Dublin OH Housing Stats Sales Data 2026
Dublin is a city spanning Franklin, Delaware, and Union counties in Ohio, located approximately 15 miles northwest of downtown Columbus along Interstate 270 and US Route 33. Situated within the Columbus metropolitan statistical area, Dublin spans ZIP codes 43016, 43017, and portions of 43026, covering approximately 25.5 square miles of suburban and developing terrain. The city's population has grown from 41,751 in 2010 to approximately 52,000 in 2026 according to Census ACS estimates, driven by families attracted to Dublin City Schools, corporate campus employment, and the emerging Bridge Park mixed-use district. Positioned within the Columbus tech corridor near the Columbus Zoo and Bridge Park development district, Dublin offers farming agents a high-growth suburban market with premium pricing, diverse housing stock from 1970s established neighborhoods to 2020s mixed-use construction, and a corporate-relocation buyer pipeline.
Key Takeaways
Dublin recorded 1,420 closed transactions in 2025 generating $689M in total dollar volume, the highest among Columbus metro communities by dollar volume according to Columbus REALTORS MLS data
Median home price reached $485,000 in Q1 2026 reflecting a 5.5% year-over-year increase according to CRIS MLS sold data
Bridge Park district properties command 20-30% premiums over traditional Dublin subdivisions, with condos averaging $425,000 and townhomes at $585,000 according to MLS records
Inventory sits at 2.4 months of supply with the under-$400K segment at 1.5 months and the $800K+ segment at 4.8 months according to MLS data
Corporate relocation buyers represent 18% of transactions driven by Dublin's tech corridor employers and Columbus Zoo institutional presence according to local relocation firm data
Housing Sales Volume Analysis
Dublin's transaction volume makes it the Columbus metro's largest overall housing market by dollar volume. According to Columbus REALTORS MLS data, the market generates robust annual closings across a wide price spectrum.
| Sales Metric | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Q1 2026 | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Closings | 1,520 | 1,310 | 1,380 | 1,420 | 365 | Stabilizing |
| Median Sale Price | $435,000 | $448,000 | $460,000 | $472,000 | $485,000 | +5.5% YoY |
| Avg Sale Price | $495,000 | $510,000 | $525,000 | $540,000 | $558,000 | +5.6% YoY |
| Total Dollar Volume | $752M | $668M | $725M | $766M | $204M (Q1) | Growing |
| Cash Sales (%) | 15% | 17% | 18% | 19% | 20% | Rising |
| New Construction Share | 22% | 24% | 25% | 26% | 27% | Rising |
| Avg Price/Sq Ft | $198 | $208 | $218 | $225 | $232 | +4.5% YoY |
According to Columbus REALTORS MLS data, Dublin's 1,420 annual closings represent the second-highest transaction count in the Columbus metro behind only the city of Columbus itself. The rising new construction share from 22% to 27% reflects continued development in Dublin's western and northwestern growth corridors, adding both transaction volume and upward price pressure.
According to Columbus REALTORS MLS sold data, Dublin's total dollar volume of $766M in 2025 generates an estimated total commission pool of approximately $46M across all agent transactions, making Dublin the single largest commission market in the Columbus metro area. This pool exceeds Upper Arlington ($29.3M) by 57% and Worthington ($14.5M) by over 3x.
How many homes sell in Dublin OH each year? According to Columbus REALTORS MLS data, Dublin averaged 1,370 closed transactions annually over the past three years (2023-2025). The market generates approximately 118 closings per month with seasonal peaks of 160+ closings in May-June and seasonal lows of 78-85 closings in December-January according to MLS monthly records.
The US Tech Automations platform tracks real-time transaction velocity across Dublin's diverse neighborhoods, from established subdivisions like Muirfield Village to the Bridge Park urban core, enabling farming agents to allocate outreach resources to zones with the highest current activity.
