Martinsburg, WV Real Estate Guide
Eastern Panhandle living. MARC train access to DC. More home for your money than anywhere in Northern Virginia.
Why Buyers Choose Martinsburg —
Eastern Panhandle Value, MARC Access, and More Home Than NoVA Can Offer
Martinsburg is the largest city in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle and the seat of Berkeley County — one of the fastest-growing counties in the entire state. The reason for that growth is straightforward: DC-area buyers have done the math. A 2,400-square-foot single-family home with a yard, a garage, and good schools costs roughly $310,000 in Martinsburg. The same footprint in Loudoun County, Virginia would run $650,000 to $900,000. The question stops being "why would someone move here?" and becomes "why did it take them this long?"
"Martinsburg is where DC buyers discover that the Eastern Panhandle isn't a compromise — it's the decision they wish they'd made three years sooner."
The MARC Brunswick Line is the market's backbone, with weekday commuter service from Martinsburg Station directly to Washington Union Station in approximately two hours. One important distinction to make upfront: unlike the VRE or Metro, only three inbound trains depart Martinsburg each weekday morning and three outbound trains return in the evening. This is a schedule built for hybrid commuters — two to four days per week in the office — not a five-day daily grind. Buyers who work remotely full-time or go into DC two or three days per week will find this schedule entirely workable. Buyers who need to be in the office every day at 8:00 AM should factor in the limited departure windows before committing to the market.
Beyond the commuter profile, Martinsburg has a real city character that distinguishes it from the purely suburban communities that dominate Berkeley County's growth corridor. The Queen Street and King Street downtown area has seen meaningful reinvestment — the Apollo Civic Theatre has been a cultural anchor for over a century, the historic B&O Railroad Roundhouse is a recognized landmark, and a growing lineup of locally owned restaurants and shops has given the core a genuine walkable identity. Spring Mills, the area's premier planned community to the south, brings the full suburban amenity package: pools, trails, community centers, and nationally recognized school performance.
There is one procedural reality every buyer and seller in Martinsburg needs to know before they start: West Virginia requires a licensed attorney to be present at every real estate closing. This is state law — not an option, not a recommendation. It differs from how closings work in Virginia, Maryland, or DC, where title companies typically handle the process independently. Budget $500 to $1,500 for attorney fees as a closing cost line item, and make sure your agent knows WV transaction law, not just VA or MD forms. Our team holds a West Virginia broker license and manages WV closings regularly.
Ready to explore what's available? Browse homes for sale in Martinsburg — or build your buying plan with our team first.
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(MAR 28, 2026 - APR 27, 2026)
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500 Properties for Sale In Martinsburg
Martinsburg Real Estate: Estimated Market Ranges
A snapshot of what buyers are typically paying across different home types in Martinsburg and the surrounding Berkeley County area — updated by the Jamil Brothers team.
Want to know what your Martinsburg home is worth today? Get a free home valuation — or use our seller net sheet calculator to estimate your full proceeds including WV excise tax and attorney fees.
Explore Martinsburg Neighborhoods
From the master-planned Spring Mills community to the historic downtown and the rural corridors of Back Creek Valley — find the pocket that fits how you actually want to live.
Master-Planned
Spring Mills
Martinsburg's most sought-after community — a large planned development south of the city with community pools, trails, and walkable retail. Spring Mills High School consistently ranks among Berkeley County's top performers, making this the default destination for families relocating from NoVA.
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New Construction
Falling Waters
The fastest-growing new construction corridor in Berkeley County — dozens of active communities have been built along I-81 north of Martinsburg over the past decade. Townhomes starting in the mid-$200s put homeownership within reach for first-time buyers priced out of Northern Virginia entirely.
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Fastest Moving
Bunker Hill
The closest Berkeley County community to the Virginia border — just 38 miles from Leesburg via WV-51 and VA-7. Early 2026 market data confirms Bunker Hill as the fastest-moving sub-market in all of Berkeley County, with well-priced homes generating multiple offers quickly.
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Historic Downtown
Downtown / Adam Stephen District
Martinsburg's walkable historic core — named for the city's founder, General Adam Stephen. The Queen Street corridor, Apollo Civic Theatre, and MARC station are all within walking distance. Victorian and period homes offer genuine character at price points well below comparable historic districts in Northern Virginia.
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Value Pick
Winchester Avenue Corridor
Martinsburg's established mid-range market — a mix of mid-century ranchers, smaller single-family homes, and townhomes at some of the most accessible price points in the area. Quick access to retail, services, and I-81 makes this the practical choice for buyers who prioritize value and convenience over community amenities.
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Rural Retreat
Back Creek Valley
For buyers who want genuine space, Back Creek Valley delivers horse properties, multi-acre parcels, and rural estates at prices that simply don't exist anywhere in Northern Virginia. Custom homes on 2–20+ acre lots with I-81 access keep DC reachable — without anyone knowing your business or parking in your yard.
View GuideWhat to Watch for When Touring Martinsburg Homes
West Virginia has four inspection and due-diligence issues that buyers from Northern Virginia, DC, and Maryland routinely underestimate. Know these before you make an offer.
West Virginia Is EPA Zone 1 — Test Every Single Home
West Virginia is classified as EPA Zone 1 — the highest radon-risk designation — across virtually the entire state, including all of Berkeley County. Radon is a naturally occurring radioactive gas that seeps into homes through foundation cracks and floors, and it is the second leading cause of lung cancer in the United States. Unlike in many other states where testing is selective, in WV radon testing is not optional — it is a standard part of every home purchase.
