Complex: Hudson Glen
Year Built: 1979
Bedrooms: 2
Median Sale Price: $327,000
HOA Fee: Not available
Property Tax: Not available
Hudson Glen’s median sale price of $327,000 sits well below the Danbury-wide median of $512,500 across all property types. That gap is the first thing buyers should understand. For a two-bedroom condominium built in 1979, Hudson Glen represents one of the more accessible price points in the Danbury market. That accessibility attracts a consistent pool of buyers, which means turnover moves when units come to market, and pricing tends to be competitive from day one. Buyers watching Danbury CT condos for value will find Hudson Glen worth tracking closely.
Availability at Hudson Glen changes quickly. The complex draws buyers who recognize the price spread between Hudson Glen and the broader Danbury CT real estate market, and that awareness keeps demand steady. Because the complex was built in 1979 and carries a finite number of units, new listings do not appear on a predictable schedule. When a unit does list, well-priced two-bedrooms at this price point attract multiple parties fast. If you are actively looking, waiting on the sidelines is the fastest way to miss the right unit. Contact The Engel Team directly to get on early notification for Hudson Glen listings before they hit the open market.
No verified MLS sales summary is available for Hudson Glen at this time. That is worth flagging, not because it signals a problem with the complex, but because thin comps make accurate pricing harder. When recent comparable sales are limited, the spread between an optimistic list price and a defensible appraisal value can be wider than buyers expect. Before making an offer, buyers should ask the listing agent for the full sales history at Hudson Glen, confirm the current price-per-square-foot against the closest comparable transactions available in Danbury’s broader condo market, and review what the unit last sold for. Sellers considering listing should understand that a limited comp set cuts both ways: it creates pricing flexibility, but it also means the first well-documented comparable sale sets the reference point for every transaction that follows.
Hudson Glen is a condominium community in Danbury, CT, constructed in 1979. As a product of the late 1970s construction wave, the complex reflects the community-style layout typical of that era: multiple residential buildings organized around shared grounds rather than a high-rise or single-structure format. The 1979 build date places Hudson Glen firmly in the category of established Danbury condo inventory, which means the buildings have decades of wear history, but also that the community has an established identity and a stable ownership base. Danbury’s condo market includes newer product at higher price points, and Hudson Glen’s position as older, two-bedroom inventory at a median near $327,000 gives it a specific niche that has held consistent buyer interest.
Units at Hudson Glen are configured as two-bedroom residences within a community-style setting. The complex style suggests a multi-building layout with units organized across shared grounds, consistent with the construction norms of 1979. Buyers should expect the unit interiors to vary in condition depending on renovation history. Some units will have been updated over the decades; others may carry original fixtures and finishes. That variation in condition is typical of a 40-plus-year-old condominium complex and should be factored into any offer calculation. Parking and outdoor space details should be confirmed directly with the seller or listing agent, as specifics by unit have not been independently verified. Buyers looking at the broader inventory of Danbury homes for sale should note that Hudson Glen’s two-bedroom layout is well-suited to buyers who want a lower-maintenance footprint at a price point that leaves room in the budget.
Hudson Glen was built in 1979, which means buyers must do focused due diligence on the building systems and reserves before closing. At this age, roofing, plumbing stacks, HVAC infrastructure, and exterior cladding have all likely seen at least one replacement cycle, and some may be approaching another. The most important document to request before committing is the reserve study. A reserve study tells you whether the association has been funding long-term capital repairs adequately or whether the current owners have been underfunding reserves, which creates the conditions for a special assessment. Ask for the last three years of meeting minutes as well. Minutes reveal pending assessments, litigation, ongoing maintenance disputes, and deferred repairs in plain language that financials alone will not show.
HOA fees and property tax figures are not available in verified form for Hudson Glen. Do not rely on estimated figures from third-party listing aggregators for these numbers. Request the actual HOA fee schedule, budget, and most recent financials directly from the association or management company. Confirm what the monthly fee covers, specifically whether it includes water, exterior maintenance, landscaping, and building insurance, and what the owner’s individual unit insurance obligation is. Condo insurance structure at a community-style complex built in 1979 can vary: some associations carry an all-in master policy, others carry bare walls-in, which shifts a larger replacement cost burden to the unit owner’s HO-6 policy.
Rental rules, pet policy, and owner-occupancy ratio all affect both daily living and resale financing. Lenders underwriting conventional condo loans require that owner-occupancy meet minimum thresholds. If Hudson Glen has a high percentage of investor-owned rentals, it may not qualify for conventional financing, which narrows the buyer pool on resale and can affect appraisal value. Verify the current ratio with the management company before proceeding. Any renovation work done inside a unit should come with permits pulled and closed; unpermitted work in a building this age can complicate both insurance claims and future sales.
The combination of below-market price point, limited comp data, and older building systems makes Hudson Glen a complex where preparation matters more than it would at a newer property with a clean sales history. The Engel Team works with buyers at Hudson Glen to assess current market value against available Danbury comps, identify red flags in HOA documents before they become problems, and structure offers that reflect real condition risk rather than wishful pricing.
Sellers at Hudson Glen benefit from the same analysis in reverse. With thin comps, a well-documented listing that accurately represents condition and recent improvements will outperform a generic list. The Engel Team can provide a specific valuation for your unit, position it correctly against current Danbury condo inventory, and move it efficiently. Reach out directly to discuss strategy whether you are buying or listing at Hudson Glen.
© 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. 
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