Historic colonial home in Leesburg, Virginia with mature landscaping

Selling Your Home in Leesburg, Virginia

NVAR Lifetime Top Producers · Over 840 Homes Sold · Flexible Commission Program

$500M+Closed Volume
840+Homes Sold
15+ yrsLoudoun Experience
Last updated: April 2026
The Jamil Brothers Perspective

Leesburg sells in two markets, not one.And pricing the wrong one costs sellers tens of thousands.

Leesburg has more pricing micro-markets than almost any other city in Loudoun County. A 4,500-square-foot colonial in Lansdowne on the Potomac competes against a different buyer pool than a renovated 1890 federal in Old Town's historic district — and a 5-acre estate west of Route 15 attracts a third audience entirely. Sellers who treat "Leesburg" as one market consistently leave equity on the table.

"The Greenway commute, school pyramid splits, and Old Town historic restrictions create three distinct buyer behaviors inside one ZIP. Knowing which one your home sits in changes the listing strategy entirely."

The buyer demand engine in Leesburg is unusual. You're drawing from data center engineers commuting east on Route 7, federal contractors using the Greenway to reach Reston and Tysons, retirees and remote workers chasing wine country and equestrian land, and Old Town buyers who specifically want walkable historic charm. Each group prices the same square footage differently.

Our job as your listing agent is to identify which buyer segment your home is actually built for, then price, photograph, and market it directly to that audience — not to "Leesburg buyers" as a generic group. That's what separates a 21-day sale at full price from a 90-day price reduction.

Leesburg Seller Market Snapshot

What your home is competing against right now

A seller's-eye view of the Leesburg market. Use these benchmarks to set a realistic equity expectation, then request a personalized valuation for your specific home.

Median Sold Price $725K – $895K Estimated typical range

Your equity benchmark — updated single-family homes in core neighborhoods often trade above median.

Days on Market 14 – 35 days Estimated typical range

Typical timeline if priced right — extended DOM in Leesburg almost always traces back to pricing strategy.

Sale-to-List Ratio 98% – 102% Estimated typical range

Homes selling close to or above asking — pricing precision is what drives offer competition.

YoY Appreciation 3% – 6% Estimated typical range

Your equity has likely grown materially since your last refinance or valuation.

What this means for you: Leesburg remains supply-constrained in the $700K–$1.2M range, where most family-sized single-family homes sit. Move-in-ready listings with strong photography continue to draw multiple offers within the first 14 days. Estate-tier homes ($1.5M+) and historic Old Town properties operate on different timelines — a custom strategy for your price band is essential.

Why Leesburg Sellers Choose the Jamil Brothers

Production credentials, local fluency, partner-level attention, and a pricing model built to maximize your net.

🏆

NVAR Lifetime Top Producers

Recognized at the highest career production tier of the Northern Virginia Association of Realtors.

📊

840+ Homes · $500M+ Closed

Hundreds of seller transactions across Loudoun, Fairfax, and Prince William — pricing instincts trained on real outcomes.

💼

Flexible Commission Program

Full-service marketing with a pricing structure designed to maximize your net proceeds at closing.

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Direct Partner Access

Saad and Arslan personally lead every transaction. No handoffs to junior agents at offer time.

Leesburg's Top Neighborhoods for Sellers

Each neighborhood has its own buyer pool, pricing rhythm, and competitive set. Click into your area for hyper-local seller insight.

Lansdowne on the Potomac homes in Leesburg, VA

Lansdowne on the Potomac

Resort-style master-planned community with golf, river access, and the strongest move-up buyer demand in eastern Leesburg.

View Lansdowne Guide →
River Creek gated community Leesburg VA Potomac River views

River Creek

Gated golf community along the Potomac. Premium pricing, distinct buyer pool, and very specific marketing requirements.

View River Creek Guide →
Beacon Hill Leesburg family neighborhood homes

Beacon Hill

Family-favorite established neighborhood with pool, tennis, and Tuscarora HS access. Strong, predictable resale rhythm.

View Beacon Hill Guide →
Edwards Landing Leesburg single family homes

Edwards Landing

Newer construction with modern floor plans, community pool, and Heritage HS pyramid. Popular with move-up buyers.

