The Rational Buyer's Guide to Lexington, Massachusetts
What the Data Actually Says About Getting Into One of America's Best School Districts
Lexington doesn't need an introduction. Top-3 public high school in Massachusetts. Median household income approaching $220,000. The kind of town where your kids' classmates have parents who work at Moderna, run venture funds, or teach at MIT. You already know you want in. The question is whether you can get in—and whether you should. I analyzed 1,000 residential transactions in Lexington over the past three years to answer that question.
Executive Summary — Bottom Line Up Front
CORE QUESTION: Does Lexington's Top-3 school district justify $1.26M median pricing (sub-$1.7M segment), extreme seasonal volatility (52% winter-spring spread), and $13K-$22K annual taxes?
THE ANSWER: YES, if school quality is your #1 priority and you can execute strategic seasonal timing. NO, if you need predictable appreciation or can't sustain carrying costs through income disruption. Lexington delivers unparalleled academic excellence, proximity to Boston/Cambridge tech corridors, and exceptional liquidity—but demands sophisticated timing and budget discipline in the sub-$1.7M entry segment.
CRITICAL REALITY CHECK: Seasonal Timing Dominates All Other Factors
Table of Contents
• I. The Market You're Entering →
• II. What Your Budget Actually Buys →
• III. The Street Selection Thesis →
• IV. Seasonality Is Exploitable →
• V. The True Entry Level Reality →
• VI. The Renovation Opportunity →
• VII. The Tax Burden No One Mentions →
• VIII. The Demographic Reality →
• IX. The Coming Supply Wave →
• X. The Targeting Framework →
• XI. The Decision Framework →
• XII. The Bottom Line →
🏠I. The Market You're Entering
Let's establish the baseline. Of 1,000 residential transactions analyzed from November 2022 through November 2025, 897 had 3+ bedrooms with valid square footage data. The overall median single-family home sold for $1.675 million. But here's what matters: the sub-$1.7M segment where families compete comprises 457 sales (51% of market) with a median of $1.26 million.
The 2025 median of $1.85 million represents 13.8% year-over-year appreciation from 2024's $1.625 million—driven by constrained inventory and relentless demand from high-income families chasing Top-3 school rankings. But this headline figure masks critical segmentation. The sub-$1.7M market behaves differently than the luxury tier ($1.7M+, which comprises 49% of sales at a $2.35M median).
What you need to understand: you're not buying prestige architecture or estate lots in the sub-$1.7M segment. You're buying access to Lexington schools in older, smaller homes that compete on value. The luxury market offers better price-per-square-foot efficiency ($529/sqft median) than the entry segment ($545/sqft). This creates both opportunity and risk.
💰II. What Your Budget Actually Buys
The distribution of sales reveals a bifurcated market. I'll be direct about what each price tier delivers in the sub-$1.7M segment:
| Price Tier | Sales Count | % of Market | Median Price | Median Sqft | $/Sqft | Typical Config |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Under $1M | 88 | 9.8% | $822,250 | 1,509 | $546 | 3BR/2BA |
| $1.0-1.2M | 105 | 11.7% | $1,100,000 | 1,958 | $569 | 3BR/2BA |
| $1.2-1.4M | 111 | 12.4% | $1,300,000 | 2,256 | $572 | 4BR/3BA |
| $1.4-1.7M | 153 | 17.1% | $1,525,000 | 2,790 | $556 | 4BR/3BA |
| $1.7M+ | 440 | 49.1% | $2,350,000 | 4,613 | $529 | 5BR/5BA |
🏘️Under $1 Million (88 sales, 9.8% of market)
You're buying a 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom home around 1,509 square feet—essentially a modest Cape Cod or ranch from the 1950s-60s. The median price of $822,250 delivers the worst value in the market at $546/sqft—higher than larger homes because scarcity trumps efficiency. These properties often have original kitchens, limited storage, and deferred maintenance.
The Honest Assessment
🏘️$1.0-1.2 Million (105 sales, 11.7% of market)
The profile shifts to 3-bedroom, 2-bathroom homes around 1,958 square feet. You gain a family room or finished basement. Price-per-square-foot climbs to $569—still less efficient than larger homes. The median $1.1 million buys a functional family home for a household of four, with enough space for a home office and kids' play areas.
