afford a median price house in Seattle, you'll have to make $83K/year. That's a median price of $420K, per HSH.com's numbers. We decided it might be time to see what $420K gets you, then.
At any given moment there seem to be dozens of townhouses being designed, planned or built around Seattle. We took a look through the design review board archives to see what's currently in the pipeline and here's what we found.
Every so often we like to take a look around and see what this crazy housing market actually has to offer. Specifically, we look at what might be available in an affordable range to see if affordable can still mean livable.
Welcome to Curbed Comparisons, where we scour Seattle's rental listings to see what your budget will get you across the city. Since we learned that the median rent around Seattle is $1,790/month, we decided to find out what you can get for that.
Welcome back to Curbed Comparisons, where we scour Seattle's listings to see what your budget will get you across the city. Today we decided to find out what $300,000 can get you all around town. You tell us which lease you'd sign.
A bungalow in South Delridge has just that setting. It is a 720 square foot house on a 5,160 square foot lot. Instead of being surrounded by lawn, it is surrounded by a planned landscape of shrubs, bushes, and trees woven with a flagstone hardscape.
As the housing market has taken off in recent years, the number of million-dollar homes has followed suit. Based on numbers from Trulia, the Seattle region is now among the ten fastest-growing markets when it comes to seven-figure home sales.