View Edwards Landing Guide →
Potomac Station Leesburg VA homes

Potomac Station

Family-favorite with community pool and tot lots. Mid-priced single-family entry point into Leesburg with steady buyer demand.

View Potomac Station Guide →
Tavistock Farms Leesburg neighborhood homes

Tavistock Farms

South Leesburg single-family with strong school zoning. Active 1990s build era — inspection prep matters more than sellers expect.

View Tavistock Farms Guide →
Exeter Leesburg subdivision

Exeter

Mature community north of Old Town with mature trees, larger lots, and walking-distance access to downtown amenities.

View Exeter Guide →
Old Town Leesburg historic district colonial homes

Old Town Leesburg (Historic District)

Federal, Victorian, and colonial-era homes inside the H-1 historic overlay. Architectural review required — and a niche buyer pool that pays for it.

View Old Town Guide →
Western Loudoun estate homes near Leesburg with acreage

Western Loudoun Estates

Acreage properties west of Route 15 in horse country. Septic, well, and lot-acreage marketing are entirely different from in-town listings.

View Western Loudoun Guide →
Local Seller Considerations

What's specific to selling in Leesburg

These four issues come up on nearly every Leesburg listing — and missing any of them costs sellers money or extends the timeline. Here's how we handle each one.

Old Town's Historic District (H-1) Restrictions

Homes inside the Old Town historic overlay require Board of Architectural Review approval for exterior changes — including paint colors, window replacements, fences, and additions. Buyers who don't understand the H-1 process get cold feet during due diligence; buyers who do, pay a premium for charm and walkability.

How we handle itWe pre-document any approved BAR records, supply a ready-to-share H-1 process summary in the disclosures, and target the buyer pool that specifically wants a historic property — not generalists who'll be scared off mid-contract.

Well & Septic on Western-Side Properties

Many Leesburg properties west of Route 15 — and pockets within town limits — operate on private well and septic. Loudoun County Health Department documentation, well-flow testing, and septic pump-and-inspect timing all affect contract velocity. Sellers who wait until under contract to address these often face delays or repair credits.

How we handle itWe coordinate well/septic inspections during pre-listing prep, surface any issues before buyers see them, and disclose proactively so the contract negotiation isn't reopened mid-deal.

Greenway Toll & Commute Pricing Effect

The Dulles Greenway (Route 267) is one of the most expensive toll roads per mile on the East Coast. Buyers from Reston, Tysons, and Loudoun-side data centers calculate this commute cost into their offer. Lansdowne, River Creek, and Edwards Landing benefit from Greenway proximity — but the toll affects how buyers value those locations vs. equivalent homes in Ashburn.

How we handle itWe position homes against direct competitive comps in Ashburn and Brambleton (not just within Leesburg), accounting for the toll math that buyers will run themselves.

School Pyramid Splits Within Town

Leesburg straddles four high school pyramids — Loudoun County HS, Tuscarora HS, Heritage HS, and Riverside HS — and the boundaries shift periodically. Two homes a few blocks apart can be in different pyramids, which materially affects the buyer pool and price ceiling. Sellers who don't verify their current zoning before listing can misprice by tens of thousands.

How we handle itWe verify your exact assignment with LCPS before pricing, and target the marketing language to the parents shopping that specific pyramid — not generic "Leesburg schools."
The Jamil Brothers Advantage

Flexible Commission Program: Keep More of Your Leesburg Equity

A full-service listing experience structured to maximize your net at the closing table — no service reductions, no shortcuts on marketing.

