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	<title>denver Archives | ZBell Real Estate</title>
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		<title>Condos for Sale in Denver: A Neighborhood Guide for 2026</title>
		<link>https://zbell.com/condos-for-sale-denver-city-living-guide/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Zaynab Sepahi]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Feb 2026 18:14:00 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Buying a Home]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Denver Real Estate]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[affordable condos denver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[condos for sale in denver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[denver]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[denver condo market]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[denver condos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[denver townhomes for sale]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[downtown denver condos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[townhomes denver co]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://zbell.com/?p=9126</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<p>Denver&#8217;s condo market is in a weird spot right now. Prices have dropped about 5% year over year while single-family homes held steady. Inventory has surged — there are over 1,150 condos for sale in Denver as of March 2026, up 249% from just 5 years ago. For buyers, that&#8217;s actually good news. You&#8217;ve got...</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://zbell.com/condos-for-sale-denver-city-living-guide/">Condos for Sale in Denver: A Neighborhood Guide for 2026</a> appeared first on <a href="https://zbell.com">ZBell Real Estate </a>.</p>
]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Denver&#8217;s condo market is in a weird spot right now. Prices have dropped about 5% year over year while single-family homes held steady. Inventory has surged — there are over 1,150 <strong>condos for sale in Denver</strong> as of March 2026, up 249% from just 5 years ago. For buyers, that&#8217;s actually good news. You&#8217;ve got more choices, less competition, and more room to negotiate than at any point since 2020.</p>
<p>The citywide median sold price for a Denver condo sits around $379,000-$400,000. But that number hides enormous variation. A 1-bedroom in Capitol Hill might run $300,000. A loft in LoDo could cost $700,000. And a penthouse in Cherry Creek? You&#8217;re looking at $2 million or more. So the real question isn&#8217;t &#8220;what do condos cost in Denver&#8221; — it&#8217;s &#8220;what do condos cost in <em>your</em> target neighborhood.&#8221;</p>
<p>We&#8217;ve been helping buyers and sellers navigate the Denver condo market for over 15 years. Here&#8217;s what the numbers actually look like right now, neighborhood by neighborhood.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="https://zbell.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/denver-city-view-1.jpg" alt="Condos for sale in Denver skyline view" /></p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Downtown Denver and LoDo condos</h2>
<p>Downtown is where Denver&#8217;s condo market started, and it&#8217;s still the densest concentration of units in the metro. There are about 191 condos listed in downtown Denver right now, with a median listing price around $599,000. Sold prices have averaged $584,000 over the last few months.</p>
<p>LoDo specifically commands a premium — the median sale price there is $699,500, roughly $776 per square foot. You&#8217;re paying for walkability to Coors Field, Union Station, and the Dairy Block. Buildings like the Glass House, Riverfront Park, and the Coloradan attract buyers who want a lock-and-leave lifestyle with restaurants and nightlife at their doorstep.</p>
<p>HOA fees in downtown high-rises run $500-$900 per month for most buildings. That covers amenities like concierge service, rooftop decks, fitness centers, and heated parking. At the ultra-luxury end — the Ritz-Carlton Residences, for example — HOAs can hit $1,800-$3,500. That&#8217;s a significant monthly expense to plan for. Make sure you factor HOA costs into your monthly budget before falling in love with a unit.</p>
<p>The biggest new development downtown is <strong>Upton Residences</strong> at 18th and Glenarm — 461 units starting in the low $400,000s, now delivering in early 2026. It&#8217;s the largest for-sale condo project in Denver since Spire opened in 2009. If you want new construction without Cherry Creek pricing, this is worth a look. Learn more about <a href="https://zbell.com/buy/">buying in Denver</a> with our team.</p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Capitol Hill and Uptown condos</h2>
