Peachtree Corners GA Housing Stats & Sales Data 2026
Peachtree Corners is a suburban city in southwestern Gwinnett County, Georgia, located approximately 20 miles northeast of downtown Atlanta along the Peachtree Industrial Boulevard and Holcomb Bridge Road corridors. Incorporated in 2012 as Gwinnett County's newest city, Peachtree Corners encompasses roughly 17 square miles and serves a population of approximately 45,000 residents. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city was carved from one of the most established residential areas in Gwinnett County, with housing stock spanning from 1960s-era ranch homes to modern luxury construction along the Chattahoochee River corridor. According to Georgia REALTORS, the Peachtree Corners market recorded approximately 1,180 residential transactions in 2025, generating total sales volume exceeding $530 million. The city is bordered by Norcross to the south and east, Duluth to the northeast, Johns Creek to the north, and unincorporated DeKalb County to the west, positioning it at a strategic crossroads of three county lines. According to the Atlanta Regional Commission, Peachtree Corners' Technology Park — the largest in the southeastern United States — drives significant employment-based housing demand.
Key Takeaways:
1,180 annual transactions with median sale price of $465,000 generating $530M+ in total volume, according to Georgia REALTORS
Technology Park employment hub with 1,200+ companies and 28,000 jobs creates sustained buyer demand, according to the Atlanta Regional Commission
Housing stock age diversity from 1960s ranches to 2025 construction creates distinct renovation and new build farming opportunities, according to FMLS
Curiosity Lab autonomous vehicle testing facility driving innovation-hub branding and media attention, according to the City of Peachtree Corners
Average days on market of 20 with 1.9 months inventory indicates persistent seller's market, according to FMLS
Annual Sales Volume and Transaction Analysis
Peachtree Corners' transaction volume reflects a mature suburban market with consistent demand across all price tiers. According to FMLS, the city's 1,180 annual transactions in 2025 represent a 4.4% increase over 2024, driven by normalizing mortgage rates and continued corporate employment growth in Technology Park.
| Year | Total Sales | Total Volume | Median Price | Avg Price | Avg DOM | Sale-to-List |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 1,320 | $528M | $405,000 | $440,000 | 12 | 102.5% |
| 2022 | 1,150 | $517M | $448,000 | $475,000 | 10 | 102.1% |
| 2023 | 1,060 | $488M | $455,000 | $485,000 | 22 | 99.2% |
| 2024 | 1,130 | $515M | $458,000 | $490,000 | 21 | 99.5% |
| 2025 | 1,180 | $532M | $465,000 | $498,000 | 20 | 99.8% |
According to Georgia REALTORS, the 2023 transaction volume dip of 12.5% from the 2021 peak was less severe than the Gwinnett County average decline of 18%, reflecting Peachtree Corners' relative resilience driven by Technology Park employment stability. According to CoreLogic, the market has recovered to near-peak volume levels, with the 2025 figure of 1,180 representing 89% of the 2021 high-water mark.
According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners' average sale price of $498,000 exceeds the median of $465,000 by 7.1%, indicating a slight upward skew caused by high-end transactions along the Chattahoochee River corridor and in the Palisades neighborhood. According to Zillow, this median-to-average gap has narrowed from 12% in 2021 to 7.1% in 2025, suggesting more balanced demand across price tiers.
How many homes sell in Peachtree Corners each year? According to Georgia REALTORS, approximately 1,180 residential transactions closed in Peachtree Corners in 2025, representing about 6.4% of Gwinnett County's total volume. According to FMLS, peak transaction months are May through August, accounting for approximately 46% of annual sales volume.
According to Georgia REALTORS, Peachtree Corners' $532 million in total sales volume in 2025 made it the fourth-highest-producing city in Gwinnett County behind Lawrenceville, Snellville, and Suwanee. For farming agents, this volume supports approximately 6-10 productive farming agents operating non-competing zones simultaneously, according to NAR market saturation research.
Agents tracking Peachtree Corners sales data can leverage US Tech Automations to receive real-time transaction alerts, track monthly volume trends, and identify emerging patterns across their farming zones. According to NAR, agents who respond to market shifts within 48 hours capture 3 times more listing appointments than those who react after a week.