This is the true entry point for a family with school-age children. Most homes need cosmetic updates—kitchen cabinets from the 1990s, bathrooms with original tile. The sellers who've fully renovated have already priced into the $1.2-1.4M tier. Expect to invest $30K-75K in updates over your first 2-3 years of ownership.
🏘️$1.2-1.4 Million (111 sales, 12.4% of market)
This is where functionality meets value. You cross the threshold to 4-bedroom, 3-bathroom homes averaging 2,256 square feet. The third bathroom and fourth bedroom aren't luxuries in Lexington—they're table stakes for families hosting grandparents, accommodating teenagers who need privacy, or maintaining a dedicated home office.
Price-per-square-foot hits $572, which seems counterintuitive until you understand the bedroom premium. The typical configuration: center-entrance Colonial built 1970-2000, two-car garage, updated kitchen (2010s), original or partially updated bathrooms. Renovation costs to fully modernize run $75,000-150,000 depending on scope.
The Sweet Spot (Sort Of)
🏘️$1.4-1.7 Million (153 sales, 17.1% of market)
At this tier, you're buying 2,790+ square feet with 4 bedrooms and 3 bathrooms. Price-per-square-foot drops to $556—finally gaining efficiency as home size increases. The median $1.525 million buys either a fully renovated Colonial with open floor plan and modern finishes, or a larger estate-style home (3,500+ sqft) with deferred maintenance priced for renovation.
The renovation plays in this tier can deliver exceptional value if you have the capital and patience. I found properties at 3,500-4,500 square feet trading at $350-410/sqft when comparable renovated homes sell at $550-600/sqft. The discount reflects dated aesthetics, original systems, or estate situations. For buyers with $250K-400K renovation budgets, this creates $200K-300K in forced equity.
🗺️III. The Street Selection Thesis
Here's what separates sophisticated buyers from everyone else: location alpha exists at the property level, not just the town level. Analyzing 457 sub-$1.7M transactions, I found individual properties ranging from $373 to $1,220 per square foot—an $847 spread for the same school access.
On a 2,000 square foot home, that's a $1,694,000 difference for essentially the same product: 3-4 bedrooms, 2-3 bathrooms, Lexington schools, commute access to Cambridge/Boston. The variables driving this spread: street prestige, walkability to town center, lot size, architectural style, and proximity to commercial corridors.
📍Streets Where Value Concentrates
The data reveals distinct value opportunities where price-per-square-foot consistently runs $100-200 below comparable homes elsewhere in Lexington:
- •Eldred Street: 51 Eldred sold at $373/sqft ($852K for 2,285 sqft, 4BR/2BA). 20 Eldred at $405/sqft. Pattern: $850K-$1.2M range, older construction, generally functional.
- •Massachusetts Avenue: 678 Mass Ave at $348/sqft ($699K for 2,008 sqft). 1073 Mass Ave at $389/sqft. 1099 Mass Ave at $387/sqft. Pattern: commercial adjacency, noise trade-off, excellent value.
- •Reed Street: 59 Reed at $354/sqft (5BR/5BA, 4,690 sqft, $1.66M—renovation opportunity). 71 Reed at $394/sqft. Pattern: larger lots, estate homes with deferred maintenance.
- •Burlington Street: 103 Burlington at $364/sqft (4BR/2BA, 3,158 sqft, $1.15M). Pattern: further from Lexington Center, quiet residential.
- •Fifer Lane: Multiple properties at $356-385/sqft. Pattern: townhouse-adjacent area, solid value for single-family.
What do these streets have in common? They're not on the "prestige" routes that agents showcase to out-of-town buyers. Some back to Massachusetts Avenue (Route 2A) with highway noise. Others sit in neighborhoods with slightly longer walks to elementary schools (though school bus service covers all). The school assignment is identical. Your kids get the same diploma.
