Living in Bellevue WA real estate

Bellevue, Washington

Washington's Fastest Growing City Is Not Playing Second Fiddle to Anyone

The fifth largest city in Washington by population. A skyline that keeps getting taller. Employers that anchor the entire Pacific Northwest economy. And a downtown that has stopped being compared to Seattle and started being compared to itself.

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The Bellevue Story

A City That Grew Up and Kept Going

Bellevue is the fifth largest city in Washington by population and it is not finished growing. The downtown skyline adds new towers on a timeline that would have seemed impossible twenty years ago. The population has grown steadily for over a decade and the employment base has grown faster than the population.

The employer list tells the story clearly. Microsoft has been in nearby Redmond for decades but its footprint in Bellevue has expanded significantly. Amazon made a major commitment to Bellevue with its second headquarters investment, bringing thousands of workers to the east side of Lake Washington. Smartsheet, PACCAR, Symetra, and Albertsons are all headquartered here. This is not a bedroom community for Seattle. It is an employment center in its own right.

The infrastructure matches the ambition. The I-90 corridor connects Bellevue to Seattle and to the broader regional highway network. The new Sound Transit 2-Line light rail now connects downtown Bellevue directly to downtown Seattle and east to Redmond, making Bellevue a genuine transit hub for the first time in its history.

The result is a city where the housing market reflects real and sustained demand. Buyers come for a job and discover a city with world class shopping, genuine green space, and a downtown that has earned its reputation on its own terms.

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Amazon Bellevue

Thousands of Amazon employees work in Bellevue as part of the company's major eastside expansion.

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Sound Transit 2-Line

Light rail connecting downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle and east to Redmond. Opened 2024.

🛍️

Bellevue Square

One of the top performing retail centers in the Pacific Northwest. Anchors the downtown commercial district.

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Bellevue Downtown Park

21 acres of green space in the heart of the urban core. A rare amenity for a city this size.

Major Employers

The Employment Base Here Is as Strong as Anywhere in the Country

Bellevue's economy is not dependent on any single employer or any single industry. Technology, finance, logistics, insurance, and retail are all represented at scale. That diversification is one reason the Bellevue housing market has historically been resilient through economic cycles.

For buyers relocating for work, Bellevue is often the answer regardless of who the employer is. The central location on the Eastside means reasonable commute times to Microsoft in Redmond, Amazon in South Lake Union or Bellevue itself, and the growing concentration of tech offices along the 520 corridor.

Headquartered in Bellevue

  • Amazon — Major Bellevue campus and ongoing expansion
  • Microsoft — Significant Bellevue presence alongside Redmond headquarters
  • Smartsheet — Collaborative work management platform headquartered downtown
  • PACCAR — Global manufacturer of Kenworth and Peterbilt trucks
  • Symetra — Financial services and insurance company
  • Albertsons — One of the largest grocery retailers in the country
  • T-Mobile — Corporate offices and major presence in the Bellevue market
  • Expedia — Travel technology company with Eastside offices
"Bellevue stopped being a suburb of Seattle a long time ago. It is a city that Seattle now competes with."
The honest read on what Bellevue has become

Bellevue Neighborhoods

A City Large Enough to Have Genuinely Different Neighborhoods

Bellevue covers enough geography that buyers should think carefully about which part of the city fits them. The differences between downtown Bellevue and Somerset or Bridle Trails are significant in terms of feel, price point, and lifestyle.

Downtown Bellevue

Urban — High Rise

The urban core. High rise condos, luxury apartments, Bellevue Square, the arts district, and the new light rail station. The most walkable address in the city and the fastest changing neighborhood block by block.

West Bellevue

Luxury — Waterfront

Medina adjacent. Some of the most expensive residential real estate in Washington State. Lake Washington frontage, large lots, and proximity to both downtown Bellevue and the 520 bridge to Seattle.

Bellevue Club Area

Prestige — Established

Centered around the Bellevue Club hotel and athletic facility. Large single family homes on generous lots with a quiet, established feel minutes from downtown.

Somerset

Views — And More

Hilltop neighborhood in southeast Bellevue with Cascade and Lake Washington views. Larger homes, near schools, and a tight-knit community feel that attracts buyers who plan to stay long term.

Bridle Trails

Quiet — Equestrian

Bordered by the Bridle Trails State Park. Heavily wooded, quiet streets, and a semi-rural feel within city limits. A genuine escape from urban density while still being minutes from the Eastside employment corridor.