Full-service marketing — no service reduction or "lite" tier
Professional photography + 3D Matterport tour included
Bright MLS syndication + active buyer-agent outreach
Expert pricing strategy + offer negotiation by Saad & Arslan
What this means for you: On a Leesburg median-priced home, sellers with our flexible commission program typically keep $10,000–$25,000+ more at closing compared to a traditional listing structure.
Explore Flexible Commission Options →

Pre-Listing Strategy for Leesburg Homes

High-ROI Prep Items

Front door + shutter repaint (curb appeal)
Power-wash siding, walkways, and decks
Refresh mulch beds and edging
Replace dated lighting fixtures
Neutral paint touch-ups in main living areas
Pre-listing carpet cleaning or strategic replacement

Common Inspection Flags (1990s–2000s builds)

Polybutylene plumbing (1980s–1990s era)
Aging HVAC systems past 15-year mark
Original water heater replacement timing
Deck board rot & railing code updates
Septic field condition (western properties)
Radon levels — common in Loudoun bedrock

What Leesburg Buyers Pay Extra For

Updated kitchens with quartz + gas range
Finished walk-out basements
Three-car garages on family homes
Flat usable backyards (not steep slope)
Top-pyramid school zones (verify before listing)
Walkable access to W&OD Trail or Old Town

Complete Leesburg Seller Cost Breakdown

Agent Commissions

Listing-side commission (flexible)Custom
Buyer-agent compensation (negotiable per contract)Varies
Total commission impact on netSee net sheet

Title & Settlement

Settlement / closing fee$400 – $800
Owner's title insurance (if seller-paid)Varies
Deed prep + courier fees$150 – $300
HOA resale packet (if applicable)$200 – $400

Virginia & Loudoun County Taxes

VA grantor tax$0.10 / $100
NoVA congestion relief fee$0.40 / $100
WMATA regional fee$0.15 / $100
Total seller-paid tax burden~0.65%

Other Seller Costs

Mortgage payoff + per diem interestVaries
Prorated property taxesVaries
Pre-listing prep / repairs (estimated)$1,500 – $5,000
Home warranty (optional buyer credit)$500 – $700

Leesburg Schools — Pyramid Breakdown

Leesburg is split across multiple Loudoun County Public Schools (LCPS) high school pyramids. School zoning is one of the strongest pricing drivers in your sale — verify your specific assignment before listing.

Loudoun County HS Pyramid

Loudoun County High SchoolHigh School
Smart's Mill Middle SchoolMiddle
Catoctin Elementary / Frances Hazel Reid ESElementary

Tuscarora HS Pyramid

Tuscarora High SchoolHigh School
Smart's Mill / Harper Park MiddleMiddle
Cool Spring / Evergreen Mill ESElementary

Heritage HS Pyramid

Heritage High SchoolHigh School
J. Lupton Simpson MiddleMiddle
Sycolin Creek / Ball's Bluff ESElementary

Riverside HS Pyramid (Eastern Leesburg)

Riverside High SchoolHigh School
Belmont Ridge MiddleMiddle
Newton-Lee / Selden's Landing ESElementary
Important for sellers: School zone is one of the top three buyer drivers in Leesburg, and pyramid boundaries can shift with LCPS redistricting. Verify your home's exact current assignment with Loudoun County Public Schools at lcps.org before pricing — pyramid changes can move pricing by tens of thousands of dollars. Private school options in the area include Loudoun Country Day School, Notre Dame Academy, and others — verify with official sources for current ratings and capacity.
Seller's Guide

Selling a Home in Leesburg?

Leesburg buyers are looking for a specific blend of historic charm and modern convenience. To maximize your sale price in 20175 and 20176, you need a strategy tailored to this unique demand.

Current Demand High for "Turnkey"
Our Strategy Digital-First Launch
View Our 21-Point Marketing Plan →

What is your home worth?

Automated estimates can't see your upgrades. Get a custom valuation report based on real-time Leesburg sales data.

Get Instant Value

Frequently Asked Questions — Selling in Leesburg

Answers to the questions Leesburg homeowners ask us most often. Don't see your situation? Text us at 703-782-4830.

Who is the best real estate agent in Leesburg, VA?

The word "best" is subjective, but you can compare agents by measurable results, experience, and client outcomes. The Jamil Brothers Realty Group is recognized as NVAR Lifetime Top Producers with over $500M in closed sales volume across the DMV.

When choosing a Leesburg listing agent, evaluate:

  • Responsiveness and communication — how fast they reply during contract negotiations
  • Pricing strategy specific to Leesburg's Greenway-corridor and historic-district buyer pools
  • Marketing plan quality — professional photography, 3D tours, exposure
  • Local expertise — micro-neighborhood knowledge across Lansdowne, River Creek, Old Town, and the western estate corridor

If you'd like, we can share a tailored pricing and marketing plan for your home in Leesburg. Request your custom plan →

Should I sell my Leesburg home in 2026?

