Complex: Trumbull Townhomes
Year Built: 2002
Bedrooms: 2–3
Building Style: Townhouse
Amenities: Clubhouse
Median Sale Price: Not available
HOA Fee: Not available
Property Tax: Not available
Trumbull Town Median (All Types): $771,000
Units at Trumbull Townhomes do not sit on the market long. Trumbull’s condominium inventory has been running at under one month of supply in early 2026, and the townhouse segment moves fastest of all. Buyers who find a unit here are competing in a market where homes are selling at roughly 105% of asking price and spending fewer than three weeks on the market before going under contract. If you are looking for a 2- or 3-bedroom townhouse-style condominium in Trumbull, this complex deserves a close look, but availability changes quickly. Contact The Engel Team directly for current listing status and to get ahead of units before they are publicly listed. You can also browse all available Trumbull CT condos to see what else is active in the market right now.
No verified MLS sales summary is currently available for Trumbull Townhomes. That does not mean nothing has traded here, it means the closed sale records for this specific complex have not yet been compiled into a verified data set. When comparable sales are limited or unverified, pricing becomes more complex and more consequential. A buyer who overpays by 5% in a complex with thin comps has no obvious comp to anchor a future appraisal. A seller who underprices leaves real money on the table with no market correction to bail them out. The Engel Team tracks sales at the complex level across Trumbull CT real estate and can pull verified MLS data for this building directly. Reach out before making any pricing decision.
Trumbull Townhomes is a townhouse-style condominium community built in 2002, making it part of the wave of early 2000s residential development that filled out Trumbull’s interior neighborhoods. The construction era matters: 2002 builds typically feature two-car garage configurations, open-plan living areas, and layouts designed for owner-occupants rather than the smaller investor-targeted formats common in older complexes. The clubhouse is a genuine amenity, not a common-room afterthought. It signals an association that invested in community infrastructure at the time of construction, which is a reasonable indicator of original build quality and HOA intent. The complex sits in a town where the residential character is almost entirely suburban, no train station, no downtown core, built around the school district and neighborhood continuity that Trumbull has delivered consistently for decades. That context shapes who buys here and why they stay.
Units at Trumbull Townhomes are offered in 2- and 3-bedroom configurations, built in the attached townhouse format that distinguishes this condominium from flat-style or mid-rise buildings elsewhere in Trumbull. Townhouse layout means vertical living: typically a ground-floor entry, living and kitchen on the main level, and bedrooms above. That format tends to deliver better sound separation between units than stacked flats, which matters in a community of this density. Parking is standard for the era and building style. Outdoor space at townhouse complexes of this type typically includes a private patio or small yard area off the main level, though buyers should confirm the specifics for any individual unit before contract. The 2-bedroom units work well for downsizers and smaller households. The 3-bedroom floor plans are the ones that compete directly with entry-level single-family homes in the same zip code, and at a price point that usually falls below the town median for detached houses.
HOA fees and reserve fund status are the first two numbers a buyer should request at Trumbull Townhomes, and they are not yet in the verified data for this complex. Do not proceed to contract without reviewing the most recent reserve study. A 2002 building is now more than 20 years old, which puts roofs, HVAC systems, and common-area infrastructure in the replacement window for many communities. If the reserve fund has not kept pace with that timeline, a special assessment becomes a real risk within the next three to five years. Ask for the last three years of meeting minutes along with the reserve study. Minutes will tell you whether any assessments have already been discussed or voted on.
Rental restrictions, pet policy, and owner-occupancy ratio all affect both your day-to-day living experience and your resale potential. Associations with high investor-ownership ratios can create financing friction: some conventional loan programs require a minimum percentage of owner-occupied units, and FHA financing has its own thresholds. Verify the current owner-occupancy rate with the management company before assuming standard financing applies. For resale, buyers want to know that the building maintains its owner-occupant character, because that is what sustains demand in a market like Trumbull’s. Request the full resale package from the HOA, which should include bylaws, rules and regulations, current budget, reserve study, and disclosure of any pending litigation or known deficiencies. Review it with your attorney before waiving any contingency.
Insurance structure in a townhouse condominium typically places exterior and common-area coverage under the master policy, with individual unit owners responsible for interior coverage. Confirm exactly where the master policy ends and your HO-6 policy needs to begin. That line varies by association and is not always where buyers assume it is.
Trumbull’s condo market is moving at a pace that does not reward hesitation. With months of supply below 1.0 and a sold-to-list ratio above 105%, buyers who wait for perfect information often find themselves competing for the next unit instead of closing on the one they wanted. The Engel Team works the Trumbull market actively, monitors off-market opportunities at the complex level, and can give you a specific valuation for any unit at Trumbull Townhomes based on verified comparable sales, not automated estimates that ignore building-specific factors.
For sellers, pricing a townhouse-style condominium in a complex with limited recent sales history requires judgment, not just a comp sheet. The Engel Team can analyze the full picture, including what comparable units in similar 2002-era complexes have sold for across Trumbull, to set a price that attracts serious buyers without leaving value behind. Browse the broader inventory of Trumbull homes for sale to understand how this complex fits within the overall market. Whether you are buying, selling, or simply trying to establish value before making any decision, reach out to The Engel Team for a direct conversation about Trumbull Townhomes.
© 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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