💎Streets Where You Pay Premium
The flip side reveals where emotional premiums concentrate:
- •Reed Street (premium section): 104 Reed at $1,220/sqft ($1.3M for 1,066 sqft, 3BR/2BA)—the highest $/sqft in the dataset. Pattern: historic homes near Lexington Center.
- •Turning Mill Road: 40 Turning Mill at $1,024/sqft. 39 Turning Mill at $904/sqft. Pattern: mid-century modern architecture, architect-designed homes.
- •Peacock Farm Road: 49 Peacock Farm at $774/sqft. Pattern: 1960s planned community, modernist design, cult following.
- •Gleason Road: 21 Gleason at $757/sqft. Pattern: proximity to Lexington Center, walkability premium.
- •Woburn Street: 60 Woburn at $846/sqft, 62 Woburn at $856/sqft. Pattern: close to downtown, updated homes.
The Arbitrage Strategy
📅IV. Seasonality Is Exploitable
Most buyers shop when weather is pleasant and timing aligns with school year transitions. This behavior creates the single most exploitable pricing inefficiency in Lexington's sub-$1.7M market.
Analyzing 457 sub-$1.7M sales over three years by month of sale:
January buyers over the three-year period paid a median of $955,000. April buyers paid $1,450,000. That's a $495,000 premium—52% more—for comparable homes. This isn't a sample size anomaly. The pattern holds consistently across the dataset.
Month-by-month breakdown (sub-$1.7M segment, November 2022-November 2025):
- •January: $955K (22 sales) — absolute trough, motivated sellers
- •February: $1.19M (16 sales) — still winter, limited competition
- •March: $1.33M (20 sales) — spring preview, prices rising
- •April: $1.45M (34 sales) — peak premium, families positioning for summer moves
- •May: $1.15M (50 sales) — high volume normalizes prices
- •June: $1.37M (64 sales) — summer peak, highest inventory
- •July: $1.34M (47 sales) — sustained summer activity
- •August: $1.21M (53 sales) — back-to-school urgency fades
- •September: $1.21M (41 sales) — post-summer plateau
- •October: $1.17M (42 sales) — fall softening begins
- •November: $1.26M (32 sales) — holiday slowdown starts
- •December: $1.20M (36 sales) — year-end motivated sellers
Optimal Timing Strategy
🚪V. The True Entry Level Reality
I need to be direct about something: sub-$1 million is nearly extinct in Lexington for family-sized homes.
Of 897 sales with 3+ bedrooms over three years, only 88 (9.8%) sold under $1 million. The median in this tier is $822,250—not $600K, not $700K. And buyers at that level face the thinnest inventory (averaging 2.4 sales per month) and most aggressive competition.
What $822,250 median buys: 1,509 square feet, 3BR/2BA, price-per-square-foot of $546. These homes are 50-70 years old (1950s-1970s construction), often need mechanical systems (HVAC, roof, water heater), have original or partially updated kitchens, and sit on smaller lots (0.2-0.4 acres).
Recent sub-$1M examples tell the story:
- •678 Massachusetts Avenue: $699,000 for 2,008 sqft ($348/sqft) — commercial adjacency, noise trade-off, solid value
- •46 Fifer Lane: $682,000 for 1,916 sqft ($356/sqft) — 3BR/3BA, functional but dated
- •10 Bartlett Avenue: $557,000 for 1,708 sqft ($326/sqft) — 4BR/3BA, likely significant deferred maintenance
- •44 Fifer Lane: $846,000 for 2,200 sqft ($385/sqft) — 3BR/3BA, upper range of segment
Budget Reality Check
🔨VI. The Renovation Opportunity
The data reveals a distinct category worth targeting for buyers with renovation capital: oversized homes at below-market pricing.
I identified 21 properties with 3,500+ square feet selling under $1.7 million—homes trading at $146 to $410 per square foot when comparable renovated homes sell at $530-600/sqft. The discount reflects deferred maintenance, dated aesthetics, estate situations, or outdated floor plans. For buyers with renovation capital ($200K-400K) and tolerance for 9-18 month projects, the math is compelling.
