Mountlake Terrace, WA Real Estate Guide
Mountlake Terrace, WA Real Estate Guide: Light Rail, Real Value, and a Market Most Buyers Haven't Found Yet
28 minutes to downtown Seattle by rail. Median home prices under $700K. And a city that, once you find it, feels exactly like home.
By Aaron Robinson · Keller Williams Realty Bothell · June 2026

I have been going to Mountlake Terrace regularly for years. Not for real estate, at least not at first. I go for haircuts. I go for chiropractic appointments with Dr. Calvin Mulanax of Ballinger Chiropractic, who I have followed for 18 years through three different locations: Eastlake in Seattle, then University Village, and now Mountlake Terrace. When you find someone great, you follow them. You don't trade excellence for convenience. That's a lesson I have applied to real estate for as long as I have been doing this work.
And it's the same lesson Mountlake Terrace itself teaches. You find it. You realize it has everything you actually need. And it starts to feel like home.
The problem is that most buyers in the Greater Seattle area have not found it yet. Not really. They drive through on I-5. They have a vague sense that it is somewhere between Shoreline and Lynnwood. They do not know what's there. And that is exactly why Mountlake Terrace real estate is worth writing about, and reading about, right now.
The Light Rail Story That Changes Everything
On August 30, 2024, Sound Transit opened the Lynnwood Link Extension on the 1 Line. Four new stations came online as part of the 8.5-mile extension from Northgate. One of those stations was in Mountlake Terrace.
That is not a small thing. That is a before-and-after line in the history of this city's real estate market.
Here is what that station means in practical terms, per the City of Mountlake Terrace's own data:
- 28 minutes to downtown Seattle from the Mountlake Terrace station
- 11 minutes to the University of Washington
- 48 minutes to downtown Bellevue
- 891 parking spaces at the station, with connections to Community Transit, King County Metro, and Sound Transit Express bus routes
Twenty-eight minutes to downtown Seattle. On a train. From a city where the median home price is somewhere between $635,000 and $675,000 depending on the month and the data source you consult. That is the Mountlake Terrace story, and it is not being told loudly enough.
I have driven the I-5 corridor between Seattle and Snohomish County more times than I can count, first as a Lyft driver for seven years, then as an agent working this market. I know what that drive feels like at 7:45 in the morning and at 5:15 in the afternoon. It is not a pleasant experience. It is a tax on your time and your energy and your patience that compounds every single weekday.
The light rail changes that math entirely. A buyer who chooses Mountlake Terrace and uses the 1 Line to commute into Seattle is not giving anything up. They are getting something most Seattle buyers cannot have: a commute that doesn't cost them two hours of their day, a home price that gives them real breathing room, and a neighborhood that has been here long enough to have genuine character.
The people who figure this out first are the ones who end up looking like geniuses five years from now. I've seen this play out in every transit-adjacent market I've watched develop. It is not speculation. It is pattern recognition.
Mountlake Terrace WA Real Estate Guide: What the Numbers Say
Market data from Redfin, NWMLS, and City of Mountlake Terrace as of May-June 2026. Verify current conditions with your agent before making decisions.
A few things worth noting about those numbers. The 5-day median days on market tells you that demand is real. This is not a forgotten market where you can take your time and expect sellers to negotiate heavily out of desperation. Homes move here. The inventory is tight relative to interest. That combination, meaningful demand pressure alongside prices that are still substantially below Shoreline and Kirkland, is what you are looking at.
The median asking price for single-family homes sitting around $709,500 per NWMLS data from May 2026 tells you that the asking side of the market reflects growing seller confidence. That gap between median sale ($635-675K) and median ask ($709K) is worth watching. It is a signal that sellers are testing where the market is going. Some of them are right.
Shoreline, the immediate neighbor to the south, consistently runs $100,000 to $150,000 higher for comparable single-family homes. Kirkland runs $250,000 to $350,000 higher. You get the same 1 Line light rail access from Mountlake Terrace that Shoreline buyers pay a significant premium for. That is the arbitrage. It doesn't last forever.
