Where home prices run highest in Zionsville
Every square below is colored by what homes there actually sold for — the median recorded sale price from Indiana’s public disclosure records over the last five years, not a portal’s estimate. Darker squares sold higher. Click any square to see the recorded sales behind its color.
What homes sold for, square by square
Faded squares hold fewer than three recorded sales — read them as a hint, not a verdict. Each square is about 0.4 miles on a side.
The priciest pockets right now
The squares with the highest median recorded price since July 2021, counting only squares with at least three sales.
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1E 300 S area3 recorded sales in this square since July 2021$3,850,000median recorded price
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2Hunt Club Rd area3 recorded sales in this square since July 2021$2,919,000median recorded price
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3The Club at Holliday Farms15 recorded sales in this square since July 2021$2,600,000median recorded price
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4Oldfields9 recorded sales in this square since July 2021$2,025,000median recorded price
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5Old Hunt Club Road Subdivision3 recorded sales in this square since July 2021$1,800,000median recorded price
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6Willow Ridge12 recorded sales in this square since July 2021$1,292,500median recorded price
How this map is built
The map lays a grid of squares roughly 0.4 miles on a side over Zionsville. Each square’s color is the median recorded sale price of the arm’s-length, finished-home sales inside it since July 2021 — the prices actually filed when those homes changed hands, not estimates or asking prices. Vacant lots, non-market transfers between family or companies, and obviously mis-recorded prices are left out. Squares with one or two sales are drawn faded. 273 of 2,789 recent sales sit on parcels the county geometry layer can’t place yet, so they aren’t shown. The price-per-square-foot view divides the full recorded price by the home’s floor area, so it only counts single-parcel sales on lots of three acres or less — a small home sold with big acreage is a land price, not a home price, and it would read as an absurd rate. A square’s median describes its recorded sales — it is not an estimate of any particular home’s value. The underlying records refresh weekly.