Country Club Village Condos in Shelton, CT

Complex: Country Club Village
Year Built: 1983
Building Style: Townhouse
Bedrooms: 2–3
Median Sale Price: $554,000
HOA Fee: Not available — verify directly with the association
Property Tax: Not available — confirm with Shelton Assessor

Country Club Village Condos for Sale

Country Club Village does not turn over frequently. Built in 1983, the complex attracts owners who stay, which means active listings come and go quickly when they do appear. If you are watching this complex, timing matters more than it does in a higher-turnover building. Buyers who wait for the perfect moment often miss the only unit available in a given quarter.

No verified active listings are confirmed at the time of publication. Availability changes without notice at a complex this size. Contact The Engel Team directly for current inventory, including any units that may be available off-market or before they reach public MLS. You can browse the broader Shelton CT condo market for active options while monitoring Country Club Village specifically.

Recently Sold at Country Club Village

No verified MLS sales summary is available for Country Club Village at this time. The median sale price across this condominium complex is reported at $554,000, which sits below the broader Shelton town median of approximately $600,000 for all property types. That gap is worth understanding before you make an offer.

Because verified comp data is thin, buyers should pull their own MLS history with an agent before pricing any offer. Key things to confirm: the actual square footage of the unit you are considering, the price per square foot against recent closings in comparable Shelton townhouse complexes, and how long the last few units sat before going under contract. Pricing a townhouse-style condominium without confirmed comps is a genuine risk in a market where inventory runs around one month of supply. Work with an agent who has access to full MLS transaction history, not just what is publicly visible.

About Country Club Village

Country Club Village is a townhouse-style condominium community in Shelton, CT, constructed in 1983. The complex offers 2- and 3-bedroom units built in an attached townhouse format, which gives owners a more residential feel than a flat-style condominium building. The name and setting suggest a landscaped community environment consistent with the suburban residential character of the area.

Shelton sits along the Housatonic River and Route 8, and Country Club Village is positioned within a town that has been gaining buyer attention from people priced out of higher-cost Fairfield County markets. The complex pre-dates many of the newer condo developments in the region, which means it carries the construction characteristics and HOA history of a 1980s-era association. That matters for due diligence, as discussed below. For buyers evaluating the full range of options, Shelton CT real estate covers the broader single-family and condominium landscape across the town.

Homes and Layouts at Country Club Village

Units at Country Club Village come in 2- and 3-bedroom configurations. The townhouse building style means a vertical layout with living areas on one floor and bedrooms on another, which is a meaningful distinction for buyers who prefer single-level living. Townhouse units typically include private entry, which adds a degree of separation from neighbors that mid-rise condominium buildings do not offer.

Specific square footage ranges are not confirmed in verified data. Buyers should request floor plans and the actual measured square footage from the listing agent or directly from the HOA records before drawing pricing conclusions. In a 1983 building, units can vary considerably in how they have been updated — kitchens, baths, mechanicals, and flooring can differ unit by unit. Parking arrangements should also be confirmed, as townhouse complexes from this era commonly offer surface lots, attached garages, or deeded spots depending on the unit. Do not assume any of these specifics apply uniformly across the complex without written confirmation.

What Buyers Need to Know

Country Club Village was built in 1983, which puts it in a category of condominium associations where reserve fund adequacy deserves careful attention. Forty-plus-year-old buildings carry the accumulated cost of aging systems: roofs, siding, parking surfaces, common-area mechanicals, and exterior maintenance schedules. The first document any buyer at this complex should request is the most recent reserve study. If one has not been conducted in the last three years, that is a red flag worth pressing on before going under contract.

HOA fees are not confirmed in available data. Buyers must request the current monthly fee, the association’s financial statements, and the meeting minutes from the past two years. Minutes will surface any pending or recently passed special assessments, ongoing litigation, and maintenance deferrals that the seller is not required to volunteer. Special assessments in older complexes are not uncommon, and a buyer who does not read the minutes has no way to know what is coming.

The resale package, sometimes called the resale certificate or condominium disclosure package, is a legal document the seller must provide. It outlines the current monthly fees, the association’s financial health, any known pending assessments, the rules regarding rentals, pets, alterations, and subletting, and the current owner-occupancy ratio. That ratio matters if you are financing with a conventional loan — most lenders want to see at least 50% owner-occupied units, and FHA financing typically requires a higher threshold. Confirm the owner-occupancy ratio with your lender before committing to a loan type.

Renovation variation between units is expected in a complex of this age. A fully updated unit and an unrenovated unit in the same building should not be priced identically, and buyers should push for cost justification when a seller prices a unit above recent comps on the basis of upgrades alone. Get a home inspection that covers not just the interior but the building envelope elements specific to your unit, including roof access points, exterior walls, windows, and any mechanicals that are unit-owner responsibility versus HOA responsibility. That division of responsibility is spelled out in the association’s declaration documents and varies by complex.

There is no verified information about rental restrictions or pet policies at Country Club Village. Both must be confirmed directly with the HOA before closing if they affect your plans for the unit.

Buying or Selling at Country Club Village

If you are buying at Country Club Village, the combination of thin comp data and a 40-year-old association structure means you need more due diligence here than at a newer complex with a clean transaction history. The Engel Team can pull full MLS history for this complex and comparable Shelton townhouse communities, walk you through the resale package review process, and flag any pricing gaps between the ask and actual market support.

If you are selling a unit at Country Club Village, the $554,000 median is a starting point, not a ceiling. Updated units with renovated kitchens, new mechanicals, and strong natural light should command a premium if positioned correctly. Underpricing to move quickly leaves money on the table in a market where Shelton’s sold-to-list ratio held at 99.7% in early 2026 and days on market averaged 46 days. That is a market where a well-priced unit moves fast without requiring a discount.

Buyers looking at the broader Shelton homes for sale market will find that single-family inventory is also tight, which pushes more buyer attention toward condominium options like Country Club Village. That dynamic supports resale value for owners who hold here and sell into continued demand.

Contact The Engel Team at Douglas Elliman for current availability, a full pricing analysis, or a listing consultation. This is a market where the right information at the right time makes the difference.

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© 2025 DOUGLAS ELLIMAN REAL ESTATE. ALL MATERIAL PRESENTED HEREIN IS INTENDED FOR INFORMATION PURPOSES ONLY. WHILE THIS INFORMATION IS BELIEVED TO BE CORRECT, IT IS REPRESENTED SUBJECT TO ERRORS, OMISSIONS, CHANGES OR WITHDRAWAL WITHOUT NOTICE. ALL PROPERTY INFORMATION, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO SQUARE FOOTAGE, ROOM COUNT, NUMBER OF BEDROOMS AND THE SCHOOL DISTRICT IN PROPERTY LISTINGS SHOULD BE VERIFIED BY YOUR OWN ATTORNEY, ARCHITECT OR ZONING EXPERT. EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY. Fair Housing Logo