Bothell WA real estate market 2026 small town

Bothell in 2026: How a Small Town Feel Became a Competitive Market

Bothell WA Real Estate market 2026: How a Small-Town Feel Became One of Seattle's Most Competitive Real Estate Markets | Aaron Robinson
Market Updates

Bothell WA Real Estate Market 2026: How a Small-Town Feel Became One of Seattle's Most Competitive Real Estate Markets

From a farming community most Washingtonians couldn't find on a map, to one of the most sought-after addresses on the Eastside. Here's the story behind the numbers.

By Aaron Robinson  ยท  Keller Williams Realty Bothell  ยท  May 2026

Bothell WA real estate market 2026 small-town feel

I have a dear friend who grew up in Bothell. She grew up in the south end of Snohomish County, and I grew up in Bonney Lake, down in Pierce County. Two places that most people in Washington couldn't have pointed to on a map thirty years ago. Two places that, today, people are competing hard to call home.

When she talks about growing up in Bothell, she talks about a farming community. Everyone knew each other. The pace was slow. The population was a fraction of what it is now, and the identity of the place was rooted in something quiet and local. When she goes back now, she says it's unrecognizable. Not in a sad way. In the way that something becomes itself more fully than you ever expected it could.

That is the Bothell story in 2026. And it is, genuinely, one of the more interesting real estate narratives in the entire Greater Seattle area.

The Origin Story: Small Town, Big Change

Bothell incorporated in 1909. For most of the twentieth century, it was exactly what my friend described: a quiet community in the south of Snohomish County, defined more by its agricultural roots and proximity to the Sammamish River than by any particular economic engine. It was, to most Washingtonians, unremarkable in the best possible way.

That started shifting in the 1990s and accelerated dramatically in the 2000s. The University of Washington Bothell campus opened in 1990. Canyon Park became a legitimate technology corridor. SR-522 and I-405 made Bothell increasingly accessible to both Seattle and Redmond. And then the tech sector exploded, and workers who couldn't afford Bellevue or Kirkland looked north and realized that Bothell offered something those cities were starting to lose: actual space, actual community feel, and prices that still made sense for what you were getting.

That inflection point is what made Bothell. Full stop.

Here's what I would say about growth stories like this one: they are always about the same thing underneath. Not square footage. Not proximity to a highway. Not the school district, the coffee shops, or the trail access, even though all of those things matter. They are about whether the people who built the city understood that growth and livability are not opposites. They are, when done thoughtfully, the same goal.

Bothell's city council and planning commissions made decisions over decades that prioritized exactly that. They brought in the Beardslee District development as a walkable urban core without bulldozing the residential character that made the surrounding neighborhoods worth living in. They invested in parks, in the trail network, in downtown. They said yes to density in the places where density belongs, and preserved the character of the places that earned their character over time. You don't end up with what Bothell has today by accident.

What Growth Done Right Actually Looks Like

When I go back to Bonney Lake now, I see the same transformation playing out. Population growth that once made the long-timers nervous. Development that raised eyebrows. And then, over time, a place that became more desirable than it ever was before, precisely because the growth was managed with some intentionality. That is not a universally common story in the Pacific Northwest. It is Bothell's story. And it is worth understanding if you're thinking about buying or selling here.

The Beardslee District is the most visible symbol of what that intentional growth produced. Where there was once light industrial and underutilized commercial land at the intersection of SR-522 and I-405, there is now a walkable mixed-use district with retail, restaurants, multifamily housing, hotel, and office space that functions as a genuine urban village. That level of activated street life did not exist in Bothell fifteen years ago. It does now. And it has had a direct and measurable effect on property values in the surrounding neighborhoods.

But the Beardslee District is the headline. The deeper story is the infrastructure investment that made it possible: the SR-522 corridor improvements, the expansion of trail connectivity, the UW Bothell campus becoming a genuine anchor institution, and the consistent land-use decisions that kept housing supply moving even as demand escalated.

The Numbers Behind the Narrative

Stories are how we understand places. Numbers are how we understand markets. Here is what the Bothell WA real estate market looks like in 2026.