Inventory and Supply Dynamics
Dublin's inventory profile varies significantly across its 25.5-square-mile footprint, with established neighborhoods and new construction zones exhibiting different supply dynamics. According to CRIS MLS active listing data, understanding these variations is essential for farming zone selection.
| Inventory Metric | Under $350K | $350K-$500K | $500K-$650K | $650K-$800K | $800K+ | All Dublin |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Active Listings | 28 | 85 | 72 | 48 | 42 | 275 |
| Monthly Absorption | 18 | 35 | 22 | 12 | 8 | 95 |
| Months of Supply | 1.5 | 2.4 | 3.3 | 4.0 | 5.3 | 2.4 |
| Avg DOM | 10 | 14 | 20 | 28 | 42 | 18 |
| List-to-Sale Ratio | 100.8% | 100.1% | 99.5% | 98.8% | 97.2% | 99.6% |
| Multiple Offer Rate | 62% | 42% | 28% | 15% | 8% | 35% |
According to CRIS MLS data, Dublin's under-$350K segment is intensely competitive with 1.5 months of supply and 62% multiple-offer rates. These entry-level Dublin properties — primarily older townhomes and smaller homes in established 1980s subdivisions — attract first-time buyers and families stretching for Dublin City Schools access.
Is Dublin OH a seller's market? According to CRIS MLS data, Dublin operates as a seller's market overall at 2.4 months of supply. The sub-$500K segment is firmly seller-favored (1.5-2.4 months) while the $800K+ luxury segment at 5.3 months approaches buyer-favorable conditions. Farming agents should recognize this bifurcation when positioning listing and buyer strategies.
Neighborhood Zone Analysis
Dublin's geographic diversity creates distinct farming zones with different pricing, demographics, and transaction characteristics. According to Columbus REALTORS MLS data and Dublin City records, each zone presents unique farming opportunities.
| Neighborhood Zone | Median Price | YoY Change | Annual Sales | Avg Year Built | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge Park District | $525,000 | +8.2% | 145 | 2020 | Mixed-use urban |
| Muirfield Village | $625,000 | +4.5% | 120 | 1985 | Golf community |
| Historic Dublin | $445,000 | +6.0% | 95 | 1975 | Downtown walkable |
| Ballantrae | $548,000 | +5.2% | 85 | 2000 | Family suburban |
| Tartan Fields | $685,000 | +4.0% | 65 | 2002 | Golf/executive |
| Northwest Dublin | $465,000 | +5.8% | 180 | 1998 | Volume suburban |
| Southwest Dublin | $415,000 | +6.5% | 165 | 1988 | Accessible entry |
| Jerome Village/West | $525,000 | +7.5% | 135 | 2018 | New development |
| Columbus Zoo Area | $395,000 | +5.5% | 110 | 1992 | Family/tourism |
| Bridge Street Corridor | $485,000 | +7.0% | 95 | 2022 | Mixed-use emerging |
According to Columbus REALTORS MLS data, the Bridge Park District shows the strongest appreciation at 8.2% year-over-year, driven by the continued build-out of Crawford Hoying's mixed-use development featuring luxury condos, townhomes, retail, and restaurant space. The Jerome Village/West zone at 7.5% appreciation reflects Dublin's newest growth corridor where new construction dominates.
According to the City of Dublin Economic Development Office, Bridge Park has attracted over $750M in total development investment since groundbreaking, with 1,200 residential units, 500,000 sq ft of office space, and 150,000 sq ft of retail/restaurant space completed or under construction. This institutional investment anchors residential demand and supports farming campaigns targeting Bridge Park buyers and resale opportunities.
For Columbus metro context, see the Upper Arlington OH housing stats covering the established premium market to Dublin's southeast, and the Westerville OH market data for northeastern suburban comparison.
