Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is all very confusing![]()
I have what I think is a split foyer - when you enter we have a living room on the entry level and there are half a flight of stairs up to the kitchen, DR, family room, and bedrooms. Half a flight down is the basement - the laundry is down there along with a bedroom and bathroom.
For the first several years we used the main level living room as a "formal living room," meaning it was not used very often. We've put a TV and comfy couch down there now. I would avoid a split foyer if I was buying again, but I don't hate it.
It sounds like you have a split level home. Not a split foyer.
Anonymous wrote:I've never heard of "bi-level" but I've heard of split foyer and split level. Those are two different styles of houses. Evidently "bi level" is another way of saying split foyer. It's probably an effort to associate it with a split level which a higher tier house than a split foyer.
Here's a picture of a split foyer followed by it's entrance (the 'foyer' which has stairs up and down). The third picture is a traditional 60's/70's split level although there are many modern looking styles of split level with anywhere from 1-5 floors. Picture shown for reference to tell them apart and because you probably recognize the style.
![]()
![]()
Anonymous wrote:This is all very confusing![]()
I have what I think is a split foyer - when you enter we have a living room on the entry level and there are half a flight of stairs up to the kitchen, DR, family room, and bedrooms. Half a flight down is the basement - the laundry is down there along with a bedroom and bathroom.
For the first several years we used the main level living room as a "formal living room," meaning it was not used very often. We've put a TV and comfy couch down there now. I would avoid a split foyer if I was buying again, but I don't hate it.
Anonymous wrote:Split levels—entrance is to main living area (living room, dining room, kitchen). Walk up a 1/2 flight of stairs (6 steps) to bedroom level, walk down 1/2 flight to family room. Some have a below ground basement under that.
Bilevels— entrance is a foyer that has a 1/2 flight upstairs to main living area (including LR, DR, kitchen, bedrooms, and 1/2 flight down to family room/utility spaces.

Anonymous wrote:Does anyone truly know the difference? I feel that real estate ads use the two interchangeably and I don't really understand.
Would love to see home examples that depict the two options.
Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone truly know the difference? I feel that real estate ads use the two interchangeably and I don't really understand.
Would love to see home examples that depict the two options.
Thanks