Crossroads

Diverse — Accessible

Central Bellevue's most diverse homes and accessible neighborhood. A wider range of housing types and price points than most of Bellevue. The Crossroads Shopping Center anchors a community with genuine neighborhood character.

Factoria

I-90 — Convenient

Southeast Bellevue along the I-90 corridor. Strong access to the freeway network and to the Eastside employment centers. More affordable entry point into the Bellevue market with good transit connections.

Newport Hills

Established — Coveted

Quiet hilltop neighborhood in south Bellevue. Established single family homes, mature trees, and a residential feel with easy access to I-90 and the broader Eastside highway network.

Market Snapshot

Bellevue Real Estate by the Numbers

Bellevue commands among the highest home prices in Washington State. Sustained employer demand, limited land supply, and a growing population of high earning residents create consistent upward pressure on values.

~$1.9M
Median Home Price
Updated Q1 2025
18
Avg Days on Market
Single-family homes
↑ 7%
Year Over Year
Median sale price
101%
Sale to List Ratio
Homes selling over ask

Location and Transit

Better Connected Than It Has Ever Been

Bellevue's geographic position at the center of the Eastside has always been an asset. The I-90 corridor connects east to west across Lake Washington and south to the broader regional highway network. SR-405 runs north to south through the city connecting to Kirkland, Renton, and beyond.

The opening of the Sound Transit 2-Line light rail in 2024 changed the transit picture entirely. Downtown Bellevue now has direct rail connections to downtown Seattle, Mercer Island, the Spring District, and east to Redmond. For buyers who want the option of leaving the car at home, Bellevue now delivers that in a way it never could before.

~25 min
To Downtown Seattle
Via 2-Line light rail from downtown Bellevue
~15 min
To Redmond
Via 2-Line light rail or SR-520 by car
~20 min
To Seattle by Car
Via I-90 off peak. Varies with traffic.
~15 min
To Kirkland
Via SR-405 north by car
~20 min
To Renton
Via SR-405 south by car

Education

Schools in Bellevue

Bellevue is served primarily by the Bellevue School District. School assignment is based on home address. Current enrollment figures, assessment data, and graduation rates are available through the Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction.

Bellevue School District

District

Serves Bellevue and surrounding communities including portions of Kirkland, Redmond, and Issaquah. Enrollment, demographics, and performance data are publicly available through OSPI.

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Bellevue High School

High School — Grades 9–12

Home of Wolverines. Serves students in the western Bellevue area within the Bellevue School District. Current enrollment and performance data available through OSPI.

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Newport High School

High School — Grades 9–12

Home of Knights. Serves students in the south and east Bellevue area within the Bellevue School District. Current enrollment and performance data available through OSPI.

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Interlake High School

High School — Grades 9–12

Home of Saints & Bernie the Saint Bernard. Serves students in the north and central Bellevue area within the Bellevue School District. Current enrollment and performance data available through OSPI.

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Sammamish High School

High School — Grades 9–12

Home of Redhawks. Serves students in the east Bellevue and Crossroads area within the Bellevue School District. Current enrollment and performance data available through OSPI.

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Middle Schools

Middle School — Grades 6–8

The Bellevue School District operates multiple middle schools serving Bellevue including Chinook, Odle, Tillicum, and Highland. Assignment is based on home address. Contact the district to confirm your attendance area.

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Elementary Schools

Elementary — Grades K–5

The Bellevue School District operates multiple elementary schools throughout Bellevue. Assignment is based on home address. Contact the district directly to confirm enrollment eligibility and current school assignments.

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Who Chooses Bellevue

Bellevue Draws from Every Direction

Bellevue is large enough and diverse enough that it attracts buyers across a wide range of profiles and price points. The common thread is people who want a city that functions at a high level and does not require tradeoffs.

The Corporate Relocator

Amazon, Microsoft, Smartsheet, PACCAR, Symetra — buyers relocating to Bellevue for a major employer find a city that matches the scale and expectations of their career move. No adjustment period required.

The International Buyer

Bellevue has one of the most internationally diverse populations in Washington State. Buyers arriving from Asia, Europe, and the Middle East frequently choose Bellevue for its urban amenities, school system, and established international community.

The Urban Upgrader

Buyers leaving Seattle for more space without giving up city amenities land in Bellevue more than anywhere else. The downtown core delivers walkability, dining, retail, and culture at a level that Seattle buyers recognize immediately.

