Learning Waynesboro Real Estate Market – By Bicycle and Showing Houses

A quick look at Waynesboro + Augusta numbers

Waynesboro + Augusta total sold, median price

  • 2020 – 1358  $244,900
  • 2021 – 1398  $262,200
  • 2022 – 1253  $300,000
  • 2023 – 1083  $319,900
  • 2024 – 1111  $325,000
  • 2025 – 1170  $341,287* 1/1/2025 – 12/10/2025

I’m finding myself in the City of Waynesboro and Augusta County a bit more of late. My daughter and her family bought a house there last year, and more of my clients are curious about and interested in the Waynesboro/Augusta real estate market.

Thankfully I am working with a great client who is patient and willing to wait 30-60 seconds for me when we’re seeing houses in Waynesboro City. He drives, and I park my car at my daughter’s house and ride my bike.

Waynesboro has a lot going for it right now. Downtown is revitalizing, their economy is doing well, and their parks and rec department is remarkable.


 

From the Daily Progress early 2024 regarding Northrup Grumman

The Falls Church-based company announced its plans for a new $200 million advanced electronics and testing facility in Waynesboro in November and broke ground on the 63-acre facility in February. Northrop Grumman has promised the plant will employ more than 300 engineers and manufacturers with an average annual salary of $94,000.

Waynesboro has long been a refuge for Charlottesville workers: Many choose to work in Charlottesville, where jobs pay more, and live in Waynesboro, where things cost less. The 30-mile commute over Afton Mountain to and from Charlottesville in the east and Waynesboro in the west has become just another part of the daily grind.

But Waynesboro may not have the housing stock or caliber to satisfy all of Northrop Grumman’s well-paid employees. Waynesboro is a smaller city — with 22,550 residents, it is half the size of Charlottesville — and its houses are significantly cheaper — its median house price at $226,700 is roughly 55% less than the average Charlottesville residence.

It is very likely that many Northrop Grumman employees will choose to work in Waynesboro and live in Charlottesville, or close to it, effectively shifting the commuter balance on Afton Mountain.

Experts go so far as to say the new factory could disrupt the regional housing market, and cause prices to rise even higher in Charlottesville and the surrounding counties in Central Virginia, already one of the most expensive places to buy property in the commonwealth.

It will be another four years before all of the jobs are filled at Northrop Grumman’s new plant, but there is already anticipation, dread and anxiety on both sides of the mountain about what those new workers, those new residents, will mean for the two markets.

The entire story is excellent; click through to read the whole thing.

(Visited 35 times, 1 visits today)