<p>Capitol Hill is Denver&#8217;s most affordable urban condo neighborhood, and it&#8217;s not even close. The median sold price hovers around $350,000, with plenty of options in the $200,000-$300,000 range for smaller units. There are 74 condos currently listed in the neighborhood, ranging from $130,000 studios to $880,000 renovated two-bedrooms.</p>
<p>What you get for the money: walkability to restaurants on 17th Avenue, Cheesman Park, and easy access to downtown via the 15/15L bus or a 10-minute bike ride. What you give up: parking (many older buildings have limited or no garage spots), updated finishes (a lot of Cap Hill inventory was built in the 1960s-1980s), and square footage.</p>
<p>Just north, Uptown has the new <strong>Marieta Condos</strong> on 17th Street — 35 units starting from the $400,000s, completed in spring 2025. These offer modern finishes and in-unit laundry that&#8217;s hard to find in older Cap Hill buildings. For buyers who want the urban feel but don&#8217;t want to deal with vintage plumbing, Uptown is the sweet spot.</p>
<p>HOA fees in Cap Hill typically run $200-$400 per month. However, it&#8217;s worth paying extra attention to older buildings with deferred maintenance — some have passed along special assessments of $10,000-$30,000 for roof replacements or elevator repairs. Always request the HOA&#8217;s reserve study and meeting minutes before making an offer.</p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Cherry Creek condos</h2>
<p>Cherry Creek is Denver&#8217;s luxury condo market. The median listing price sits at $727,000, with only 21 condos currently available — meaning inventory is tight and prices hold up better than other neighborhoods even in the current downturn.</p>
<p>The headline development here is the <strong>Waldorf Astoria Residences</strong> at 185 Steele Street. This 5-story, 37-unit building broke ground in November 2025, with units starting just over $2 million and penthouses reaching $10 million. It&#8217;s already 65% sold before completion (expected early 2028). That tells you something about demand at the top end of Cherry Creek.</p>
<p>Even at non-Waldorf prices, Cherry Creek condos come with a premium. You&#8217;re paying for walkability to Cherry Creek Shopping Center, some of Denver&#8217;s best restaurants, and a neighborhood where the average household income exceeds $150,000. The tradeoff: HOA fees tend to run $500-$800 per month in newer buildings, and property taxes on a $700,000+ condo aren&#8217;t cheap either.</p>
<p>For buyers considering Cherry Creek versus other luxury neighborhoods, our <a href="https://zbell.com/denver-relocation-guide/">Denver relocation guide</a> breaks down the lifestyle differences.</p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>RiNo, Highlands, and Sloan&#8217;s Lake</h2>
<p>These three neighborhoods on Denver&#8217;s north and west sides have seen the most condo development over the last decade — and they&#8217;re all feeling the inventory surge.</p>
<p><strong>RiNo (River North):</strong> Median sold price around $487,000. This is Denver&#8217;s arts district, home to breweries, galleries, and converted warehouse lofts. The condo stock here skews newer (built 2015-2023), so you&#8217;re getting modern finishes and in-unit laundry. Prices range from $205,000 for small studios to $1.19 million for premium penthouse units.</p>
<p><strong>Highlands:</strong> Median listing around $657,000. The Highlands neighborhood has a village-like feel with shops along 32nd Avenue and Tennyson Street. Condo inventory is limited — just 20 units listed — because much of the Highlands is single-family homes and duplexes. When condos do come up, they move faster than in other neighborhoods.</p>
<p><strong>Sloan&#8217;s Lake:</strong> Median listing around $413,000, though only 3 condos are currently listed. This neighborhood exploded with new condo construction from 2016-2022, and many of those buyers are now listing their units as the market shifts. The lake itself is the draw — morning runs around the 2.6-mile loop, paddleboarding in summer, and unobstructed mountain views from upper-floor units.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="https://zbell.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/homes-mountian-view-4.jpg" alt="Denver condos with Colorado mountain views" /></p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Condos for sale in Denver suburbs: Aurora, Lakewood, and Boulder</h2>