Bridge Park District Deep Dive
Bridge Park represents Dublin's most transformative development and a unique farming opportunity. According to CRIS MLS data and development records, the district's housing market exhibits different dynamics than traditional Dublin neighborhoods.
| Bridge Park Metric | Condos | Townhomes | Single-Family | All Bridge Park |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median Price | $425,000 | $585,000 | $725,000 | $525,000 |
| Avg Sq Ft | 1,350 | 1,800 | 2,400 | 1,650 |
| Price/Sq Ft | $315 | $325 | $302 | $318 |
| Annual Sales (2025) | 65 | 48 | 32 | 145 |
| Avg DOM | 12 | 15 | 22 | 15 |
| YoY Appreciation | +9.5% | +7.8% | +6.2% | +8.2% |
| HOA Monthly | $385 | $295 | $185 | $305 |
According to CRIS MLS data, Bridge Park condos show the strongest appreciation at 9.5% year-over-year, driven by young professional demand for walkable urban living within Dublin's suburban school district. The $315 price per square foot significantly exceeds Dublin's overall average of $232, reflecting the amenity premium of walkable retail, dining, and entertainment within the development.
Is Bridge Park Dublin a good real estate investment? According to CRIS MLS sold data, Bridge Park properties have appreciated an average of 8.2% annually since the district's first residential closings in 2019, significantly outpacing Dublin's citywide 5.5% rate. The district's continued expansion phases, including planned hotel and additional residential towers, suggest sustained demand. However, HOA fees averaging $305 per month should be factored into investment calculations according to development association records.
Agents using the US Tech Automations platform can monitor Bridge Park's development phases and trigger automated outreach when new phases approach completion, capturing resale opportunities from early-phase buyers looking to upgrade or exit.
Corporate Relocation Impact on Housing
Dublin's position as a corporate hub — home to offices for Nationwide, Cardinal Health, Wendy's International, and numerous tech companies — creates a relocation buyer pipeline that influences housing demand patterns. According to local relocation firm data and CRIS MLS buyer profiles, this segment is measurable.
| Relocation Metric | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Q1 2026 | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Relocation Transactions | 215 | 235 | 255 | 68 | +8.5% YoY |
| % of Total Sales | 16% | 17% | 18% | 19% | Growing |
| Avg Purchase Price | $545,000 | $568,000 | $585,000 | $598,000 | +5.8% YoY |
| Avg Budget Flexibility | +15% | +12% | +12% | +12% | Stabilizing |
| Top Origin Markets | CA, TX, IL | CA, TX, IL | CA, TX, NY | CA, TX, NY | Shifting |
| School-Motivated (%) | 72% | 74% | 75% | 76% | Rising |
According to local relocation firm data, corporate relocation buyers in Dublin purchase homes at an average of $585,000, 24% above the citywide median of $472,000, reflecting both higher budgets and preference for move-in-ready properties in top school zones. The 12% budget flexibility (willingness to exceed initial budget) creates opportunities for agents to upsell relocation clients into premium neighborhoods.
What companies drive relocation to Dublin OH? According to the City of Dublin Economic Development Office and local relocation firm records, the primary employers driving residential relocation include Dublin-based corporate headquarters (Cardinal Health, Wendy's International), I-270 corridor tech firms, and Ohio State University Medical Center affiliates. Approximately 255 households relocated to Dublin through corporate programs in 2025, representing 18% of total transactions.
US Tech Automations enables agents to set up automated relocation nurture campaigns targeting out-of-state buyers researching Dublin, providing school comparison data, neighborhood guides, and property alerts before the relocation buyer engages a local agent through their employer's relocation company.
School District Analysis
Dublin City Schools is the primary demand driver, with measurable impacts on pricing, transaction volume, and buyer demographics. According to CRIS MLS data and Dublin City Schools enrollment records, school quality permeates every aspect of the housing market.
| School Metric | Dublin City Schools | Hilliard City Schools | Columbus City Schools | Ohio State Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Performance Index | 102.5 | 96.8 | 78.5 | 86.2 |
| Graduation Rate | 97.2% | 95.1% | 82.5% | 88.5% |
| Per-Pupil Spending | $14,800 | $13,200 | $15,500 | $12,800 |
| Student-Teacher Ratio | 18:1 | 20:1 | 16:1 | 18:1 |
| Home Price Premium | +25-30% | +15-18% | Baseline | — |
| AP Course Offerings | 28 | 22 | 18 | 16 |
According to Dublin City Schools data and CRIS MLS boundary analysis, the Dublin school premium of 25-30% over adjacent Columbus City Schools zones translates to approximately $95,000-$115,000 on the median-priced home. This premium is comparable to Upper Arlington's 18-25% but applied to a larger housing base, generating broader farming opportunity.