~$850K Approximate median home price in Bothell, WA, per Northwest MLS data, Q1 2026
Top 10% Bothell has consistently outperformed broader Seattle metro appreciation over the past decade, per Northwest MLS and Redfin market data
~14 Days Median days on market for Bothell homes, Q1 2026, per Northwest MLS. Well-priced homes continue to move in under a week.
+38% Approximate population growth in Bothell over the past 20 years, per U.S. Census Bureau estimates

Market figures are approximations based on Northwest MLS, Redfin, and U.S. Census data as of early 2026. Individual neighborhood data varies. For current pricing in a specific area of Bothell, contact Aaron Robinson at Keller Williams Realty Bothell directly.

The appreciation story in Bothell is not primarily a pandemic story, though the pandemic accelerated trends that were already in motion. Bothell was already outperforming the Seattle metro before remote work made every suburb look attractive. What changed between 2020 and now is that the rest of the country caught up to what people who were paying attention already knew.

Who Is Moving to Bothell, and Why

The buyer profile in Bothell has shifted considerably over the past decade. What was once a market driven largely by local move-up buyers, people graduating from a condo in Kenmore or a starter home in Shoreline, is now heavily influenced by relocation buyers. Specifically, tech workers relocating from California who are comparing what their budget buys in the Bay Area against what it buys here. And the comparison is not close.

Bothell sits in a near-ideal location for someone working at Amazon in South Lake Union, Microsoft in Redmond, or any number of Canyon Park employers. SR-522 and I-405 give you multiple routing options. The commute is real, but it is manageable. And what you get on the other side of that commute is a home with actual square footage, a neighborhood with actual character, and a community that still functions like a community.

That combination is increasingly rare in the Greater Seattle area. And rare things hold value.

Thinking About Buying in Bothell?

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What This Means If You're Buying Right Now

Here's what I would say to anyone looking at buying in the Bothell WA real estate market in 2026: the window that existed five years ago, when you could browse casually and submit a reasonable offer and see what happened, is not the window that exists today. Bothell is competitive. Not Bellevue-competitive, where you're routinely fighting fifteen offers on a home. But competitive in the way that means you need to know your number before you fall for a house, you need a pre-approval that is actually a pre-approval, and you need an agent who understands the micro-neighborhood dynamics well enough to know when a home is priced correctly and when it isn't.

The good news is that Bothell still offers something Bellevue and Kirkland often can't: genuine value relative to what you're getting. You can still find a well-built home on a real lot in a real neighborhood, at a price point that makes the long-term math work. That is not a given everywhere on the Eastside. It is still, for now, part of the Bothell story.

What This Means If You're Selling Right Now

Sellers in Bothell are in a strong position, but strong positions require strategy to realize fully. The buyers who are coming to Bothell in 2026 are informed. Many of them have been looking for months. They know the comps. They know what the Beardslee District access is worth, what the UW Bothell proximity does for long-term value, what good school district access means for resale.

What that means for you as a seller is that pricing matters more than it did in 2021, when anything in a desirable zip code was going to receive offers regardless of condition or price. Today, homes that are priced with precision, prepared with care, and marketed to the actual buyer, the relocating tech professional, the move-up buyer from south King County, the investor who understands the Snohomish County ADU landscape, sell quickly and well. Homes that aren't do not.

The market rewards preparation. It always has. It just punishes the lack of it more visibly now than it did a few years ago.

Bothell in 2026 is what happens when a community grows without losing what made it worth growing into. The small-town identity that my friend remembers is still present in the way people engage with their neighborhoods, the way the trail network connects people to their city, the way the farmers market still draws a crowd on a Saturday morning. What changed is the scale of the opportunity, the depth of the infrastructure, and the recognition, finally earned, that Bothell is not a second-choice market. It is a first choice for people who are paying attention. That is the story behind the numbers. And it is still being written.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Bothell, WA a good place to buy a home in 2026?

