Turn of River CT Real Estate

TURN OF RIVER CT REAL ESTATE

Turn of River CT real estate occupies a genuinely useful position in the Fairfield County market. Stamford is not one market — it’s four or five layered on top of each other: downtown condos trading above $600 per square foot, North Stamford estates pushing $3 million, and everything in between. Turn of River sits in the middle of that geography and, not coincidentally, the middle of that market. It’s more suburban than Harbor Point, more accessible than the Merritt Parkway backcountry, and more affordable than nearly any comparable neighborhood in Fairfield County at this commute distance. That’s a real combination, and it’s why buyers keep arriving here. For a broader look at the city, start with Stamford CT Real Estate.

The neighborhood takes its name from the historic bend in the Rippowam River, a detail most residents don’t know and almost none mention. What they do mention: the quiet, the lots, and the schools. Turn of River is roughly centered between downtown Stamford to the south and the New Canaan border to the north — close enough to everything, far enough from the density that defines the city’s core.

CHARACTER AND ARCHITECTURE

The housing stock here is honest and unpretentious. The dominant building era runs from the early 1960s through the mid-1980s — split-levels, raised ranches, center-hall colonials, and cape cods built on quarter-acre to half-acre lots when Stamford was pushing outward from its downtown core. These are not grand homes. They are well-proportioned, functional, and increasingly renovated. A gut-renovated 1970s colonial on a flat half-acre in Turn of River looks very different from the original, and buyers have discovered that.

Scattered among the older subdivisions are pockets of newer construction — infill colonials and cape revivals built in the 1990s and 2000s that updated the streetscape without transforming it. The result is a neighborhood that feels settled. Tree canopy is mature. Sidewalks are intermittent. Driveways are wide. The architecture won’t win design awards, but the bones are solid and the lots are real — a genuine differentiator from what downtown Stamford or even mid-city neighborhoods can offer at similar prices. Buyers cross-shopping nearby towns often look at New Canaan CT real estate before landing here, drawn back by the value equation Turn of River consistently delivers.

PRICES IN 2025 AND 2026

Turn of River CT real estate has functioned as an entry point to Stamford’s single-family market for the better part of a decade, and that positioning held through the rate cycle. Homes here have generally traded between $525,000 and $825,000 depending on condition, square footage, and lot. Updated colonials in the 1,800–2,400 square foot range — the neighborhood’s bread and butter — have consistently cleared $600,000 and moved quickly when priced correctly. Unrenovated splits and ranches still find buyers in the low-to-mid $500,000s, particularly when the lot is flat and the location is strong. The ceiling has been rising. A handful of fully renovated larger colonials have pushed past $900,000, though those remain the exception rather than the rule.

What drove price appreciation here wasn’t speculation — it was math. Buyers priced out of Darien CT real estate and similar Fairfield County towns ran the commute numbers and found that Turn of River delivered most of the same access at a meaningful discount. That calculation hasn’t changed. If anything, higher mortgage rates sharpened it, pushing more buyers toward neighborhoods where the base price creates a serviceable payment rather than a punishing one.

SCHOOLS AND DAILY LIFE

Turn of River Middle School anchors the neighborhood’s identity in a way that’s uncommon for a school building to do — families track into this district deliberately. Elementary-age children typically attend Northeast Elementary. Both schools feed into Westhill High School, Stamford’s largest high school campus. Test scores are competitive within the Stamford district, and the middle school in particular has a strong reputation among families relocating from New York.

Daily errands run south on High Ridge Road, which carries most of the commercial weight for this part of Stamford — grocery stores, pharmacies, coffee, hardware, and the usual suburban infrastructure. The neighborhood itself is residential almost without exception. There are no corner stores, no walkable main street, no train station within walking distance. The Springdale Metro-North station is the closest option for commuters; a car is required to reach it, which is true of most of the neighborhoods at this distance from downtown. That’s not a deterrent for the buyers who choose Turn of River — it’s already priced in.

WHO BUYS HERE

Turn of River CT real estate draws a predictable but genuine buyer pool: families relocating from New York City who want a real yard and a real school district without stretching into the $1.2 million range that comparable lots command in the most competitive Fairfield County towns. It also draws trade-up buyers from Stamford’s condo market who are ready for a single-family home and want to stay within the city. And it draws buyers who’ve been watching the neighborhood for years and finally moved when inventory opened up. The common thread is practicality. People who buy in Turn of River have done the math, compared the alternatives, and decided this is where the numbers make sense. That consensus is durable, and it’s what has kept the market here consistently active through cycles that flattened demand elsewhere.

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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