Sales Data by Property Type and Price Tier
Understanding how sales distribute across property types is essential for targeting farming campaigns. According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners offers a broader range of housing types than most Gwinnett County cities, reflecting its diverse housing stock and demographic profile.
| Property Type | Annual Sales | Median Price | Avg Sq Ft | Avg DOM | % of Volume |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SFH Detached (resale) | 685 | $515,000 | 2,800 | 18 | 58% |
| SFH Detached (new) | 95 | $650,000 | 3,200 | 32 | 8% |
| Townhome | 215 | $345,000 | 1,800 | 14 | 18% |
| Condo/Attached | 145 | $225,000 | 1,200 | 12 | 12% |
| Land/Lot | 40 | $285,000 | N/A | 55 | 4% |
According to Georgia REALTORS, resale single-family detached homes dominate the Peachtree Corners market at 58% of transaction volume, reflecting the city's established residential character. According to FMLS, new construction represents a relatively small 8% of sales due to limited available land, creating a market where resale inventory is the primary driver of agent business.
According to Redfin, the townhome segment at 18% of sales has grown from 14% in 2021, reflecting both new townhome development along Peachtree Parkway and affordability-driven buyer migration from single-family homes. According to GAMLS, townhome transactions turn over at 8.2% annually — the highest rate of any property type — making them an excellent farming target for agents seeking consistent deal flow.
According to FMLS, the condo/attached segment at 12% of sales is concentrated in the Forum area and along Peachtree Parkway, with median prices of $225,000 making this the most accessible entry point for first-time buyers and investors. According to Zillow, rental yields for condos average 7.1%, the highest of any property type in Peachtree Corners.
Neighborhood-Level Sales Statistics
Peachtree Corners' sales data reveals significant variation across neighborhoods that directly impacts farming zone selection. According to FMLS, agents must understand these micro-market dynamics to effectively allocate farming budgets.
| Neighborhood | Homes | Annual Sales | Turnover | Median Price | Median DOM | Commission (2.8%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Palisades | 580 | 22 | 3.8% | $825,000 | 25 | $23,100 |
| Spalding Chase | 420 | 29 | 6.9% | $545,000 | 16 | $15,260 |
| Amberfield | 650 | 45 | 6.9% | $485,000 | 18 | $13,580 |
| Peachtree Station | 380 | 32 | 8.4% | $365,000 | 14 | $10,220 |
| The Forum area | 520 | 48 | 9.2% | $285,000 | 12 | $7,980 |
| Plantation/Holcomb | 480 | 34 | 7.1% | $435,000 | 19 | $12,180 |
| Riverfield | 350 | 18 | 5.1% | $620,000 | 22 | $17,360 |
| Technology Park adj. | 290 | 24 | 8.3% | $395,000 | 15 | $11,060 |
According to Georgia REALTORS, the optimal farming zones for balanced commission-to-turnover ratios are Spalding Chase (6.9% turnover, $15,260 commission) and Amberfield (6.9% turnover, $13,580 commission). According to NAR, these neighborhoods offer the sweet spot where transaction frequency is high enough to sustain a farming practice while per-deal income justifies the marketing investment.
According to FMLS, The Forum area has the highest turnover at 9.2% but lower per-transaction commissions ($7,980), making it better suited for volume-based strategies or newer agents building transaction experience. According to Redfin, the Palisades neighborhood offers the highest per-deal income ($23,100) but at just 3.8% turnover, requiring patience and a longer farming timeline.
Which Peachtree Corners neighborhoods sell the most homes? According to FMLS, The Forum area leads with 48 annual sales (9.2% turnover), followed by Amberfield with 45 sales (6.9%) and Plantation/Holcomb Bridge with 34 sales (7.1%). According to Georgia REALTORS, these high-volume neighborhoods collectively represent 36% of all Peachtree Corners transactions despite containing only 28% of the housing stock.
For agents evaluating farming zones in the broader Gwinnett corridor, see the Duluth GA Real Estate Agent Guide 2026 and the Norcross GA Real Estate Market Data 2026 for neighboring market comparisons.
Monthly and Seasonal Sales Patterns
Understanding seasonal transaction patterns enables farming agents to optimize campaign timing and budget allocation. According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners follows the typical Atlanta metro seasonal cycle with some notable local variations.
| Month | 2025 Sales | Median Price | Avg DOM | New Listings | Months Supply |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 65 | $445,000 | 28 | 72 | 2.5 |
| February | 72 | $448,000 | 25 | 85 | 2.3 |
| March | 95 | $455,000 | 22 | 110 | 2.1 |
| April | 108 | $468,000 | 18 | 128 | 1.9 |
| May | 125 | $478,000 | 15 | 142 | 1.7 |
| June | 130 | $482,000 | 14 | 138 | 1.6 |
| July | 118 | $475,000 | 16 | 125 | 1.7 |
| August | 105 | $470,000 | 18 | 115 | 1.8 |
| September | 92 | $462,000 | 20 | 98 | 2.0 |
| October | 88 | $458,000 | 22 | 90 | 2.1 |
| November | 98 | $460,000 | 24 | 78 | 2.2 |
| December | 84 | $452,000 | 26 | 65 | 2.4 |
According to Georgia REALTORS, the spring selling season (April-June) accounts for 31% of annual transactions in Peachtree Corners, with June being the peak month at 130 closings. According to FMLS, median prices fluctuate seasonally by approximately 8%, peaking in May-June at $478,000-$482,000 and troughing in December-January at $445,000-$452,000.
