What is the North Fulton real estate market like in June 2026?
North Fulton — the area north of I-285 including Alpharetta, Roswell, Johns Creek, and Milton — is among the strongest-performing submarkets in the entire Atlanta metro. Fulton County's broader median of $495,071 reflects a 18.9% year-over-year gain, though North Fulton's premium markets routinely trade well above that county-wide median. Days on market sit at 35 — homes priced correctly and presented well are moving faster here than in most surrounding counties.
What is the median home price in Alpharetta in 2026?
Alpharetta's median runs meaningfully above the Fulton County average. The technology corridor, walkable downtown, and top-rated school system (Alpharetta High, Milton High, Cambridge High) sustain prices even as other Atlanta suburbs soften. Expect $600,000–$900,000 to be the competitive range for single-family homes in established Alpharetta neighborhoods.
How does Roswell compare to Alpharetta for buyers?
Roswell offers more price diversity — you can find homes from $350K in older parts of the city to $1M+ in the Historic District and Canton Street adjacent neighborhoods. The Canton Street corridor has made Roswell attractive to buyers who want a walkable, restaurant-dense community without Buckhead density or pricing. It's a strong long-term hold.
Is North Fulton still a good place to buy in 2026?
For buyers with the budget, yes. The area's employment anchors — Microsoft, Salesforce, NCR Voyix, and dozens of tech tenants — create durable housing demand that doesn't evaporate in softer markets. Supply constraints in desirable school zones maintain competitive conditions. The entry point is high, but so is the floor on downside risk.
Fulton County's numbers include all of Atlanta, so North Fulton's actual north-of-the-perimeter market runs significantly higher in price and tighter in days. Alpharetta and Roswell continue to outperform.