Futures
Access hundreds of perpetual contracts
TradFi
Gold
One platform for global traditional assets
Options
Hot
Trade European-style vanilla options
Unified Account
Maximize your capital efficiency
Demo Trading
Introduction to Futures Trading
Learn the basics of futures trading
Futures Events
Join events to earn rewards
Demo Trading
Use virtual funds to practice risk-free trading
Launch
CandyDrop
Collect candies to earn airdrops
Launchpool
Quick staking, earn potential new tokens
HODLer Airdrop
Hold GT and get massive airdrops for free
Launchpad
Be early to the next big token project
Alpha Points
Trade on-chain assets and earn airdrops
Futures Points
Earn futures points and claim airdrop rewards
Mapping America's Richest Neighborhoods: Where $300,000+ Household Incomes Concentrate in 2025
The landscape of America’s most affluent residential areas reveals fascinating patterns about wealth distribution, economic opportunity, and regional prosperity. A comprehensive analysis by GOBankingRates examined the nation’s richest neighborhoods, focusing on suburban communities with at least 5,000 households in metropolitan areas, to identify where the country’s highest-earning families choose to establish their homes.
Scarsdale Secures the Crown: New York’s Dominance in Wealth Rankings
Scarsdale, New York, continues to stand atop America’s richest neighborhoods for the second consecutive year, cementing its position as the nation’s most affluent suburb. The community boasts a mean household income of $601,193 for 2023, reflecting a 2.2% year-over-year increase from 2022’s $588,014. Beyond income metrics, Scarsdale residents enjoy one of the nation’s most robust real estate markets, with median home values reaching $1.21 million as of May 2025, up 3.2% from the previous year.
New York’s stronghold on wealth extends beyond Scarsdale. Rye, another New York City suburb, claims the second position with household incomes averaging $421,259 in 2023. What sets Rye apart is its premium real estate trajectory—home values surged to $1.88 million, marking a 4.4% appreciation in a single year. This combination of high incomes and accelerating home values suggests that New York’s richest neighborhoods attract both established wealth and investment capital.
California’s Silicon Valley Influence: 17 Communities Define Western Wealth
California solidified its status as the epicenter of America’s wealthiest neighborhoods, with 17 communities appearing in the top 50 list—an increase from 16 the previous year. This regional concentration reflects the economic gravitational pull of Silicon Valley’s technology sector and adjacent luxury markets.
Los Altos emerges as California’s most expensive neighborhood, with mean household incomes of $403,512 and extraordinary home values averaging $4.56 million. The income-to-home-value ratio tells a compelling story: residents are purchasing properties worth more than 11 times their annual income, suggesting significant inherited wealth, investment portfolios, and executive compensation packages. Alamo, a newcomer to the top 10, follows closely with homes valued at $2.55 million and incomes at $403,334—representing a significant entry point for investors seeking high-income suburban communities with slightly lower price points.
Other California standouts include Saratoga ($4.12 million average home value), Palo Alto ($3.83 million), and Cupertino ($3.27 million). These communities represent the geographic heart of America’s richest neighborhoods, powered by corporate headquarters, venture capital networks, and decades of accumulated technology-sector wealth.
Texas’s Unexpected Challenge to Coastal Dominance
Texas emerged as a surprising contender, placing five communities in the top 50, with three breaking into the elite top 10. This performance signals a shift in American wealth geography, as tech-forward hubs like Austin and thriving corporate centers like Dallas and Houston attract high-earning professionals.
West University Place near Houston ranks third nationally with household incomes of $409,677, making it Texas’s wealthiest suburb. University Park (Dallas area) secures the sixth position, while Southlake, a Fort Worth suburb, demonstrates the most dramatic rise—jumping from 13th place in 2024 to seventh place in 2025. Southlake’s 2.8% year-over-year income growth and moderate home values ($1.29 million) position it as an accessible entry point for affluent families seeking Texas-based alternatives to California’s megamillionaire neighborhoods.
Bellaire (Houston area) and Colleyville (Fort Worth area) round out Texas’s representation, suggesting that oil and gas legacy wealth, combined with modern technology sector growth, has created robust markets for richest neighborhoods in the Lone Star State.
The Boston-Washington Corridor: Established Wealth Meets Professional Centers
The East Coast’s established centers of wealth and power continue to anchor America’s richest neighborhoods. Boston suburbs dominate through Wellesley, Lexington, Winchester, Needham, and newcomer Newton—communities steeped in New England heritage and proximity to prestigious universities and financial institutions.
Wellesley ranks 10th nationally with household incomes of $368,179 and home values near $2.08 million. The Boston-area communities represent generational wealth patterns, where professional services, healthcare, and education sectors generate consistent high incomes in affluent suburban settings.
The Washington, D.C. corridor claims McLean (12th), Potomac (27th), Bethesda (38th), and Vienna (45th), reflecting the concentration of federal government employees, lobbying professionals, and defense contractors in the Capital region. These richest neighborhoods demonstrate how government-sector employment creates stable, high-income demographics that support premium real estate markets.
Florida’s Coastal Concentration: Where Luxury Meets Lifestyle
Florida’s three richest neighborhoods reveal the state’s unique wealth dynamics: Palm Beach ($10.31 million average home value), Pinecrest (Miami area, $2.40 million), and Lake Butler (Orlando area, $283,493). Palm Beach’s extraordinary home values—over 28 times its household income of $356,467—underscore how legacy wealth, international investment, and luxury positioning create premium coastal markets distinct from inland Florida.