Leesburg continues to attract buyers tied to data center expansion, the Silver Line Metro at Ashburn, and remote/hybrid workers seeking land that inner-NoVA can't offer. Inventory in the $700K–$1.4M range remains tight, so well-prepared homes priced strategically are still drawing competitive interest.

The right answer depends on your equity position, your next-home plan, and your timeline. We can model your specific net proceeds at multiple price points so you can make the call with real numbers, not generalizations. Run the numbers →

Is now a good time to sell in Leesburg?

For move-in-ready single-family homes in established Leesburg neighborhoods, market conditions remain favorable to sellers — limited inventory, sustained relocation demand from Northern Virginia tech and government, and continued data center hiring. Higher-end estates and historic properties operate on slower timelines and reward patient, well-positioned listings.

The honest answer is: it depends on your home, your neighborhood, and your alternatives. We'll tell you straight whether your specific home benefits from listing now or waiting.

What's the Leesburg real estate market doing in 2026?

Leesburg's market in 2026 is characterized by tight inventory in the family-home price band, continued buyer demand from Loudoun's data center economy, and sustained interest in lifestyle features (wine country, equestrian, walkable Old Town). Greenway-adjacent neighborhoods like Lansdowne and River Creek remain particularly competitive.

The luxury tier ($1.5M+) operates more slowly and benefits from concierge marketing, drone work, and targeted buyer outreach.

How do I know if I'm ready to sell my Leesburg home?

You're likely ready to sell if you can answer yes to most of these:

  • You've built enough equity to cover commission, closing costs, and your next down payment
  • You have a clear plan (or active search) for where you'll move next
  • Your timeline is flexible enough to allow proper prep and pricing
  • You've considered the full cost of selling, not just the headline sale price

If you're unsure on any of those, that's exactly what a no-pressure consultation is for. Talk through your timeline →

How much does it cost to sell a home in Leesburg, VA?

Leesburg sellers typically pay agent commissions, Virginia grantor tax ($0.10/$100), the NoVA congestion relief fee ($0.40/$100), the WMATA regional fee ($0.15/$100), title and settlement fees ($400–$800), HOA resale packet fees if applicable ($200–$400), prorated property taxes, and any pre-listing prep.

State and local taxes alone run roughly 0.65% of your sale price. Our flexible commission program is structured so sellers keep more equity at closing — request a custom net sheet to see your specific numbers.

What are typical seller closing costs in Leesburg?

Beyond agent commissions, Leesburg seller closing costs typically include:

  • Virginia & NoVA transfer taxes — combined ~0.65% of sale price (grantor + congestion + WMATA)
  • Settlement / closing fee — $400–$800
  • Deed prep, courier, recording fees — $150–$300
  • HOA resale disclosure packet — $200–$400 (if applicable)
  • Mortgage payoff + per-diem interest — varies
  • Prorated property taxes — varies by close date
How long does it take to sell a home in Leesburg?

Days on market vary significantly by price band and neighborhood. Move-in-ready homes in Lansdowne, River Creek, and Potomac Station priced correctly often go under contract within 2–4 weeks. Estates west of Route 15 and historic Old Town homes may take longer due to a smaller, more selective buyer pool. From listing to closing, plan on 30–60 days for a typical financed transaction.

How do I prepare my Leesburg home for sale?

Prep priorities for Leesburg homes typically include: power-washing exterior surfaces, refreshing front-door curb appeal, addressing high-visibility paint touch-ups, professional carpet cleaning, decluttering and depersonalizing, and resolving inspection-likely issues (HVAC, polybutylene plumbing on 1980s–90s builds, septic/well on western properties) before they show up in a buyer's inspection report.

We provide a custom prep checklist during our listing consultation based on your specific home and price band.

When is the best time to list my Leesburg home?