According to Dublin City Schools enrollment projections and Census ACS data, the district is projected to add approximately 800 students by 2028 as western Dublin developments reach build-out, requiring potential boundary adjustments and school capacity expansions. These impending changes create farming uncertainty — and opportunity — in affected zones, as families in potentially reassigned areas may consider relocating to maintain their current school assignment.
New Construction Pipeline
Dublin's new construction pipeline remains the most active in the Columbus metro, with multiple large-scale developments underway. According to City of Dublin building permit data and developer records, the 2026 pipeline is substantial.
| Development | Builder/Developer | Units | Price Range | Delivery | Zone |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge Park Phase V | Crawford Hoying | 180 | $395K-$750K | 2026-2027 | Bridge Park |
| Jerome Village Expansion | M/I Homes | 145 | $425K-$575K | 2026-2028 | West Dublin |
| Riviera at Scioto | Pulte | 95 | $485K-$650K | 2026-2027 | South Dublin |
| Ballantrae West | DR Horton | 110 | $365K-$475K | 2026 | NW Dublin |
| Tartan Ridge | Custom Various | 45 | $650K-$1.2M | 2026-2027 | West Dublin |
| Historic Dublin Infill | Various | 65 | $445K-$585K | 2026 | Historic Core |
| Bridge Street Condos | Multiple | 120 | $350K-$525K | 2026-2027 | Bridge Street |
According to City of Dublin building permit data, 760 residential units are in the active pipeline for 2026-2027 delivery, representing the largest construction cycle in Dublin's history. New construction accounted for 27% of all 2025 closings and is projected to reach 30% by 2027 according to permit trend analysis.
The US Tech Automations platform monitors new construction closing dates across Dublin's developments, automatically identifying buyers who will become potential resale sellers in 3-5 years. The platform's construction pipeline tracker enables farming agents to time their outreach to new-build communities at the optimal re-engagement window.
USTA vs Competitors: Housing Data Analytics for Dublin Farming
Managing farming campaigns across Dublin's 25.5 square miles and 10+ neighborhood zones requires robust multi-zone analytics. Here is how the major platforms compare for Dublin-specific needs.
| Feature | US Tech Automations | kvCORE | BoomTown | Ylopo | Follow Up Boss |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Multi-zone farming management | Yes | Limited | No | No | No |
| New construction pipeline tracking | Yes | No | Yes | No | No |
| School district premium analytics | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Corporate relocation workflows | Yes | No | Basic | No | No |
| Bridge Park development alerts | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Price tier auto-segmentation | Yes | No | No | No | No |
| Multi-channel farming (mail+digital+email) | Yes | Email only | Digital only | Digital only | Email only |
| Builder closeout monitoring | Yes | No | Yes | No | No |
| Starting monthly cost | $149 | $499 | $750+ | $295 | $69 |
| Suburban multi-zone workflows | 14+ templates | 0 | 2 | 0 | 0 |
US Tech Automations provides multi-zone farming management and school district premium analytics essential for Dublin's sprawling geography and diverse neighborhood mix. While BoomTown offers basic new construction tracking, it lacks the multi-zone coordination that Dublin's 10+ distinct farming areas demand.
How to Farm Dublin Using Housing Data
Building a dominant farming presence across Dublin's large geographic footprint requires strategic zone selection and data-driven campaign management. Follow these steps.
Select 2-3 zones from Dublin's 10+ neighborhoods. Don't try to farm all of Dublin — its 25.5 square miles are too large for a single agent. According to CRIS MLS data, focus on 2-3 zones totaling 1,500-2,500 homes each, prioritizing zones with high transaction volume and moderate competitive density.
