Anonymous wrote:Your future self will thank you if you move WOTP park along the redline. Best for ease of commute and top schools. DuPont for Ross. Cleveland Park for Eaton. And Van Ness for Hearst/Murch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If I were you I will rent in Shepherd Park. You will probably get inbound for pk3 and k for SES. It is a great school and great neighborhood. It is affordable if you rent but not that affordable to buy. There is not a lot of houses to rent though You could walk to the red line and metro to NoMA and DuPont. I do that every morning (Noma). Btw my neighbor is renting her place for one year or so and it is probably within your budget. Good luck
I cosign this rec. But agree there are very few rentals (I looked here a year before buying and couldn't find any).
Anonymous wrote:Hi! We are relocating to DC in about a month for work and are trying to figure out where to begin. Our understanding is that since we’ve missed the deadline for the lottery we should plan to rent in-boundary for a school we are ok with for our kindergartener, and hope she can pull in the 3 year old. My husband’s soon to be office is in NOMA and mine will be between DuPont and Logan Circle. We’ll be renting at first with the intent to buy in a year or so. Prefer to live east of the park and keep rent below $4k per month (less if we are going to have to send the 3yo to private preschool.) Where do we begin? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Your future self will thank you if you move WOTP park along the redline. Best for ease of commute and top schools. DuPont for Ross. Cleveland Park for Eaton. And Van Ness for Hearst/Murch.
Anonymous wrote:I would rent in a place where you have longer term achool optipns. Ross is fine long term but a lot of The other school suggested are not options you want past 2-4th grade. You need to think about the middle school fees now.
Anonymous wrote:If I were you I will rent in Shepherd Park. You will probably get inbound for pk3 and k for SES. It is a great school and great neighborhood. It is affordable if you rent but not that affordable to buy. There is not a lot of houses to rent though You could walk to the red line and metro to NoMA and DuPont. I do that every morning (Noma). Btw my neighbor is renting her place for one year or so and it is probably within your budget. Good luck
Anonymous wrote:Hi! We are relocating to DC in about a month for work and are trying to figure out where to begin. Our understanding is that since we’ve missed the deadline for the lottery we should plan to rent in-boundary for a school we are ok with for our kindergartener, and hope she can pull in the 3 year old. My husband’s soon to be office is in NOMA and mine will be between DuPont and Logan Circle. We’ll be renting at first with the intent to buy in a year or so. Prefer to live east of the park and keep rent below $4k per month (less if we are going to have to send the 3yo to private preschool.) Where do we begin? Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:If I were you, I'd rent in boundary for Seaton, Thomson, or Garrison. All would likely be able to get your three year old in as IB with sibling enrolled and will work for your K kid for several years (or longer). You could do the same on the Hill at Brent, Maury, or Ludlow-Taylor, but with a slightly more annoying commute.
When you buy, you'll likely have the choice to keep your kids at the school where they start or to move them to the new IB school. DCPS guidance on this is fuzzy and changes all the time but most people find this works.