Late February through early June consistently produces the strongest buyer activity in Leesburg, with a secondary window in September after the school year settles. That said, low inventory has flattened seasonal patterns recently — well-positioned homes sell year-round in Leesburg's current market. Your best window depends on your specific neighborhood, your competition, and your personal timeline.

What's the average sale price in Leesburg right now?

The estimated typical median sold price in Leesburg currently sits in the $725K–$895K range, with significant variation by neighborhood and home type. Lansdowne, River Creek, and Beacon Hill regularly trade well above median; entry-level townhomes and condos in central Leesburg trade below. Your specific home's value depends on neighborhood, school zone, condition, lot, and current micro-market dynamics. Get a personalized valuation →

How does The Jamil Brothers commission compare to traditional agents?

Our Flexible Commission Program is structured to maximize your net proceeds at closing — full-service marketing without the rigid pricing of traditional listings. Sellers with our program typically keep $10,000–$25,000+ more at closing on a Leesburg median-priced home compared to a standard structure. We're happy to walk through the math on your specific home. See how it works →

Will I net more money selling FSBO or with an agent in Leesburg?

National data consistently shows agent-listed homes sell for measurably more than FSBO sales — even after commission. The gap typically exceeds the cost of representation, particularly in markets like Leesburg where buyer competition, contract complexity, and pricing nuance reward professional marketing and negotiation. Our flexible commission structure narrows that math even further in your favor.

Do I need to disclose well and septic on a Leesburg home?

Many Leesburg properties — especially west of Route 15 — are on private well and septic systems. Virginia law requires sellers to provide a Residential Property Disclosure statement, and well/septic condition disclosure is standard practice and often contractually required by buyers' lenders. We coordinate well-flow tests, septic pump-and-inspect, and any required Loudoun County Health Department documentation as part of pre-listing prep.

What's the difference between Old Town and Lansdowne for sellers?

Old Town homes inside the H-1 historic district come with architectural review requirements but draw a niche buyer pool willing to pay premiums for walkable historic charm. Lansdowne is a master-planned community with golf, river access, and amenities that attract corporate-relocation and move-up family buyers. The marketing strategies, photography emphasis, and pricing comps are entirely different — we tailor our approach to which buyer pool your home is built for.

How does the Dulles Greenway toll affect my home's value?

The Greenway is among the most expensive toll roads per mile on the East Coast, and Leesburg buyers commuting east factor it into their offers. Greenway-proximate neighborhoods (Lansdowne, River Creek, Edwards Landing) benefit from quick highway access; the trade-off is monthly toll cost. We position your home against direct competitive comps in Ashburn and Brambleton — not just within Leesburg — because that's the math your buyer is running.

What's involved in selling a home in the Old Town historic district?

Old Town homes inside the H-1 overlay require Board of Architectural Review (BAR) approval for exterior changes — paint colors, windows, fences, additions. As a seller, you'll want to surface any prior BAR approvals, document any unpermitted changes, and prepare buyers (and their inspectors) for the H-1 process. Done right, the historic designation is a premium-driver, not a deterrent.

Have a different question? Text 703-782-4830 — we'll answer directly.
Decision Helper

Should you sell your Leesburg home in 2026?

Not every seller needs to move now — and not every "wait and see" actually saves money. Use the framework below to think through your timing.

Is 2026 a good year to sell in Leesburg?

A few estimated trend observations that matter to your decision:

Inventory in the $700K–$1.4M family-home band remains constrained
Loudoun's data center economy continues to drive relocation buyer demand
Silver Line Phase 2 (Ashburn Metro) sustains commuter-buyer interest in eastern Leesburg
Higher rates have softened buyer competition in the $1.5M+ tier

6-month outlook: Move-in-ready single-family homes priced to current comps continue to perform well. Higher-end and historic properties reward strategic prep and selective marketing.

Are you ready to sell? — Self-Check

Yes/no questions to help you self-diagnose:

?Have you lived in your home long enough to recoup transaction costs and build meaningful equity?
?Do you have a clear plan for where you'll move next (rent, buy, relocate)?
?Is your timeline flexible — or driven by a hard deadline (job, school, life event)?
?Have you considered the full cost of selling (commission, taxes, prep, moving)?

