The definitive guide to buying, selling, and understanding Bethesda real estate.
The Guide · Contents
Three chapters cover the market end to end. Start anywhere — each stands on its own and opens into a full resource.
A working reference to every Bethesda-area community — pricing, schools, inventory, commute, and architecture.
Explore the chapter →The high end on its own terms — estates, new construction, and what moves Bethesda’s top of market.
Explore the chapter →The area’s mid-century modern architecture, the neighborhoods that hold it, and the buyers who seek it.
Explore the chapter →Bethesda isn’t one market but several — downtown condos near the Metro, the estates of Bradley Hills, the architect-designed mid-century modern streets of Carderock Springs — each moving on its own terms, street to street.
This guide brings them together. The neighborhood-level detail, the current market data, the architecture that shapes value, and the listings themselves live in one place and stay current — a single, continuously evolving reference rather than a scattering of pages. It’s built so that wherever you begin, the next answer is already here.
It’s written and kept current by Pey Behin, a Bethesda real estate agent who works the way an analyst does — reading the data, tracking each neighborhood, and turning it into clear guidance for buyers and sellers. Begin with the neighborhood guides or the mid-century modern chapter.
Not area pages — a working reference to every Bethesda-area community. Each entry covers what homes actually cost there, how fast they sell, the schools, the commute, and the architecture that defines the streets.
Bethesda’s luxury market follows its own logic. Architect-built estates in Bradley Hills and Edgemoor, new construction on rare in-town lots, and trophy properties that often trade before they reach the open market — here value turns on land, provenance, and finish as much as square footage, with buyers from across the DC region and beyond.
This chapter follows that segment closely: what’s available, what’s selling, and what separates a strong price from an aspirational one.
Bethesda holds one of the Washington area’s richest concentrations of mid-century modern homes — from the architect-planned streets of Carderock Springs to examples scattered through Bannockburn and Bradley Hills. For design-minded buyers these houses form their own market, with distinct pricing, preservation questions, and demand.
This chapter is the reference for it: where the homes are, what shapes their value, and how a well-kept example should be brought to market.
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Browse available listings in Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Potomac, and surrounding DC Metro communities. Filter by neighborhood, school district, price, and more.
Search Now →Get a free, no-obligation home value estimate with a local expert analysis based on the latest Bethesda and Montgomery County market data.
Get My Value →Have questions about buying, selling, or the market? I’m here to help. Reach out anytime — I respond quickly and personally.
Contact Pey →Common Questions
The median sold price in Bethesda is roughly $1.4M (2025, ZIP 20816), up about 5.86% year over year, while the current median list price runs higher. Prices vary widely by neighborhood and home type, from Metro-close condos to multimillion-dollar estates.
The largest concentration is Carderock Springs, an architect-planned mid-century modern community, with additional examples in Bannockburn and Bradley Hills. These homes carry their own pricing dynamics and buyer pool.
It depends on what you are weighing: schools (Chevy Chase), walkability and dining (Downtown Bethesda), space and privacy (Potomac), or transit and new development (North Bethesda). Each neighborhood guide compares prices, inventory, schools, and home styles.
Bethesda remains an in-demand, seller-leaning market with tight inventory in its most sought-after neighborhoods. Conditions shift week to week, so it is worth reviewing current list prices, days on market, and inventory before you act.
Request a valuation built from current Bethesda and Montgomery County comparables and live micro-market data: a defensible number grounded in recent sales, not an automated estimate.
Bethesda is served by some of Maryland's top-rated public schools, including the Walt Whitman and Bethesda-Chevy Chase clusters. Because school assignment drives value, each neighborhood guide notes the schools a community feeds into.
Well-priced homes in desirable neighborhoods often move quickly, while higher price points and unique properties can take longer. Days on market shift by season and segment, so ask for the latest figures for your price range.
Bethesda's high end, including architect-built estates in Bradley Hills and Edgemoor, new construction on rare in-town lots, and trophy properties, often trades partly off-market, with value driven by land, provenance, and finish as much as square footage.
Bethesda sits in Montgomery County, where property tax runs roughly 0.95% of assessed value, though the exact rate and any municipal additions depend on the specific location.
You are not required to, but a local agent who follows each Bethesda neighborhood closely helps you price correctly, surface off-market opportunities, and negotiate, often saving more than the cost in a competitive market.
Ready to buy, sell, or just have questions about the Bethesda market? Reach out — I respond fast and I'm always happy to talk through your options.