Neighborhoods · 30309

Ansley Park.

Atlanta's first planned community — 1904 garden suburb energy, intact a century later.

Ansley Park is a planned neighborhood built in 1904 by Edwin Ansley as the first automobile-era residential development in the city — wide streets that took the new technology into account, generous lots, and a string of small parks threaded through.

What remained: the original street grid, the parks (Winn Park, McClatchey Park, Iverson Park among them), and a housing stock dominated by 1900s–1930s estate homes on lots that would be impossible to assemble in 2026.

Buyers come here for the architecture, the quiet inside a city, and the proximity to Piedmont Park, the High Museum, and Midtown's energy — without sitting inside it.

The Market — Spring 2026

$1.3MMedian Sale Price
36Days on Market
2.5Months of Inventory
96.6%Sale-to-List Ratio

12-month rolling data · FMLS / Realtors Property Resource

Schools

Ansley Park is part of Atlanta Public Schools. The elementary assignment varies; the high school is Midtown High School.

Walkability

WalkScore around 78. Walkable to Piedmont Park, the High Museum, the Atlanta Botanical Garden, and the restaurants concentrated on the southern edge near 14th Street.

The current dynamic

Ansley Park remains a seller's market — 2.5 months of inventory and a median sale around $1.3M tell that story. The limited supply of historic homes on this scale within the city keeps demand consistent. Homes that need extensive work sit longer than turn-key estate properties.

Price ranges

  • $800K – $1.2M — Smaller homes, properties needing renovation, condominiums in the few low-rise buildings
  • $1.2M – $2M — Most standard family homes, well-maintained turn-key properties
  • $2M – $4M+ — Larger estate homes, fully renovated landmarks, the prime blocks

What to ask before you buy here

  • Renovation history. Many Ansley Park homes have been thoughtfully updated over decades. Knowing what's been done — and what hasn't — affects both price and your next decade of carrying costs.
  • Historic district considerations. Significant portions of Ansley Park sit inside Atlanta's National Register district. This generally doesn't restrict ordinary renovation, but materially altering the exterior may require review.
  • Mature trees. Beautiful, valuable — and sometimes expensive. Ask about tree health, recent removals, and any open arborist reports.
  • HVAC and electrical systems. In century-old homes, mechanical systems matter.

Working in Ansley Park

A first conversation.

Whether you're considering a purchase, exploring whether your home is ready to list, or just want a current read on a specific street — reach out.

Schedule a Consultation