<p>Not everyone wants to live in the city core. Suburban condos offer more space, lower HOA fees, and — in some cases — dramatically lower prices.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://zbell.com/aurora-co-relocation-guide/">Aurora</a></strong> is the most affordable option in the metro, with a median condo listing price of just $255,000. There are 382 condos listed right now — more than any other single city. Many of these are in the older complexes near the Anschutz Medical Campus or along Havana Street. For first-time buyers or investors, Aurora condos offer the lowest entry point in the Denver metro.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://zbell.com/lakewood-co-relocation-guide/">Lakewood</a></strong> splits the difference at around $300,000 median, with 83 condos currently listed. The selling points: proximity to the Federal Center light rail station, quick access to the foothills for hiking, and a quieter pace than Denver proper. <a href="https://zbell.com/golden-co-relocation-guide/">Golden</a> is just up the road if you want to be even closer to the mountains.</p>
<p><strong><a href="https://zbell.com/relocate-to-boulder-co/">Boulder</a></strong> condos sit around $485,000-$540,000 — a fraction of the city&#8217;s $948,000 single-family median. With 84 condos listed, Boulder gives you access to Pearl Street, the Flatirons, and CU Boulder&#8217;s campus. Because single-family homes are so expensive there, condos are often the only way into the Boulder market without a seven-figure budget.</p>
<p>Explore all our suburban relocation guides at the <a href="https://zbell.com/colorado-relocation-guides/">Colorado relocation hub</a>.</p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Why Denver condo prices are dropping (and what it means for buyers)</h2>
<p>Let&#8217;s be direct: the Denver condo market is in a correction. Attached home values have fallen about 7% — roughly $30,000 — over the trailing 12 months. Condo prices are back to approximately 2020 levels. Meanwhile, single-family homes are flat to slightly up.</p>
<p>Three forces are driving this:</p>
<p><strong>Insurance costs.</strong> After the Marshall Fire and increased wildfire risk, condo association master insurance policies have spiked 20-50%, sometimes doubling year over year. Those costs get passed directly to owners through higher HOA fees. According to <a href="https://denverite.com/2025/12/26/denver-condo-market-recession/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Denverite</a>, one Broomfield complex saw HOAs jump from $300 to over $600 per month. That&#8217;s a meaningful change in monthly costs for owners.</p>
<p><strong>Construction defect laws.</strong> Colorado&#8217;s construction defect litigation environment has made developers reluctant to build condos for decades. The Upton Residences is the first major for-sale condo project in 17 years. That long drought of new supply means much of the existing condo stock is aging, and aging buildings need expensive repairs.</p>
<p><strong>Buyer preference shift.</strong> <a href="https://www.denverpost.com/2025/10/10/denver-area-home-buyers-want-houses-not-condos-or-townhomes-real-estate-voices/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Denver Post reporting</a> shows that buyers increasingly prefer single-family homes. Attached home sales dropped 13% in 2025 while detached sales rose 2.9%. Remote work made extra square footage and a yard more appealing than urban walkability for many buyers.</p>
<p>For buyers? This is opportunity. More selection, less competition, and sellers who are willing to negotiate. In the luxury segment above $2 million, there are 26 months of condo inventory — a deep buyer&#8217;s market. Even at mainstream price points, the power dynamic has shifted. If you&#8217;ve been priced out of the Denver condo market before, 2026 might be your window.</p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>HOA fees: the hidden cost of condo ownership</h2>
<p>Colorado has one of the highest rates of HOA membership in the country — 42.4% of households pay association fees, compared to 25% nationally. The statewide average is $401 per month. In Denver, that range stretches from $200 for a basic garden-level unit in <a href="https://zbell.com/relocate-to-centennial-co/">Centennial</a> to $5,000+ for a Four Seasons penthouse downtown.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s what matters: every $100 per month in HOA fees reduces your buying power by about $15,000 in mortgage principal. So a condo with $600/month HOA fees versus one with $300/month fees effectively costs $45,000 more over time — even if the sticker prices are identical.</p>
<p>Before you make an offer on any Denver condo, get these documents from the HOA:</p>