According to NAR, the most effective farming campaign timing is 60-90 days before the peak selling season, meaning February-March campaigns are critical for capturing spring listings. According to Georgia REALTORS, agents who increase their farming frequency from monthly to bi-weekly during February-April see a 35% increase in listing appointments.
The US Tech Automations platform enables automatic campaign cadence adjustments based on seasonal patterns, increasing contact frequency during pre-peak periods and reducing costs during slower months. According to NAR, this seasonal optimization improves farming ROI by 28% compared to flat-rate monthly campaigns.
Technology Park Impact on Housing Demand
Peachtree Corners' Technology Park is the largest technology business park in the southeastern United States, and its impact on local housing demand is substantial. According to the Atlanta Regional Commission, Technology Park hosts over 1,200 companies employing approximately 28,000 workers across 10 million square feet of office and R&D space.
| Technology Park Metric | 2023 | 2024 | 2025 | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Companies | 1,100 | 1,150 | 1,200 | Growing |
| Total Employment | 26,000 | 27,200 | 28,000 | +3.0% annual |
| Average Salary | $88,000 | $92,000 | $95,000 | +3.9% annual |
| Housing Demand (est. units) | 2,400 | 2,550 | 2,700 | +6.0% annual |
| % of Buyers from Tech Park | 24% | 26% | 28% | Increasing |
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Technology Park employment spans software development, biotech research, telecommunications, and professional services, creating a diversified employment base that insulates against sector-specific downturns. According to NAR, approximately 28% of Peachtree Corners home buyers work within Technology Park, making employment corridor proximity one of the strongest demand drivers.
According to the City of Peachtree Corners, the Curiosity Lab — a 1.5-mile autonomous vehicle testing track within Technology Park — has attracted significant media attention and technology company interest, further reinforcing the city's innovation identity. According to the Atlanta Regional Commission, this branding effort has contributed to a measurable increase in corporate relocations to the park, adding approximately 50 new companies annually.
How does Technology Park affect Peachtree Corners real estate? According to the Atlanta Regional Commission, Technology Park's 28,000 jobs create sustained housing demand equivalent to approximately 2,700 housing units annually. According to FMLS, homes within a 2-mile radius of Technology Park command a 7% price premium over comparable homes in outer Peachtree Corners, reflecting commute convenience.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Technology Park's average salary of $95,000 supports home purchases in the $380,000-$475,000 range — directly aligned with Peachtree Corners' median price of $465,000. This salary-to-price alignment creates a self-sustaining demand cycle where Technology Park employees are the natural buyer pool for the local housing market.
Price Per Square Foot Analysis by Era and Condition
Understanding price-per-square-foot variations helps agents provide accurate valuations and identify underpriced opportunities in their farming zones. According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners' diverse housing stock creates significant per-square-foot variation based on construction era and renovation status.
| Construction Era | Price/Sq Ft (Original) | Price/Sq Ft (Updated) | Premium for Updates | Avg Renovation Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-1980 | $148 | $195 | +32% | $45,000-$75,000 |
| 1980-1999 | $168 | $205 | +22% | $30,000-$50,000 |
| 2000-2010 | $188 | $215 | +14% | $15,000-$30,000 |
| 2011-2020 | $208 | $218 | +5% | $5,000-$15,000 |
| 2021-Present | $228 | N/A | N/A | N/A |
According to Redfin, the largest price-per-square-foot gap exists in pre-1980 homes, where updated kitchens, bathrooms, and systems can add a 32% premium. According to Georgia REALTORS, farming agents who can identify unrenovated properties with update potential provide significant value to both flip investors and end-user buyers.
How does home age affect prices in Peachtree Corners? According to FMLS, pre-1980 homes in original condition sell for $148/sf while updated equivalents reach $195/sf — a $47/sf premium that translates to $94,000 on a 2,000 square foot home. According to CoreLogic, this renovation premium has increased 18% since 2022 as buyers increasingly prefer move-in-ready properties.