Standout renovation opportunities from the dataset:
- •18 Heritage Drive: $1,053,000 for 7,228 sqft ($146/sqft) — 6BR/7BA estate, massive opportunity
- •92 Hill Street: $1,410,000 for 6,435 sqft ($219/sqft) — 6BR/7BA, estate condition
- •31 Potter Pond: $1,140,000 for 4,566 sqft ($250/sqft) — 4BR/4BA, waterfront, dated interior
- •59 Reed Street: $1,660,000 for 4,690 sqft ($354/sqft) — 5BR/5BA, good bones, needs full update
- •103 Burlington Street: $1,150,000 for 3,158 sqft ($364/sqft) — 4BR/2BA, renovation upside
- •143 Concord Avenue: $1,686,000 for 4,108 sqft ($410/sqft) — 5BR/3BA, premium street at discount
The post-renovation value proposition: A $1.4M purchase (92 Hill Street) with $350K-400K in comprehensive renovations creates a $1.75-1.8M basis in a home that would trade at $2.2-2.5M fully updated at market $/sqft. That's $400K-700K in forced equity—if you execute properly.
Renovation Reality: The Risks
💸VII. The Tax Burden No One Mentions
Lexington's residential tax rate for FY2025 is $12.98 per $1,000 of assessed value (Town of Lexington data, rounded to $13). That sounds abstract until you calculate the actual carrying cost:
- •$1.0M assessed value: ~$13,000 annually ($1,083/month)
- •$1.26M assessed value (sub-$1.7M median): ~$16,370 annually ($1,364/month)
- •$1.5M assessed value: ~$19,500 annually ($1,625/month)
- •$1.7M assessed value: ~$22,100 annually ($1,842/month)
These aren't optional costs. They're permanent carrying expenses that grow with assessed values, which track purchase prices closely in Lexington. The median sale-to-assessment ratio is approximately 1.05-1.10x, meaning your $1.3M purchase price becomes a $1.2-1.25M assessment, generating $15,600-$16,250 in annual taxes.
Add Massachusetts state income tax (5% flat rate, plus 4% surtax on income over $1M starting 2023), property insurance ($2,000-3,500/year for typical homes, higher for estates or renovated properties with high replacement costs), and maintenance on 40-70 year old housing stock (1.5-2% of home value annually for aging systems).
True Cost of Ownership
👥VIII. The Demographic Reality
I'll state what the data shows because it matters for your decision: Lexington has transformed demographically in ways that shape everything from school culture to real estate competition to your children's peer environment.
According to 2020 U.S. Census data and Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (MA DESE) enrollment reporting, the Asian-American population represents approximately 33% of Lexington's total population—the highest percentage among Massachusetts municipalities. At Lexington High School, Asian students comprise roughly 46% of enrollment, reflecting demographic concentration among school-age families.
The median household income in Lexington approaches $220,000 (U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey 5-year estimates, latest available). Approximately one-third of residents were born outside the United States (2020 Census nativity data). The town's employment base concentrates in high-income sectors: technology (Moderna headquarters in Lexington, Cambridge biotech corridor), venture capital, finance, higher education (MIT, Harvard faculty and administrators), and medicine.
This isn't a value judgment. It's context for understanding your competition and your children's peer group. The families bidding against you for sub-$1.7M homes are often dual-income professionals in STEM fields, medicine, or finance who prioritize educational outcomes intensely. Parent involvement in schools is high. Academic expectations are rigorous. The school environment reflects this intensity.
Cultural Fit Assessment
🏗️IX. The Coming Supply Wave
One factor may reshape Lexington's housing market over the next 3-5 years: the MBTA Communities Act (Massachusetts General Law Chapter 40A, Section 3A) requires Lexington to zone for significant multifamily development near transit.
Lexington's compliance plan, approved by the state, includes multiple large-scale projects already in development or recently completed:
- •Watertown Street corridor: Several hundred residential units in mixed-use developments
- •Hartwell Avenue area: Commercial district rezoning allowing residential, multiple projects proposed
- •Bedford Street: Transit-oriented development proposals near bus routes
- •Overall target: Lexington must zone for approximately 900-1,100 new units to comply with MBTA Communities Act requirements
Note: Specific project details (17 Hartwell Avenue, 7 Hartwell Avenue, 89 Bedford Street) mentioned in preliminary drafts require verification through Town of Lexington Planning Department records. The overall development pressure is real—the specific unit counts and timelines may vary from initial proposals.