What Your Budget Actually Buys Here
Mountlake Terrace is not a land of mansions. It never was and it is not trying to be. It is a city of well-built mid-century and postwar single-family homes on real lots, ranchers and split-levels with mature landscaping, plus a growing layer of newer townhomes and condos as the Town Center corridor densifies around the light rail station.
In the $600,000 to $750,000 range, which is where a significant portion of the active market sits, you are typically looking at:
- 1,200 to 1,800 square feet of single-family living space
- 3 bedrooms, 1 or 2 baths, with room to add value through updating
- Yards that are actual yards, not postage stamps
- Garages. Real ones. Not shared parking structures.
- Established neighborhoods with mature trees and long-term neighbors who actually know each other
If you are coming from a Seattle price point, that list might read like a description of a different era of housing. In a lot of Seattle, $700,000 buys a condo with HOA fees that will make your eyes water. In Mountlake Terrace, it buys a house. With a yard. Twenty-eight minutes from downtown on a train you can board from a station with nearly 900 parking spaces.
Who Mountlake Terrace Is Right For
Not every market fits every buyer, and I am not going to tell you Mountlake Terrace is for everyone. Here's who I think it genuinely clicks for.
The Seattle buyer who has been priced out of ownership. If you have been renting in Seattle and watching the homeownership math not work, Mountlake Terrace changes the equation without asking you to give up the commute. This is real access to the city at a price point Seattle proper cannot offer.
The tech commuter relocating for Amazon, Microsoft, or Boeing. Amazon's office footprint means Seattle commutes. Microsoft's Redmond campus is 48 minutes by rail from Mountlake Terrace. Boeing's Everett facility is even closer by car. The Mountlake Terrace price point, combined with Snohomish County property tax rates that are lower than King County, makes this a compelling landing spot for employees relocating from California or New York. For more on that picture, see my full guide to relocating to the Seattle area for Amazon, Microsoft, or Google.
The buyer who values proven neighborhoods over trendy ones. Mountlake Terrace does not have a lot of hype. It has residents who have been here for decades, a parks system with over 269 acres of recreational space per the City of Mountlake Terrace, and a Town Center that is actively developing without losing the character of what the city has always been. If you want a neighborhood that has been tested by time and still comes out well, this is worth serious consideration.
The investor thinking ahead of the curve. Transit-oriented development around light rail stations follows a reliable pattern in markets across the country. Mountlake Terrace updated its Town Center land use plan in 2019 specifically in anticipation of light rail. The Gateway transit-oriented development neighborhood adjacent to the station is underway. The value capture from that development has not fully played out yet. Buyers who get in before it does tend to benefit significantly.
The City Itself: What to Know Beyond the Listing
Mountlake Terrace sits about 14 miles north of Seattle, directly west of I-5, in a position that gives it genuine access in multiple directions. North to Lynnwood and Edmonds. South to Shoreline and Seattle. East toward Bothell and Kenmore. It is not isolated. It is connected.
Lake Ballinger sits on the city's eastern edge, a genuine recreational draw with shoreline access and a quiet, neighborhood feel that is genuinely hard to find this close to a major transit corridor. Terrace Creek Park, the city's centerpiece green space, includes athletic fields and an indoor community swimming pool that is open to residents year-round.
The business community along 212th and in the Town Center corridor has been growing steadily, adding the kind of walkable amenity layer that makes a neighborhood feel complete rather than just residential. Independent restaurants, service businesses, and local providers have been building here for years. Ballinger Chiropractic, where I have been bringing my own spine for nearly two decades, is one of those businesses. When practitioners like Dr. Calvin Mulanax build long careers in a community, it is usually because the community itself is stable, walkable, and worth staying in. That is a data point most real estate guides do not think to collect.
Thinking About Mountlake Terrace?
