| Oob = out of boundary |
People usually try to afford a SFH starting at about $800k+ "close in" - that is, closer to D.C. than not), TH or condo (starting at about $300k for a 2 BR "close in") in either Fairfax County, VA or Montgomery County, MD. *AND* it is *VERY* like the D.C. area (this includes Northern Virginia and parts of MD) to *not* be straightforward/helpful with information. They would rather try to act like you are, somehow, in the problem. It really is puzzling the first 1,000 times or so. It is really like no where else in that regard. But most "benefits" you could easily find elsewhere. GL, whatever you decide, OP. Whatever decision you make has to be for yourself, not anyone else! |
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Look in Fairfax, Arlington or MOntgomery Counties. PG schools are terrible. As the previous posters mentioned, you won't get much for $350K, but if schools are really important, you could look for a condo in a strong school district. You likely won't find anything in say the Langley or McLean school districts, but perhaps look in Vienna or Oakton or the area near Woodson HS. Another option, live in a less desirable school district where the homes are cheaper and look into private school financial aid. I am totally out of my depth here, but perhaps post a query on the private school board about likelihood of financial aid based on your household income. If your kids are really bright and hardworking, maybe you could get in to a private with aid.
Housing in this area is outrageous. I share your frustration. |
| We bought a townhouse in Gaithersburg -Montgomery County that was within your budget. We are in the Quince Orchard H.S. cluster which is well regarded even though it isn't one of the W schools. With your budget you probably cannot find anything in the W school areas - we tried and it was a no go. (W - Walter Johnson, Whitman, Wootton, Winston Churchill). It is also possible you could find something in the Richard Montgomery HS cluster which is also well regarded (this is in Rockville) |
| OP started this thread back in September and another poster decided to revive it this week. It's not clear the OP is still looking or reading. |
thanks for mentioning this. hate when that happens and I don't notice! |
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I think the best way to research school options is to a) figure out where you want to live/what commute is acceptable and what your budget is b) look at test scores (an incomplete picture, but informative)/demographics/student teacher ratio and all this info is accessible on greatschools.com. Then you decide whether you can handle the uncertainty of magnets and charters that comes with urban schools, or if you would rather have less choice but a very solid option, which impacts where you buy a house as well.
If you are considering privates, you can look on greatschools.com, although obviously test scores won't be there. Then you can look at the comments on greatschools/DCUM (take those with a grain of salt). You can also look at the city-data forum for some of the same general impressions. You can look at US news and world report for high schools and see how it ranks (again, sometimes informative, like how many students take APs, but no the full picture). Once you have a general idea of what you are looking for, you can skim the schools websites and get a sense of what the curriculum is like. You can also talk to neighbors/friends and, most importantly visit the schools. Good luck. |