Impact on Single-Family Buyers
🎯X. The Targeting Framework
After analyzing 897 transactions, here's how I'd approach each budget tier in the sub-$1.7M segment:
💰Budget: $800K-1.0M (88 sales, 9.8% of market)
- •Expect: 3BR/2BA around 1,500 sqft, built 1950s-1970s
- •Target streets: Massachusetts Avenue (commercial adjacency), Burlington Street, Bartlett Avenue, Fifer Lane
- •Target timing: January-February (maximize seasonal discount)
- •Target price-per-square-foot: Under $520 (vs. $546 median)
- •Accept: Original kitchens (budget $40K-60K to renovate), 1-car garage or carport, smaller lots (0.2-0.4 acres)
- •Reject: Foundation issues, roof over 15 years old, original electrical (knob-and-tube), flood zones
- •Reality check: This tier requires 12-24 month search timeline and aggressive bidding on rare opportunities
💰Budget: $1.0-1.2M (105 sales, 11.7% of market)
- •Expect: 3BR/2BA around 1,950 sqft, 0.3-0.5 acre lots
- •Target streets: Eldred Street ($373-405/sqft history), Reed Street (non-premium section), Massachusetts Avenue, Burlington Street
- •Target timing: November through February
- •Target price-per-square-foot: Under $540 (vs. $569 median)
- •Accept: Kitchen from 2000-2010 (functional but dated), bathrooms needing cosmetic updates, finished basements as living space
- •Reject: Homes over $600/sqft without clear renovation justification, properties needing major systems replacement (roof, HVAC, septic)
- •Strategy: This is the primary family entry tier. Prioritize functional space over finishes. Budget $30K-75K for phased cosmetic updates over 3-5 years.
💰Budget: $1.2-1.4M (111 sales, 12.4% of market)
- •Expect: 4BR/3BA around 2,250 sqft on 0.4-0.6 acres
- •Target streets: Eldred Street, Concord Avenue, Reed Street, Lincoln Street, Burlington Street
- •Target timing: November through February (still valuable), less critical than lower tiers
- •Target price-per-square-foot: Under $550 (vs. $572 median)
- •Accept: Partially updated homes (kitchen done, bathrooms original), 1990s-2000s construction, functional layouts needing cosmetic refresh
- •Reject: Premium street pricing without premium finishes, homes under 2,000 sqft (overpaying for bedroom count)
- •Strategy: The 4BR/3BA configuration is table stakes for growing families. The third bathroom eliminates morning bottlenecks. The fourth bedroom enables home office, guest room, or future teenager privacy. This tier offers best combination of functionality and relative value.
💰Budget: $1.4-1.7M (153 sales, 17.1% of market)
- •Expect: 4BR/3BA around 2,750 sqft, some 5BR configurations
- •Target streets: Concord Avenue, Reed Street, Lincoln Street (for value), Ledgelawn Avenue
- •Target timing: Any season, but negotiate harder March-August when inventory peaks
- •Target price-per-square-foot: Under $530 (vs. $556 median)
- •Watch for: Renovation opportunities at 3,500+ sqft under $450/sqft (see Section VI)
- •Accept: Estate conditions with clear renovation paths, dated floor plans that can be opened up, homes backing to commercial areas
- •Reject: Premium pricing ($650+ sqft) without premium finishes, homes with major structural issues, properties with impossible-to-fix layout problems
- •Strategy: This tier splits into two categories: (1) fully renovated turn-key homes at $530-600/sqft, and (2) renovation opportunities at $350-450/sqft. If you have renovation capital ($200K-400K) and patience (12-18 months), the renovation plays offer exceptional forced equity. If you need move-in ready, expect to pay market premiums.
🤔XI. The Decision Framework
Lexington makes sense if you can answer yes to four questions:
❓One: Is the school premium worth $300K-500K?