Yes, for buyers who understand what they're buying into. Bothell has consistently outperformed the broader Seattle metro in home appreciation over the past decade, per Northwest MLS data. The market is competitive, with median days on market in the low-to-mid teens as of Q1 2026, and well-priced homes often moving in under a week. What makes Bothell a strong long-term buy is the combination of factors that aren't easy to replicate: proximity to major tech employers along SR-522 and the I-405 corridor, a walkable urban core in the Beardslee District, significant trail and park infrastructure, and a community identity that has survived the growth rather than been replaced by it. Buyers who go in prepared, with a real pre-approval and a clear sense of the neighborhood dynamics, are in a strong position. Aaron Robinson at Keller Williams Realty Bothell works primarily in this market and can give you a current, ground-level read on specific neighborhoods.

Why have Bothell home prices gone up so much?

Several converging factors have driven Bothell's appreciation above the broader Seattle metro average over the past decade. Proximity to the technology employment corridor along SR-522 and Canyon Park, plus easy access to Amazon in Seattle and Microsoft in Redmond via I-405, positioned Bothell as an ideal landing point for tech relocations. The development of the Beardslee District as a walkable mixed-use urban core raised the lifestyle ceiling of the market without displacing residential character. Investment in trail infrastructure, parks, and the UW Bothell campus added layers of long-term value that appeal to buyers across different stages of life. And constrained supply across the Greater Seattle area overall has concentrated demand into markets like Bothell that still offer genuine value relative to their Eastside neighbors. The appreciation story predates the pandemic and has continued through it, which reflects structural demand rather than a temporary spike.

How does Bothell compare to Bellevue and Kirkland for homebuyers?

Bothell offers a meaningful value proposition relative to both Bellevue and Kirkland. Median home prices in Bothell run considerably below Bellevue's, where median prices for single-family homes regularly exceed $1.5 million per Northwest MLS data, and below Kirkland's, which occupies a similar premium tier. For that price difference, Bothell buyers typically get comparable or larger lot sizes, similar commute access to major tech employers, and a community feel that both Bellevue and Kirkland have largely priced out at scale. The trade-offs are real: Bellevue's amenity density and Kirkland's waterfront access are genuine advantages that Bothell doesn't replicate. But for buyers whose priority is long-term value and neighborhood quality per dollar, Bothell has consistently delivered. The gap between Bothell and its premium neighbors has been narrowing as appreciation has continued, which is itself an argument for buying sooner rather than later if Bothell is where your life fits.

What neighborhoods in Bothell are the most competitive right now?

The most competitive inventory in Bothell tends to cluster around the Beardslee District and North Bothell for buyers prioritizing walkability and the urban-village lifestyle, and around Canyon Park and the areas directly north for buyers whose priority is proximity to the tech employment corridor. The most consistently high-demand homes across all Bothell neighborhoods are well-maintained single-family homes in the mid-range price tier that offer real outdoor space and functional layouts. Homes near the Burke-Gilman Trail access points and the Sammamish River corridor also generate outsized interest relative to supply. For a current read on which specific streets and neighborhoods are moving fastest, that conversation is worth having directly, because the micro-dynamics shift quarter to quarter and the data that matters is more granular than what shows up in a zip-code summary.

Is Bothell still affordable compared to the rest of Seattle's Eastside?

Relative to the rest of the Eastside, yes. Bothell remains meaningfully more accessible than Bellevue, Kirkland, and Redmond on a price-per-square-foot basis, per Northwest MLS comparisons as of early 2026. The gap has compressed over the past five years as Bothell's appreciation has outpaced those markets in some sub-periods. But it still exists, and it is still one of the primary reasons buyers looking at the Eastside who have done their homework end up in Bothell. The question worth asking is not just whether Bothell is affordable today, but whether the appreciation trajectory suggests it will remain so in three to five years. Based on the development pipeline in the Beardslee District and the ongoing tech employment pressure on the SR-522 corridor, the window of relative value is narrowing. Whether that's an argument for buying sooner or for looking elsewhere is a conversation worth having with Aaron Robinson directly, because it depends entirely on your situation.

Ready to Talk About What Bothell Looks Like for You?

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