The Prestige Buyer

West Bellevue and the waterfront areas attract buyers for whom price is not the primary filter. Lake Washington frontage, proximity to Medina, and access to the best schools in the state draw serious buyers from across the country.

The Transit-First Buyer

The 2-Line light rail changed the calculation for buyers who want to live car-light. Downtown Bellevue to downtown Seattle in roughly 25 minutes by train is a commute that simply did not exist before 2026. That buyer now has a real option here.

The Value Seeker

Crossroads and Factoria offer entry points into Bellevue at prices that are meaningfully lower than the city median. Buyers who want the Bellevue address, the Bellevue schools, and the Bellevue employment access without the West Bellevue price tag find real options here.

The Bottom Line

Bellevue Is Not Getting Cheaper. The Buyers Who Waited Five Years Ago Know That.

Every cycle has buyers who hold off and buyers who move. In Bellevue the gap between those two groups has widened every year. The employers are not leaving. The infrastructure investment is not stopping. The population is not declining. If you are serious about Bellevue, the best time to understand the market is right now.

Talk to Me About Bellevue

Ready to Explore Bellevue

Let Me Send You Current Bellevue Listings

Bellevue has more range than most buyers expect. Downtown high rises steps from light rail. Waterfront estates on Lake Washington. Quiet hilltop neighborhoods with Cascade views. Accessible entry points in Crossroads and Factoria. Tell me what you are looking for and I will put together a curated list of current Bellevue homes that actually match it.

Already own in Bellevue and thinking about selling? In a market where homes are regularly selling above list price and days on market are measured in weeks, knowing what your home is worth right now is worth a conversation.

No pressure. No obligation. Just a straight answer from someone who knows this market.

Living in Bellevue WA real estate

School Information Disclaimer

School district boundaries and feeder patterns are subject to change by local authorities. Any school summaries, ratings, or boundaries provided on this site are for informational purposes only and are sourced from third-party providers. I do not guarantee the accuracy of this data, nor do I make representations regarding the quality or "ranking" of any educational institution. Prospective buyers are strongly encouraged to conduct their own independent investigation by contacting the local school district directly to verify enrollment eligibility and school performance.

Bellevue Real Estate FAQ — Aaron Robinson Real Estate
Bellevue FAQ

Bellevue, straight.
No polish required.

What you actually need to know about living and buying in one of Washington's most sought-after cities.

  • Bellevue is one of the most polished cities in Washington State and it knows it. Clean streets, high-end dining, luxury retail, and a skyline that has grown up fast. If you want urban amenities without Seattle's grit, this is your city. If you're drawn to a simpler, more rural pace of life, Bellevue will feel like it's trying too hard. It's a city for people who want the best version of everything and are willing to pay for it.

  • Bellevue sits at the intersection of I-90 and SR-405, two of the most important corridors on the Eastside. Seattle is 20 minutes off-peak, 45 minutes or more during rush hour. East Link light rail now connects Bellevue to Seattle without touching a steering wheel, which is a genuine game-changer for the downtown-to-downtown run. Microsoft's Redmond campus is minutes away. Amazon's Seattle headquarters is a straight shot on I-90. For Eastside tech workers, Bellevue isn't a commute. It's a home base.

  • Bellevue attracts buyers who want the full package: luxury finishes, walkable amenities, and a city that feels curated. Tech professionals, corporate executives, and buyers relocating from high-cost metros like San Francisco or New York tend to land here and feel right at home. The price point self-selects. If someone is cross-shopping Bellevue and a more relaxed Eastside city, they usually already know which one they are.

  • Bellevue's entry point for a single-family home runs $1.2M to $1.5M, and it climbs fast from there. Downtown condos and penthouses routinely reach into eight figures. Waterfront properties are in a category of their own. What you get is genuine: new construction, premium finishes, and neighborhoods that are exceptionally well-maintained. This is not a market where you're paying a location premium and getting a dated home in return. Bellevue delivers on the price tag.

  • If you're coming from a major metro and don't want to downgrade your lifestyle, Bellevue is the easiest landing spot in the Greater Seattle area. The infrastructure is modern, the dining and retail are legitimately good, and the city functions well. The adjustment is minimal if you're used to city living at a high level. If you're coming from somewhere quieter and slower, give it an honest look before committing at this price point.

Thinking about Bellevue? Let's look at what's available and what it actually costs. No pressure, no pitch.
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