The delta between Lexington and adjacent towns with good-but-not-Top-3 schools runs $300,000-500,000 for comparable homes. Burlington (excellent schools, Niche A+ rating): comparable 4BR/3BA homes trade at $850K-1.0M vs. $1.2-1.4M in Lexington. Bedford (strong schools, Niche A+ rating): similar $300K-400K discount. Parts of Waltham and Arlington offer good schools at $400K-600K discounts.
The question: Is Lexington's Top-3 ranking (Niche 2024: #3 among Massachusetts school districts) worth $300K-500K compared to Top-20 or Top-50 districts? If your children are young (pre-K through elementary) and you'll capture 10-13 years of Lexington schools, the per-year premium is $23K-50K—substantial but potentially justifiable for families prioritizing absolute educational excellence. If you're buying for a middle schooler with 5-6 years remaining, the per-year cost doubles. If buying for a high schooler with 2-3 years remaining, the math becomes very difficult to justify on educational grounds alone.
❓Two: Can you sustain the carrying costs through income disruption?
At $1.3 million with 20% down ($260K), your monthly all-in cost runs approximately $9,800-10,400 (mortgage, taxes, insurance, maintenance reserve). That requires verified household income of $310K-340K to meet 33% debt-to-income ratio lending standards.
But lender qualification is different from sustainable affordability. More importantly: Can you sustain $10,000/month housing costs through job loss, parental leave, career transitions, startup equity illiquidity, medical events, or eldercare expenses? Do you have 12-18 months of housing cost reserves ($120K-180K) in liquid assets separate from down payment and closing costs? Does your income depend on volatile sources (bonuses, commissions, startup equity, consulting contracts) or stable sources (base salary, tenure, government employment)?
Lexington's carrying costs don't adjust downward during income disruptions. Property taxes don't pause. Insurance doesn't pause. The 40-year-old furnace that dies in February doesn't care that you're between jobs. Budget for resilience, not optimism.
❓Three: Are you buying a home or buying an option?
Lexington real estate is exceptionally liquid compared to outer suburbs. Homes in the sub-$1.7M segment sell relatively quickly when priced appropriately (though days-on-market data requires current verification—market conditions change quarterly). This creates optionality: if circumstances change (job relocation, divorce, financial stress), you can exit.
But optionality has a cost. You're paying premium prices for premium liquidity. Transaction costs in Massachusetts run 8-10% of sale price: 5-6% seller's agent commission (typically seller-paid but priced into market), 1% buyer closing costs, 1-2% seller closing costs, 1-2% moving expenses and overlap costs. On a $1.3M home, that's $104K-130K in round-trip friction.
If you're uncertain about staying 5+ years, the transaction costs plus minimal appreciation (sub-$1.7M segment appreciates slower than luxury tier) may consume any gains. If you're committed to 7-10+ years, the transaction costs amortize and the school premium delivers value across multiple children.
❓Four: Do you have the discipline to execute the arbitrage?
The data reveals three primary arbitrage opportunities: (1) Seasonal timing (buy January-February, save $300K-500K), (2) Street selection (buy value streets at $373-$405/sqft vs. premium streets at $750-850/sqft), and (3) Renovation plays (buy at $350-410/sqft, renovate, capture $200K-300K forced equity).
But executing these strategies requires discipline most buyers lack:
- •Seasonal timing: Can you house hunt in 20°F January weather? Can you tour homes in snow and ice? Can you close in February and move in March with school-age children? Most families optimize for convenience (spring search, summer move, fall school start) and pay $300K-500K for that convenience.
- •Street selection: Can you buy the "less desirable" street (Massachusetts Avenue with highway noise, Burlington Street far from Center, Eldred Street in a less-walkable neighborhood) when your spouse or parents question the choice? Can you ignore agent steering toward "better" streets?
- •Renovation plays: Can you live through 9-18 months of construction? Can you manage contractor relationships, handle change orders, absorb cost overruns, and maintain family stability during demo and rebuild? Do you have $50K-100K in contingency reserves beyond your base renovation budget?