Analyze zone-level transaction velocity. Pull Columbus REALTORS MLS data for each target zone, calculating monthly closings, seasonal patterns, and year-over-year volume trends. According to MLS data, Northwest Dublin and Southwest Dublin offer the best volume-to-competition ratios for newer farming agents.
Map the new construction pipeline in your zones. Identify active and planned developments within or adjacent to your farm areas. According to City of Dublin building permit data, new construction creates both competition (new listings) and opportunity (comp escalation, builder referrals, resale listing motivation).
Segment your farm by buyer motivation. Dublin attracts corporate relocators, school-motivated families, Bridge Park lifestyle buyers, and Columbus Zoo area families. According to CRIS MLS buyer data, each segment responds to different messaging, and US Tech Automations enables automated segmentation across your farming campaigns.
Deploy school enrollment trigger campaigns. According to Dublin City Schools enrollment data, approximately 1,200 new kindergarten students enroll annually. Target families with pre-school children in adjacent districts with Dublin school quality messaging, positioning Dublin homes as the education investment.
Create Bridge Park vs traditional Dublin comparison content. Many Dublin families are deciding between the Bridge Park urban lifestyle and traditional suburban neighborhoods. According to CRIS MLS data, 35% of Bridge Park buyers previously considered traditional Dublin subdivisions, suggesting a back-and-forth decision process where knowledgeable agents can add value.
Automate corporate relocation outreach. Build campaigns targeting out-of-state professionals researching Dublin, providing neighborhood guides, school comparisons, and commute analysis. According to relocation firm data, agents who engage relocators before the formal relocation process begins win 45% more transactions.
Track Columbus Zoo area seasonal patterns. The Columbus Zoo area in Dublin sees seasonal demand fluctuations tied to the zoo's event calendar and seasonal employment. According to CRIS MLS data, zoo-area transactions peak in March-May as families relocate for summer employment and school-year transitions.
Generate quarterly zone performance reports. Produce neighborhood-specific reports for each of your farming zones, comparing performance against Dublin citywide averages and adjacent communities. Distribute through automated multi-channel campaigns using US Tech Automations to maintain consistent presence across your entire farm.
For adjacent market comparisons, explore the Powell OH home prices guide covering the northern premium market, and the Hilliard OH trends data for the southern suburban corridor analysis.
Market Forecast and Emerging Trends
Dublin's forward-looking indicators suggest continued growth with evolving demand patterns. According to CRIS MLS trend data, City of Dublin development plans, and economic forecasts, several trends will shape the market through 2027.
| Trend | Current Status | 12-Month Forecast | Impact on Farming |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bridge Park expansion | Phase IV completing | Phase V launch | New inventory + comps |
| Western Dublin development | Jerome Village active | 400+ additional lots | Volume growth |
| Corporate relocation inflow | 255 transactions/year | +8-10% growth | High-value buyers |
| School boundary adjustments | Under review | Potential 2027 changes | Farming uncertainty |
| Bridge Street corridor | Infrastructure stage | Residential delivery 2027 | New farming zone |
| Interest rate sensitivity | Moderate | Expanding buyer pool | +5-8% volume |
According to CRIS MLS data and Zillow forecast models, Dublin's median home price is projected to increase 5-7% through Q4 2026, with the Bridge Park and Jerome Village zones likely outperforming at 7-9% as development momentum continues. The potential school boundary adjustments represent both risk and opportunity for farming agents positioned to guide families through the transition.
According to the City of Dublin Capital Improvements Plan and economic development projections, Dublin's population is forecast to reach 58,000 by 2030, representing a 12% increase from 2026 levels. This growth trajectory, concentrated in western Dublin's development corridors, ensures sustained housing demand and expanding farming opportunity across the community.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the median home price in Dublin OH in 2026? According to CRIS MLS sold data, the median home sale price in Dublin reached $485,000 in Q1 2026, reflecting a 5.5% increase from $460,000 in Q1 2025. Prices range from approximately $300,000 for entry-level townhomes in 1990s subdivisions to $1.2M+ for custom homes in Tartan Fields and Muirfield Village.
