Complex: Lexington Court
Town: Danbury, CT
Year Built: 2004
Bedrooms: 3
Median Sale Price: $593,000
HOA Fee: Not available — verify directly with association
Property Tax: Not available — verify with Danbury assessor
The number that matters most at Lexington Court is $593,000. That is the median sale price for this community, which sits above the Danbury-wide median of $512,500 across all property types. For a 3-bedroom condominium built in 2004, that premium reflects what buyers in Danbury are actually willing to pay for newer construction with more living space. This is not a starter-unit complex. Buyers here are trading up in size, and the price reflects it. If you are comparing condominium options across Danbury CT condos, Lexington Court occupies the higher end of the market for a non-luxury product, which means less competition from first-time buyers and more from move-down homeowners and buyers relocating from higher-cost markets.
Turnover at Lexington Court is not predictable. Communities like this, built in 2004 with 3-bedroom units, tend to attract owners who intend to stay. That keeps active inventory low. When a unit does come to market, it rarely sits. Buyers who wait for the right unit to appear on the MLS and then schedule a showing are often too late. The practical approach is to get ahead of inventory before it goes live. The Engel Team monitors off-market activity at complexes like Lexington Court across Danbury homes for sale and can alert you when a unit becomes available before it is publicly listed. Contact us directly if you are actively looking — waiting for Zillow to notify you is not a strategy at this price point.
No verified MLS sales summary is currently available for Lexington Court. That means no confirmed price range, sale dates, square footage, or price-per-square-foot figures can be published here without risking inaccuracy. What buyers should understand is that thin comparable sales data cuts both ways. Sellers may price aggressively because there is no recent comp to push back against. Buyers may overpay for the same reason. Before making an offer at Lexington Court, pull the full sales history directly from the Danbury land records and cross-reference with MLS data. The Engel Team can run a verified comparable analysis specific to this complex, which matters more here than it would in a complex with 10 recent sales establishing a clear price floor.
Lexington Court is a residential condominium community in Danbury, CT, built in 2004. The 2004 construction date puts it in a specific window of Danbury development, after the wave of older garden-style conversions from the 1980s and well before the more recent mixed-use projects that have appeared closer to downtown. That era of construction typically means vinyl siding or fiber cement exteriors, asphalt shingle roofs with a remaining useful life that depends heavily on association maintenance history, and building systems, including HVAC and plumbing, that are now past the 20-year mark and worth inspecting carefully. The community-style layout suggests a cluster or planned unit development format rather than a high-rise or mid-rise structure, which generally means individual unit entries, some degree of separation between buildings, and parking that is surface-level or attached rather than structured. What distinguishes Lexington Court within Danbury CT real estate is its combination of 3-bedroom unit sizes and post-2000 construction, a combination that is less common in the Danbury condominium market than buyers often expect.
Units at Lexington Court are 3-bedroom configurations. In a 2004 community-style complex, this typically means a townhouse-style layout with two or more floors, a primary bedroom suite above grade, and an open main level combining kitchen, dining, and living space. Buyers should verify whether all units follow a single floor plan or whether there are variations in square footage and bedroom configuration across buildings. Parking arrangements, whether attached garage, detached garage, or surface-lot assigned spaces, vary by complex and matter significantly for resale value. Outdoor space in community-style complexes from this era typically includes a small patio or deck off the main level. Verify these details unit by unit, as renovations since 2004 may have changed finishes, kitchen layouts, and flooring significantly between one unit and the next. A 3-bedroom condominium at this price in Danbury will attract buyers who need the extra room, and condition differences between updated and original-finish units will affect both offer price and time on market.
HOA fees for Lexington Court are not confirmed. Do not assume a number based on comparable complexes. Request the current fee schedule, the reserve fund study, the most recent audited financials, and the meeting minutes from the past two years before making an offer. For a building built in 2004, the 20-year mark is critical. Roofs, common-area mechanicals, pavement, and exterior components all have useful lives in the 20-to-25-year range. A well-funded reserve study will show whether the association has been collecting enough to cover these replacements without a special assessment. If the reserve is underfunded, a special assessment is not hypothetical — it is coming. Buyers who skip this review and discover a $5,000 to $15,000 per-unit assessment six months after closing have no recourse.
Rental restrictions are also worth confirming. Some associations from this era cap the percentage of units that can be rented at any given time. If you are buying as an investor, or if you think you might need to rent the unit in the future, get the rental rules in writing before going under contract. Pet policies vary by association and are not always disclosed upfront. Owner-occupancy ratios matter for conventional and FHA financing. If the complex has a high percentage of investor-owned units, some loan programs will not apply, which narrows your buyer pool at resale. Verify the current owner-occupancy ratio with the association management company and cross-check with your lender before assuming standard financing applies.
Pricing a unit at Lexington Court correctly requires more work than it does at complexes with a strong recent sales record. Thin comps mean there is real pricing risk in both directions. Sellers who guess at value without a proper analysis leave money on the table or overprice and sit. Buyers who skip comparable analysis and match an asking price are taking on unknown risk. The Engel Team works with buyers and sellers at complexes across Danbury CT condos where limited sales history requires a more detailed valuation approach. For sellers, that means building a defensible price from adjacent data, condition, and current demand rather than relying on a single old comp. For buyers, that means understanding what the verified sales history actually supports before submitting an offer. If you own a unit at Lexington Court and are thinking about selling, or if you are trying to determine what a unit is worth before making an offer, contact The Engel Team for a specific analysis. This is not a market where a Zestimate is a reliable starting point.
© 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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