<p>1. <strong>Reserve study.</strong> This shows how much money the association has saved for future repairs. A well-funded reserve (70%+ funded ratio) means lower risk of special assessments.</p>
<p>2. <strong>Meeting minutes</strong> from the last 12 months. Look for mentions of litigation, insurance disputes, or upcoming capital expenditures.</p>
<p>3. <strong>Insurance declarations page.</strong> Verify the master policy covers the full replacement cost of the building. If it doesn&#8217;t, that&#8217;s something to discuss with your insurance agent.</p>
<p>4. <strong>Budget and financials.</strong> Compare actual expenses to the budget. If they&#8217;re consistently over budget, a fee increase is coming.</p>
<p>Our <a href="https://zbell.com/realtors/">agents</a> review all of these documents with every condo buyer we work with. It&#8217;s not glamorous, but it&#8217;s where doing this homework upfront helps you feel confident about your purchase.</p>
<p><img decoding="async" src="https://zbell.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/denver-home-5.jpg" alt="Denver Colorado condo living" /></p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Frequently asked questions about condos for sale in Denver</h2>
<h3 style='font-size:20px'>What&#8217;s the average price for condos for sale in Denver right now?</h3>
<p>The citywide median sold price is $379,000-$400,000 as of early 2026. But prices vary dramatically by neighborhood — from $255,000 in <a href="https://zbell.com/aurora-co-relocation-guide/">Aurora</a> to $727,000 in Cherry Creek and $700,000+ in LoDo. Capitol Hill remains the most affordable in-city option at around $350,000 median.</p>
<h3 style='font-size:20px'>Are condos for sale in Denver a good investment in 2026?</h3>
<p>Condo values have fallen about 5-7% over the last year, which means you&#8217;re buying at lower prices than any time since 2020. For owner-occupants who plan to hold 5+ years, the current pricing represents a buying opportunity. Investors should factor in rising HOA costs and insurance premiums — rental yields still pencil out in neighborhoods like Capitol Hill and Aurora where purchase prices are lowest. Check our <a href="https://zbell.com/invest/">investment page</a> for more guidance.</p>
<h3 style='font-size:20px'>How much are HOA fees for Denver condos?</h3>
<p>The statewide average is $401 per month. In Denver, typical HOA fees range from $200-$600 depending on the building. Downtown high-rises with amenities like concierge and rooftop pools can run $500-$900+. Always request the HOA&#8217;s financial documents before making an offer — fees have been rising rapidly due to insurance cost increases.</p>
<h3 style='font-size:20px'>Where are the most affordable condos for sale in Denver metro?</h3>
<p><a href="https://zbell.com/aurora-co-relocation-guide/">Aurora</a> ($255,000 median), <a href="https://zbell.com/lakewood-co-relocation-guide/">Lakewood</a> ($300,000), and Capitol Hill ($350,000) offer the lowest entry points. <a href="https://zbell.com/relocate-to-boulder-co/">Boulder</a> condos ($485,000-$540,000) are the most affordable way into that market given single-family homes there exceed $948,000.</p>
<h2 style='font-size:29px'>Start your Denver condo search</h2>
<p>The Denver condo market has shifted in buyers&#8217; favor for the first time in years. More inventory, softer prices, and motivated sellers mean you&#8217;ve got leverage that didn&#8217;t exist in 2021 or 2022. Whether you&#8217;re a first-time buyer looking for an affordable entry point in Aurora or Capitol Hill, or you want a luxury unit in Cherry Creek or LoDo, now is the time to start looking seriously.</p>
<p>We know the condo buildings, the HOA reputations, and the neighborhoods inside and out — from <a href="https://zbell.com/arvada-co-relocation-guide/">Arvada</a> and <a href="https://zbell.com/wheat-ridge-co-relocation-guide/">Wheat Ridge</a> on the west side to <a href="https://zbell.com/relocate-to-northglenn-colorado/">Northglenn</a> and <a href="https://zbell.com/relocate-to-thornton-colorado/">Thornton</a> up north. <a href="https://zbell.com/contact/">Contact us today</a> for a free consultation and we&#8217;ll match you with an agent who specializes in <strong>condos for sale in Denver</strong> and the surrounding metro. You can also browse our <a href="https://zbell.com/denver-metro-market-report/">Denver metro market report</a> for the latest pricing data, or visit our <a href="https://zbell.com/faqs/">FAQs</a> for answers to common buyer questions.</p>
<p>The post <a href="https://zbell.com/condos-for-sale-denver-city-living-guide/">Condos for Sale in Denver: A Neighborhood Guide for 2026</a> appeared first on <a href="https://zbell.com">ZBell Real Estate </a>.</p>
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