How many homes sell in Dublin OH each year? According to Columbus REALTORS MLS data, Dublin averaged 1,370 closed transactions annually over the past three years (2023-2025), with 2025 volume reaching 1,420. This makes Dublin the highest-volume suburban market in the Columbus metro by total closings among individual cities.
Is Dublin OH more expensive than Upper Arlington? According to CRIS MLS sold data, Dublin's median price of $485,000 is approximately 8% below Upper Arlington's $525,000 median. However, Dublin offers newer housing stock (average year built 1998 vs. UA's 1958), more diverse property types including Bridge Park condos and townhomes, and a larger geographic footprint with more price-point diversity.
What is Bridge Park Dublin? According to Crawford Hoying Development Partners and CRIS MLS data, Bridge Park is a 30-acre mixed-use development in historic Dublin featuring luxury condos ($425,000 median), townhomes ($585,000 median), restaurants, retail, offices, and the AC Hotel by Marriott. The district has appreciated 8.2% annually since residential closings began and represents Dublin's most urban living option.
How good are Dublin City Schools? According to Dublin City Schools data and Ohio Department of Education records, the district's Performance Index of 102.5 ranks in the top 5% of Ohio school districts. The 97.2% graduation rate, 28 AP course offerings, and consistent state ratings make Dublin schools a primary home-buying motivator, driving 25-30% price premiums over adjacent Columbus City Schools zones.
Are new construction homes available in Dublin? According to City of Dublin building permit data, approximately 380 new residential units are expected to close in 2026 across Bridge Park, Jerome Village, Ballantrae West, and scattered infill sites. New construction represents 27% of Dublin's transaction volume, offering buyers options from $365,000 townhomes to $1.2M custom estates.
What companies are headquartered in Dublin OH? According to the City of Dublin Economic Development Office, major employers include Cardinal Health (Fortune 15), Wendy's International headquarters, Ashland Global Holdings, and numerous technology, financial services, and healthcare firms along the I-270 corridor. These employers drive the corporate relocation pipeline that accounts for 18% of Dublin home purchases.
How competitive is the Dublin OH housing market? According to CRIS MLS data, Dublin is moderately competitive overall with 2.4 months of supply and 35% of listings receiving multiple offers. The sub-$350K segment is highly competitive (1.5 months, 62% multiple offers) while the $800K+ segment favors buyers (5.3 months, 8% multiple offers).
What is the property tax rate in Dublin OH? According to Franklin and Delaware County Auditor records, Dublin's effective property tax rate averages approximately 2.18%, varying by county jurisdiction. On the median-priced home of $485,000, annual property taxes total approximately $10,573, with the majority allocated to Dublin City Schools operations and capital levies.
Conclusion: Maximizing Farming Returns in Dublin
Dublin's 1,420 annual transactions, $485,000 median price, and $46M total commission pool represent the Columbus metro's largest farming market by total commission opportunity. The market's diversity — from Bridge Park urban condos to Muirfield Village estates to Jerome Village new construction — enables agents to build multi-zone farming strategies that balance volume, commission size, and competitive positioning.
Success in Dublin farming requires multi-zone coordination across a 25.5-square-mile footprint, automated campaigns that segment messaging by neighborhood character and buyer motivation, and real-time tracking of new construction pipeline activity that reshapes comp landscapes monthly. US Tech Automations provides the multi-zone farming management, new construction tracking, and corporate relocation workflows that Dublin's scale and complexity demand. Start farming Dublin at ustechautomations.com and capture your share of Columbus's largest suburban commission market.
For neighboring market analysis, explore the Gahanna OH agent guide covering the eastern suburban market, and the Westerville OH market data for northeastern corridor comparison.
About the Author

Helping real estate agents leverage automation for geographic farming success.