What’s in a Street Name? A Key to Home Values

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Homes are more expensive along streets with the words Beverly, Third, Brickell, Bayshore or Island. But Timber or Knoll street homes took longer to sell.

JACKSON, Ga. – Some street and neighborhood names are more associated with expensive homes than other names.

“What’s in a name?” Shakespeare wrote in “Romeo & Juliet.” “That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.”

In the U.S. housing market, some street and neighborhood names are sweeter than others in terms of being associated with expensive homes. Cinch Home Services, a home warranty seller, constructed a list of neighborhood and street names that are host to the most expensive homes in the country. It used data from the Census Bureau and real estate brokerage Redfin.

Addresses with “Beverly” in the name easily topped the list, posting an average home value of $4.3 million.

“This group likely included some seriously expensive outliers, like Beverly Hills, Calif., a city boasting homes worth $30 million and above,” Cinch said in commentary accompanying the list.

It said Beverly Hills holds the record for the most expensive house ever sold at auction – $165 million in 2021.

‘Third’ places second

The word “Third” took second place (excuse the pun), with homes having that name in the address posting an average value of $2.1 million. “Brickell” was third, also with an average value of $2.1 million. Brickell Avenue is one of the most expensive streets in Miami.

“Bayshore” was fourth at $2 million, and “Island” was fifth at $1.9 million. Other water-oriented names that fared well were “Lakeside,” seventh at $1.8 million; “Ocean,” ninth at $1.7 million; and “Pacific,” 10th at $1.6 million.

Properties near a clean (or even dirty) body of water, of course, are often the most expensive.

Names by median income

Cinch also ranked the names of neighborhoods associated with the highest median incomes. No. 1 was “Boca” at $72,500. That presumably includes the tony Boca Raton, Fla.

“Woodlands” was second at $70,800. That presumably includes upscale Woodlands, Texas. “Legacy” was third at $67,100.

“San” was fourth at $66,200. That presumably includes San Francisco and San Jose, Calif. Huntington was fifth at $65,200. That presumably includes Huntington Beach, Calif.

Streets by time on the market

Cinch also rated street names by homes that spent the least amount of time on the market before changing hands. “Fauntleroy” topped the list at 23 days. “Fauntleroy” comes from old French and means “son of the king.” So perhaps these homes have a patina of royalty.

“Avalon’ placed second at 30 days. “Dawson” was third, also at 30 days; “Ivy” was fourth, also at 30 days; and “Residence” was fifth at 32 days.

The worst homes to sell were on Timber Street. That took 410 days. Knoll was the second worst at 382 days.

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