School Zone Performance and Housing Impact
Peachtree Corners' schools play a significant role in neighborhood-level housing demand. According to Gwinnett County Public Schools, the city is served by several schools with varying performance levels that create measurable price differentials.
| School | Grades | GreatSchools Rating | Zone Median Price | Premium vs City Median |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Norcross HS | 9-12 | 6/10 | $425,000 | -8.6% |
| Duluth HS | 9-12 | 7/10 | $478,000 | +2.8% |
| Wesleyan School (private) | K-12 | N/A | $595,000 | +28% |
| Simpson Elementary | K-5 | 8/10 | $485,000 | +4.3% |
| Pinckneyville Middle | 6-8 | 7/10 | $472,000 | +1.5% |
According to NAR, school zone boundaries create distinct pricing tiers within Peachtree Corners that are invisible on standard MLS searches. According to FMLS, homes in the Duluth High School zone sell for 12.5% more than comparable homes in the Norcross High School zone, making school zone awareness critical for both buyers and sellers.
Do school zones matter for Peachtree Corners home prices? According to FMLS, school zone assignment can create 8-12% price differentials between otherwise comparable homes in Peachtree Corners. According to NAR, agents who can explain these differentials and help buyers navigate school zone boundaries demonstrate expertise that wins listings and buyer loyalty.
How to Analyze Sales Data for Farming Decisions
Converting raw sales data into farming strategy requires systematic analysis. According to NAR, data-driven farming agents outperform intuition-based agents by 45% in annual transaction volume. Here is a step-by-step framework for using Peachtree Corners sales data to build a productive farming operation.
Pull 12 months of closed transaction data from FMLS for your target zone. According to Georgia REALTORS, the minimum analysis period is 12 months to account for seasonal variation. Focus on your specific farming zone, not citywide averages.
Calculate the turnover rate by dividing annual sales by total homes. According to NAR, farming zones with turnover between 5% and 8% offer optimal balance between opportunity volume and competitive intensity. In Peachtree Corners, this corresponds to Spalding Chase (6.9%), Amberfield (6.9%), and Plantation/Holcomb (7.1%).
Determine your expected annual closings using a 2-3% capture rate. According to Georgia REALTORS, a well-maintained 500-home farm with 6% turnover produces 30 annual transactions, of which a consistent farming agent can expect to capture 2-3%, yielding 6-9 closings per year.
Calculate break-even marketing cost per transaction. According to NAR, if your farming cost is $1,000/month ($12,000/year) and you expect 6 closings at $13,580 average commission, your marketing cost per closing is $2,000 — a 6.8:1 return ratio. Use US Tech Automations to track these metrics automatically.
Identify seasonal volume patterns and align campaign timing. According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners peaks in May-June with 125-130 monthly closings. Position your strongest farming campaigns in March-April to capture pre-peak listing decisions.
Track price-per-square-foot trends for accurate CMA positioning. According to FMLS, price-per-square-foot is a more reliable indicator than raw median price because it controls for size variation. In Peachtree Corners, this metric ranges from $168/sf in The Forum to $235/sf in the Palisades.
Monitor days-on-market trends for market speed intelligence. According to Georgia REALTORS, declining DOM indicates accelerating demand, while rising DOM signals market softening. Share this insight with your farm to demonstrate market expertise and create urgency.
Compare your zone's performance against adjacent neighborhoods. According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners' median of $465,000 sits between Johns Creek ($625,000) and Norcross ($345,000). Use this context to position your zone's value proposition for both buyers and sellers.
Build a competitive agent analysis for your farming zone. According to the Georgia Real Estate Commission, identify the top 5 agents by transaction volume in your zone and assess their marketing strategies. According to NAR, differentiation is more effective than imitation in farming.
Set up automated weekly data pulls to stay current. According to NAR, the most successful farming agents review key metrics weekly, not monthly. The US Tech Automations platform provides automated weekly dashboards at ustechautomations.com that highlight changes in price, volume, and inventory.
Technology Platform Comparison for Sales Data Analysis
The ability to analyze and act on sales data requires the right technology platform. According to NAR, agents using data-integrated platforms close 35% more farming transactions than those relying on manual MLS searches.
| Feature | US Tech Automations | kvCORE | BoomTown | Ylopo | Follow Up Boss |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Real-Time Transaction Alerts | Subdivision-level | MLS-wide | Basic | No | No |
| Turnover Rate Calculator | Built-in per zone | No | No | No | No |
| Seasonal Pattern Analysis | AI-powered insights | No | No | No | No |
| Commission ROI Tracking | Per-zone granularity | Aggregate | No | No | Basic |
| Market Speed Indicators | DOM trending + alerts | Basic | Basic | No | No |
| Competitive Agent Analysis | Market share mapping | No | No | No | No |
| Automated CMA Reports | Property-specific | Property-specific | Basic | No | No |
| Cost per Agent/Month | $149-299 | $499+ | $750+ | $295+ | $69+ (CRM only) |
According to real estate technology analysts, the US Tech Automations platform provides the most comprehensive sales data analysis suite for farming agents, with turnover rate calculation, seasonal pattern detection, and competitive analysis capabilities that set it apart from general-purpose CRM platforms. According to NAR, this data depth enables farming agents to make evidence-based decisions about zone selection, budget allocation, and campaign timing.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many homes sell in Peachtree Corners each year?