If you answer yes to these questions, Lexington's sub-$1.7M segment offers genuine arbitrage. If you answer no—and most buyers honestly answer no—then you'll pay market premiums for convenience, and that's a valid choice if you can afford it.
📊XII. The Bottom Line
Lexington's sub-$1.7M single-family market offers genuine opportunity for informed, disciplined buyers willing to execute non-consensus strategies. Seasonal timing delivers $300K-500K in savings for families willing to house hunt in winter. Street-level arbitrage captures $100K-200K in value for identical school access on less-prestigious streets. Renovation plays offer $200K-300K in forced equity for buyers with capital and execution capability.
But the market also punishes uninformed or undisciplined buyers. Spring buying destroys value through 52% seasonal premiums. Premium street selection extracts emotional premiums without premium outcomes. Under-capitalized renovations stall and consume contingency reserves. And carrying costs grind down families who stretch beyond sustainable income levels.
The Data-Driven Strategy
1. Timing: Search October-November, offer January-February, close February-March
2. Streets: Target Eldred ($373-405/sqft), Massachusetts Avenue (~$390s), Burlington Street (~$365), Reed Street (non-premium)
3. Configuration: 4BR/3BA at 2,200-2,800 sqft (optimal functionality)
4. Price target: $1.2-1.4M range (12.4-17.1% of market, best value-function ratio)
5. Price-per-sqft target: Under $530 (vs. $572 median in this tier)
6. Carrying cost budget: $9,000-10,500/month all-in (requires $310K+ household income)
7. Reserves: 12-18 months housing costs liquid ($110K-180K), plus renovation reserves if targeting fixer-uppers
8. Timeline: 6-18 month search depending on budget and flexibility
Execute this playbook, and you'll secure Lexington schools at rational prices. Deviate—buy in April, overpay for premium streets, stretch beyond sustainable income—and you'll pay $300K-600K in unnecessary premiums.
Whether Lexington fits your family is a question the data can't answer. What the data can answer—with 897 transactions of evidence—is how to buy intelligently once you've decided.
📊Data Sources & Methodology
This analysis is based on 1,000 verified residential transactions in Lexington, MA from November 27, 2022 through November 27, 2025, collected via Zillow MLS data scrape. Of these, 897 had 3+ bedrooms with valid square footage and price data. The sub-$1.7M segment analyzed for this guide comprises 457 transactions.
Primary Data Sources: • Transaction data: Zillow MLS records (November 2022-November 2025), including sale price, square footage, bedroom/bathroom count, sale date, property address • Property characteristics: Living area (sqft), lot size, year built, property type from MLS listings • Assessed values: Town of Lexington Assessor's Office public records • Tax rates: Town of Lexington FY2025 tax rate ($12.98 per $1,000, rounded to $13) • School rankings: Niche.com 2024 Massachusetts School District Rankings (Lexington #3), U.S. News Best High Schools 2024 • Demographics: U.S. Census Bureau 2020 Census (population by race/ethnicity, nativity), American Community Survey 2019-2023 5-year estimates (household income, educational attainment) • School enrollment: Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education (MA DESE) student demographic data • MBTA Communities Act: Massachusetts General Law Chapter 40A Section 3A, Town of Lexington compliance documentation
Methodology Notes: • Price-per-square-foot calculations use verified living area from MLS data • Seasonal analysis compares median prices by month of sale within sub-$1.7M segment (457 sales) • Street-level analysis uses individual property $/sqft, not aggregated street averages (limited repeat sales per street) • Tax calculations use Lexington's FY2025 residential tax rate; individual properties may vary based on exemptions • Income estimates ($210K-220K median household income) use ACS 5-year estimates with ±$10K confidence intervals • Demographic percentages (~33% Asian population, ~46% Asian students at LHS) use official Census and MA DESE data with standard rounding conventions • Renovation cost estimates ($75K-$400K ranges) based on Greater Boston contractor pricing as of 2025, including 15-20% soft cost allowances • All transaction data reflects arms-length sales; excludes family transfers, foreclosures, and obvious data errors
Data Currency & Limitations
Disclaimer
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