If you answered "no" or "unsure" to two or more, a no-pressure conversation will save you money long-term.

What if you're 6+ months out?

Early prep almost always pays off. Three moves to make now:

1.Declutter and address inspection-likely issues before they become urgent under contract
2.Get a baseline home valuation now to track equity over time and benchmark improvement decisions
3.Build your moving timeline backward from your ideal close date — most sellers underestimate by 4–6 weeks

Six-month-out planning is when sellers gain the most leverage. The market doesn't reward last-minute decisions.

Timeline-Based Prep Plan

Your custom Leesburg listing timeline

Whether you need to move fast or have time to maximize equity, here's the prep cadence that consistently produces strong results.

Tight Timeline

Selling in 30 Days

For relocations, hard deadlines, or fast-cash-out situations

1
Day 1–3: Schedule listing consultation immediately
2
Day 3–7: Professional cleaning + minor staging (no major repairs)
3
Day 7–10: Pro photography + 3D Matterport tour
4
Day 10–13: Pricing strategy meeting + final marketing assets
5
Day 14: Bright MLS launch with full syndication
6
Day 14–28: Showings + offer review
Most Common

Selling in 90 Days

Balanced approach — enough runway to maximize equity

1
Week 1: Initial home valuation + listing consultation
2
Weeks 2–4: Address inspection-likely issues (HVAC, plumbing, septic if applicable)
3
Weeks 4–8: Painting, lighting refresh, curb appeal updates
4
Weeks 8–10: Stage rooms + professional photography
5
Week 12: MLS launch with full marketing rollout
6
Weeks 12–13: Open houses, offer review, contract
Strategic Prep

Selling in 6+ Months

Maximum-leverage prep for top-of-market positioning

1
Now: Baseline valuation to track market against your equity
2
Month 1–3: Tackle major prep (HVAC replacement, roof, kitchen updates if ROI-positive)
3
Month 2–4: Decluttering and depersonalizing in stages
4
Month 4: Tax planning if relocating across states
5
Month 4–5: Full marketing strategy meeting + pre-listing inspection
6
Month 6: Photography, staging, MLS launch
Life Event Selling Guides

Selling around a major life change

Every seller's situation is different. Here's how we approach the three life events that bring most Leesburg homeowners to the table.

Selling Due to Job Relocation

Loudoun's data center economy and federal contracting market generate constant relocation activity. We coordinate with your relocation company, structure timeline-sensitive contracts, and handle the long-distance closing logistics so you don't have to fly back for signing.

Read the relocation seller guide →

Downsizing in Leesburg

Empty-nesters in Lansdowne, River Creek, and the western estate corridor often have significant equity but limited inventory of right-sized next homes locally. We help you sequence the sale and the next purchase to avoid temporary housing or double moves.

Read the downsizing guide →

Selling an Inherited Home in Leesburg

Inherited Leesburg properties often come with deferred maintenance, septic/well conditions on older western parcels, and complex multi-heir coordination. We handle stepped-up basis documentation, probate-coordinated timelines, and preparation of properties that may not have been actively maintained.

Read the inherited home guide →
Local Trigger Events

What's moving the Leesburg market right now

Three local developments currently affecting Leesburg seller pricing and buyer behavior. We factor each into our positioning strategy.

Silver Line Phase 2 (Ashburn Metro) Ripple

The Ashburn Metro stop on the Silver Line continues to reshape eastern Loudoun pricing. Leesburg neighborhoods within a 12-minute drive — Lansdowne, Edwards Landing, Potomac Station — benefit from the spillover demand from Metro-priced-out buyers in Ashburn and Brambleton.

How we factor this into your pricing →

Loudoun Data Center Expansion

Loudoun County remains the largest data center market on Earth, and the construction and engineering hiring tied to it generates a steady stream of relocation buyers across all Leesburg price tiers. The flip side: traffic and grid-infrastructure conversations affect specific corridors.

How we factor this into your pricing →

Old Town Leesburg Reinvestment Cycle

Continued restaurant, retail, and boutique-hotel investment in Old Town has reinforced the walkable-downtown premium. Historic-district homes — done right — are commanding meaningful price premiums vs. comparable-square-footage homes in surrounding subdivisions.