Breakthrough Communities: New Entries Signal Shifting Wealth Patterns
Six new communities entered the top 50 for 2025, with Alamo (California) and Southlake (Texas) making dramatic debuts in the top 10. This pattern suggests wealth redistribution toward tech hubs and energy centers, away from traditional East Coast strongholds. Coto de Caza (California), Lake Butler (Florida), Colleyville (Texas), Newton (Massachusetts), and Brentwood (Tennessee) represent emerging preferences for newer or previously overlooked affluent neighborhoods.
The Income-to-Home-Value Puzzle: Investment Implications
Comparing household income to home values reveals divergent wealth concentration strategies. California’s richest neighborhoods show ratios as high as 11:1 (home value to annual income), indicating reliance on non-income wealth sources. Texas neighborhoods exhibit more balanced ratios of 3-5:1, suggesting incomes better align with local home values. This divergence may signal shifting investment preferences toward markets where earned income directly supports real estate purchases rather than requiring substantial prior wealth accumulation.
Regional Diversity Expands America’s Wealth Map
Beyond the dominant states, Illinois (Chicago suburbs like Hinsdale and Lake Forest), New Jersey (Tenafly, Summit, Westfield, Ridgewood), Maryland (Potomac, Bethesda), Washington (Mercer Island, Sammamish), Alabama (Mountain Brook), and Tennessee (Brentwood) demonstrate that America’s richest neighborhoods extend far beyond coastal and tech-hub concentrations. These communities reflect regional prosperity centers powered by diverse economic engines—manufacturing, healthcare, finance, and education.
Complete Ranking: America’s 50 Richest Neighborhoods
The following compilation presents detailed metrics for all 50 communities, including mean household income, year-over-year income changes, home values, and real estate appreciation rates:
1. Scarsdale, New York (NYC Suburb)
2. Rye, New York (NYC Suburb)
3. West University Place, Texas (Houston)
4. Los Altos, California (San Jose Area)
5. Alamo, California (Oakland Area)
6. University Park, Texas (Dallas)
7. Southlake, Texas (Fort Worth Area)
8. Hinsdale, Illinois (Chicago)
9. Orinda, California (Oakland Area)
10. Wellesley, Massachusetts (Boston)
11. Palos Verdes Estates, California (Los Angeles)
12. McLean, Virginia (Washington, D.C.)
13. Palm Beach, Florida (Fort Lauderdale Area)
14. Saratoga, California (San Jose Area)
15. Menlo Park, California (San Jose Area)
16. San Carlos, California (San Francisco)
17. Lafayette, California (Oakland Area)
18. Los Gatos, California (San Jose Area)
19. La Cañada Flintridge, California (Los Angeles)
20. Wolf Trap, Virginia (Washington, D.C.)
21. Pinecrest, Florida (Miami)
22. Coto de Caza, California (Irvine Area)
23. Bellaire, Texas (Houston)
24. Palo Alto, California (San Francisco)
25. Mill Valley, California (San Francisco)
26. Tenafly, New Jersey (NYC Suburb)
27. Potomac, Maryland (Washington, D.C.)
28. Summit, New Jersey (NYC Suburb)
29. Mercer Island, Washington (Seattle)
30. Mountain Brook, Alabama (Birmingham)
31. Lake Forest, Illinois (Chicago)
32. Lexington, Massachusetts (Boston)
33. Westfield, New Jersey (NYC Suburb)
34. Greenwich, Connecticut (NYC Suburb)
35. Winchester, Massachusetts (Boston)
36. Cupertino, California (San Jose Area)
37. Wilmette, Illinois (Chicago)
38. Bethesda, Maryland (Washington, D.C.)
39. Manhattan Beach, California (Los Angeles)
40. Lake Butler, Florida (Orlando)
41. Ridgewood, New Jersey (NYC Suburb)
42. Danville, California (Oakland Area)
43. Needham, Massachusetts (Boston)
44. Sammamish, Washington (Seattle)
45. Vienna, Virginia (Washington, D.C.)
46. Dix Hills, New York (NYC Suburb)
47. Colleyville, Texas (Fort Worth Area)
48. Moraga, California (Oakland Area)
49. Newton, Massachusetts (Boston)
50. Brentwood, Tennessee (Nashville)
What Defines America’s Richest Neighborhoods
Understanding the criteria that identify these wealthiest communities requires examining the analytical framework used to compile this ranking. The analysis evaluated municipalities meeting specific demographic thresholds—communities containing at least 5,000 households situated within metropolitan statistical areas but distinct from principal cities bearing the MSA designation. This distinction proves crucial, as it captures true suburban characteristics while excluding urban core populations.
The research methodology relied on the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2023 American Community Survey for household income data, home value information from the Zillow Home Value Index for May 2025, and inflation adjustments calculated through the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Price Index calculator. Year-over-year comparisons employed 2022 baseline income data, which was then inflation-adjusted to 2023 values to ensure accurate temporal comparisons.
This multi-source approach validates the reliability of America’s richest neighborhoods ranking, providing investors, relocating families, and policy analysts with empirically grounded insights into where affluent communities concentrate and how their prosperity trajectories compare across regions and fiscal periods.