I know this city from the ground up. Let's talk about what's actually available and whether it fits where you're trying to go.
Talk to Aaron Is Now the Right Time?Mountlake Terrace real estate is the kind of market that rewards the buyers who find it before the crowd does. Light rail access to downtown Seattle in 28 minutes. Median prices $100,000 to $150,000 below comparable Shoreline properties. A city that has been building its character for decades and is now adding the transit infrastructure to match it. The discovery problem is real: most buyers have not found this place yet. The ones who do, and who move on it, tend not to regret it.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average home price in Mountlake Terrace, WA?
The median sale price in Mountlake Terrace was approximately $635,000 across all home types in March 2026 per Redfin citing NWMLS data. Single-family homes have run higher, with a median sale price near $675,000 over the past six months per NWMLS data. Median asking prices for single-family homes were around $709,500 in May 2026. Prices vary meaningfully by home type: condos and townhomes in the Town Center corridor tend to come in lower than established single-family neighborhoods. These figures are subject to change and should be verified with a local agent and current NWMLS data before making any decisions.
Does Mountlake Terrace have light rail access to Seattle?
Yes. Sound Transit's Mountlake Terrace Station on the 1 Line opened August 30, 2024 as part of the Lynnwood Link Extension. Per the City of Mountlake Terrace, projected travel times from the station are 28 minutes to downtown Seattle, 11 minutes to the University of Washington, and 48 minutes to downtown Bellevue. The elevated station is located east of I-5 at the Mountlake Terrace Transit Center near 236th Street Southwest, with 891 parking spaces and connections to Community Transit, King County Metro, and Sound Transit Express bus routes. This is active, operating rail service, not a future project.
Is Mountlake Terrace a good place to buy a home?
Mountlake Terrace offers a combination that is increasingly rare in the Greater Seattle area: transit access to downtown Seattle comparable to Shoreline at a price point that is meaningfully lower. The city has stable, established residential neighborhoods, a parks system with over 269 acres of recreational space per the City of Mountlake Terrace, an active Town Center corridor that is adding density and amenities around the new light rail station, and a commuter profile that benefits from rail access in multiple directions. For buyers who prioritize transit, value, and neighborhood stability over proximity to specific Seattle amenities, Mountlake Terrace warrants serious consideration. As with any market, buyers should verify current pricing and conditions with a local agent before making decisions.
How does Mountlake Terrace compare to Shoreline for home buyers?
Both Mountlake Terrace and Shoreline are served by Sound Transit's 1 Line light rail, offering comparable rail access to downtown Seattle and the University of Washington. The primary difference for buyers is price: Shoreline single-family homes consistently run $100,000 to $150,000 higher than comparable properties in Mountlake Terrace. Both cities have established residential neighborhoods and are experiencing transit-oriented development near their respective stations. Buyers who prioritize value and are willing to be a few minutes further north on I-5 will generally find more purchasing power in Mountlake Terrace. Both markets move quickly, with homes regularly going pending in under two weeks, so buyers should be pre-approved and ready to move when they find the right property.
How long does it take to commute from Mountlake Terrace to downtown Seattle?
By light rail on Sound Transit's 1 Line, the projected travel time from Mountlake Terrace Station to downtown Seattle (Westlake Station) is approximately 28 minutes, per the City of Mountlake Terrace and Sound Transit. Trains run approximately every eight minutes during peak hours. By car on I-5 southbound, travel time varies significantly depending on traffic and can range from 25 minutes in off-peak conditions to well over an hour during peak morning or evening commutes. The rail option is both faster and more predictable than driving for most commuters targeting downtown Seattle work locations.
Ready to See What Mountlake Terrace Can Do for You?
I have been coming to this city for years. Let me show you why it's worth more than a drive-by on I-5. This should be a great ride.
Talk to AaronResidential Real Estate Agent · Keller Williams Realty Bothell
License #25032471 · Greater Seattle Area
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