How we factor this into your pricing →
Have a unique situation? Talk to us directly →

Buyer & Seller Tools

Resources to help you make informed decisions in Leesburg

Buyer Tools

Monthly Payment Estimator

See what your Leesburg home budget translates to in monthly payments including taxes and insurance.

Calculate Payment

Offer Strength Check

Understand how your offer compares in Leesburg's competitive market conditions.

Check Offer Strength

Commute Fit Snapshot

Compare commute times from different Leesburg neighborhoods to your workplace.

Map My Commute

Seller Tools

Seller Net Sheet

Calculate your estimated proceeds after commissions, closing costs, and payoffs.

Calculate Net

Home Valuation

Get a current market estimate for your Leesburg property based on recent comparable sales.

Get Valuation

Flexible Commission Program

Explore commission structures designed to maximize your equity at closing.

Learn More

Tools provide estimates; confirm specifics with a local expert.

Quick Answers: Leesburg Real Estate

Fast facts for buyers and sellers

What zip codes cover Leesburg VA?

Leesburg primarily uses zip codes 20175 (central/historic) and 20176 (south/east). Some outlying areas may have 20177 or overlap with nearby Ashburn (20147, 20148).

Is Leesburg considered Northern Virginia?

Yes, Leesburg is in Loudoun County, part of the Northern Virginia region. It sits at the western edge of NoVA, about 35 miles northwest of Washington DC.

What's the property tax rate in Leesburg?

Loudoun County's real estate tax rate is among the lowest in Northern Virginia. Check the current rate with the Loudoun County Treasurer as it adjusts annually.

Are there 55+ communities in Leesburg?

Yes, several active adult communities serve Leesburg, including Lansdowne Woods and Heritage Green. These offer low-maintenance living with amenities geared toward active retirees.

How do Leesburg schools compare to Ashburn?

Both are served by Loudoun County Public Schools, one of Virginia's top districts. Specific school quality varies by pyramid. Let us help match you to the right school zone.

What builders are active in Leesburg?

NVHomes, Toll Brothers, Van Metre, and Ryan Homes have built or are currently building in Leesburg. New construction availability varies—contact us for current inventory.

Is downtown Leesburg walkable?

The historic downtown core is highly walkable with brick sidewalks, shops, restaurants, and the W&OD Trail access. Suburban neighborhoods outside downtown require a car for most errands.

What's the commute from Leesburg to Tysons?

Typically 30–50 minutes depending on route and time of day. The Dulles Greenway is faster but tolled; Route 7 is free but slower during rush hour. Get a personalized commute analysis.

Does Leesburg flood?

Some areas near Catoctin Creek and the Potomac River are in FEMA flood zones. Always request a flood zone determination before purchasing—especially for waterfront properties in River Creek.

Are there data centers in Leesburg?

Data centers are concentrated in eastern Loudoun (Ashburn), not central Leesburg. However, the industry's growth has boosted local employment and contributed to the county's strong tax base.

Recent Outcomes

Results in the Loudoun County Market

Examples of recent client outcomes in the greater Leesburg area

Buyer Win

Townhome Near Downtown

Relocating family prioritized walkability and Tuscarora schools. We identified an off-market opportunity before it hit MLS, structured a competitive offer with escalation clause, and secured the home against multiple competing buyers.

Closed within 45 days of engagement
Seller Result

Single-Family in Lansdowne

Sellers needed to maximize proceeds while timing a job relocation. Strategic pre-listing prep focused on kitchen updates and curb appeal. Priced to generate competition, resulting in multiple offers above list.

Sold above list price in under 10 days
Client Words

First-Time Buyer in Loudoun

"We were overwhelmed by the options in Loudoun County. The Jamil Brothers helped us understand the trade-offs between neighborhoods, school pyramids, and commute routes. We found a home that checked all our boxes without overpaying."

Closed with confidence

Results represent recent outcomes; individual experiences may vary. No guarantees implied.

Ready to Make Your Move?

Whether you are buying your dream home in Aldie or selling for top dollar, we have a strategy for you.

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