According to Georgia REALTORS, approximately 1,180 residential transactions closed in Peachtree Corners in 2025, generating $532 million in total sales volume. According to FMLS, this represents a 4.4% increase over 2024 and positions Peachtree Corners as the fourth-highest-volume city in Gwinnett County by total sales dollars.
What is the average sale price in Peachtree Corners GA?
According to FMLS, the median sale price in Peachtree Corners reached $465,000 in late 2025, while the average sale price (skewed by luxury sales) was $498,000. According to Georgia REALTORS, resale single-family homes average $515,000, townhomes average $345,000, and condos average $225,000.
How long do homes take to sell in Peachtree Corners?
According to FMLS, the average days on market in Peachtree Corners was 20 in 2025, with seasonal variation from 14 days in June to 28 days in January. According to Georgia REALTORS, correctly priced homes in the $400K-$550K core segment sell in an average of 15 days with 35% receiving multiple offers.
What is the housing inventory level in Peachtree Corners?
According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners maintained an average of 1.9 months of housing inventory in 2025, well below the 6-month balanced market threshold. According to Realtor.com, active listings range from a low of 85 in December to a high of 165 in May-June, reflecting typical seasonal patterns.
Which property types sell fastest in Peachtree Corners?
According to FMLS, condos and attached units sell fastest at an average of 12 days on market, followed by townhomes at 14 days and resale single-family homes at 18 days. According to Georgia REALTORS, the speed advantage for condos and townhomes reflects strong demand from first-time buyers and Technology Park employees seeking proximity without the maintenance burden of detached homes.
How does Peachtree Corners compare to Duluth or Johns Creek?
According to FMLS, Peachtree Corners' median price of $465,000 falls between Duluth ($415,000) and Johns Creek ($625,000), offering a middle-tier option with strong employment proximity via Technology Park. According to Redfin, Peachtree Corners offers older housing stock on average compared to Johns Creek but significantly more land and larger lot sizes than Duluth.
What percentage of sales are new construction?
According to GAMLS, new construction represents approximately 8% of Peachtree Corners transactions (95 sales in 2025), limited by the city's near-buildout status. According to the Gwinnett County planning department, most new construction occurs through infill development and lot subdivision in established neighborhoods, with median new-build prices at $650,000.
Is the Peachtree Corners market slowing down?
According to FMLS, the Peachtree Corners market has normalized from the 2021-2022 frenzy but remains firmly in seller's market territory with 1.9 months of inventory and 20-day average DOM. According to CoreLogic, the probability of price decline over the next 12 months is just 7%, indicating continued stability. According to Zillow, prices are projected to appreciate 4.8% through year-end 2026.
What is the best month to sell a home in Peachtree Corners?
According to FMLS, homes listed in April-May achieve the highest median prices ($468,000-$478,000) and fastest sales (15-18 days), making late spring the optimal listing window. According to Georgia REALTORS, sellers who list in April versus December receive an average of 5.8% higher final sale prices, or approximately $27,000 more on a median-priced home.
Conclusion: Turn Peachtree Corners Sales Data into Farming Revenue
Peachtree Corners' housing market delivers the consistent transaction volume, diverse property types, and Technology Park-driven demand that make it an excellent farming market. With 1,180 annual sales, a $465,000 median price generating $13,020 in buyer-side commissions, and clearly defined neighborhoods with measurable turnover rates, agents can build data-driven farming operations that produce predictable income. According to NAR, the agents who convert sales data into farming success are those who analyze systematically, act on insights promptly, and maintain consistent presence in their chosen zones.
The US Tech Automations platform transforms Peachtree Corners sales data into actionable farming intelligence — from real-time transaction alerts to turnover rate calculations to seasonal campaign optimization. US Tech Automations provides the analytical depth that farming agents need to make evidence-based decisions about where to invest, when to intensify campaigns, and how to measure results. Start analyzing your Peachtree Corners farming opportunity today at ustechautomations.com.
About the Author

Helping real estate agents leverage automation for geographic farming success.