Well and Septic — Confirm Before You Fall in Love With a Property
A significant number of Berkeley County properties — particularly in Bunker Hill, Back Creek Valley, Hedgesville, and the rural fringe — operate on private well and septic rather than municipal water and sewer. Buyers from Northern Virginia who have never owned a well or septic property are often completely unprepared for the ongoing maintenance requirements, testing obligations, and the cost of a system failure. A septic drain field replacement runs $8,000–$20,000+. A failed well pump or contaminated water supply can derail a closing entirely.
Crawl Space Moisture and Vapor Barrier Deficiencies
The Eastern Panhandle receives significant annual rainfall, and many Martinsburg-area homes built before 2000 — particularly detached ranchers and colonials on older lots — have crawl spaces with inadequate vapor barriers, poor drainage, and accumulated moisture. Left unaddressed, crawl space moisture leads to wood rot, mold growth, pest infiltration, and structural damage to floor joists. Sellers frequently either underestimate the extent of the problem or have never had the space properly inspected.
Knob-and-Tube Wiring, Aluminum Branch Circuits, and Aging Panels
Downtown Martinsburg and the surrounding established neighborhoods contain a large number of homes built between the 1920s and 1970s. Pre-1950 homes may still have knob-and-tube wiring — no longer code-compliant and commonly rejected by homeowners insurance carriers. Homes from the 1960s–1970s frequently have aluminum branch circuit wiring, which carries a documented fire risk if not addressed with COPALUM connectors or replacement. Federal Pacific Stab-Lok and Zinsco panels from this era are flagged by virtually every inspector as a fire hazard due to documented breaker failure rates.
Want a WV-specific buyer checklist before your first showing? Build your buyer plan with our team — we'll flag the right questions for every home you tour in Martinsburg.
Martinsburg Schools Breakdown
All Martinsburg-area homes fall within the Berkeley County Schools (BCS) district. Unlike Northern Virginia, there is no independent city school system — but school assignment varies significantly by address, and the Spring Mills pyramid is the most sought-after by buyers. Always verify your specific assignment before purchasing.
Berkeley County Schools (BCS)
County-wide district serving all of Berkeley County, WV. No independent city division. School assignment determined by home address. Website: bcswv.net
Is school assignment your top priority? Tell us your must-haves — we'll filter listings to confirmed Spring Mills or Martinsburg HS boundaries only, and verify every address before you tour.
Selling Your Martinsburg Home?
Keep More of What You've Built.
The Martinsburg market is driven by DC-area buyers who know what they're getting for the price. Sellers who understand that buyer and price accordingly — and address WV-specific inspection items upfront — consistently outperform those who don't.
Pricing for the DC Commuter Buyer Pool
The majority of Martinsburg buyers are comparing your home against Northern Virginia, Frederick MD, and other Eastern Panhandle options. We price using cross-market data — not just Berkeley County comps — to position your home as the obvious value decision for that buyer, not just a local listing competing on price alone.
Marketing Across the DMV, Not Just Berkeley County
Most local WV agents market only within the county. Our team markets your listing actively across the DC, NoVA, and Maryland buyer pools — the people who are specifically searching for affordable alternatives to high-cost suburbs. That reach is the difference between 3 showings and 30.
Address WV Inspection Items Before They Kill Your Deal
WV buyers — especially first-time buyers from NoVA — inspect thoroughly and react strongly to radon, crawl space moisture, and electrical red flags. We walk through your home before listing and identify the items that will come up in due diligence, so you control the narrative rather than responding to a buyer's repair demand two weeks after going under contract.
The Jamil Brothers Flexible Commission Program
Most Martinsburg sellers don't know that commission is negotiable — and most local agents won't tell them. Our Flexible Commission Program gives you full-service representation at a structure designed to keep more equity in your pocket, not theirs.
Includes WV-specific net sheet with excise tax and attorney fee calculations
Questions about selling in Martinsburg or Berkeley County? Talk to a listing advisor — our team is licensed in West Virginia and handles WV closings regularly.
Frequently Asked Questions About Martinsburg WV Real Estate
Honest answers to the questions buyers and sellers ask most — including the ones other agents avoid.
The Berkeley County median home price is approximately $295,000–$310,000 as of early 2026, with the Eastern Panhandle experiencing roughly 9.3% annual appreciation. Starter townhomes begin around $185K–$265K, mid-range townhomes run $250K–$380K, single-family homes span $295K–$520K, and newer construction on larger lots can reach $450K–$750K+. These prices represent significant value compared to comparable communities in Loudoun County VA or Montgomery County MD, which is the primary driver of continued buyer demand from the DC metro area. Get a free home valuation for a property-specific estimate.
This is the most important practical question for any buyer planning to commute, and the honest answer is: fewer than most people expect. The MARC Brunswick Line runs only three inbound trains from Martinsburg on weekday mornings and three outbound trains returning in the evenings. Service is weekday only — no weekends, no late nights. Travel time to Washington Union Station is approximately two hours. This schedule works well for hybrid commuters going into DC two to four days per week. For daily five-days-a-week commuters who need consistent morning departure windows, the limited schedule is a genuine constraint that should be tested before committing to the market. Always verify current schedules at mta.maryland.gov before purchasing.
Yes — for the right type of commuter. Martinsburg is best suited for hybrid or remote workers who go into the DC area two to four days per week. Those buyers find that the MARC train eliminates driving stress on office days, the $150,000–$300,000 in savings versus comparable Northern Virginia homes more than compensates for the longer commute, and the Eastern Panhandle's quality of life is genuinely better for families who value space, outdoor access, and a lower cost of living. Buyers who need to be in DC five days per week at fixed hours will find the limited MARC schedule and two-hour travel time more demanding — and should run an honest test commute before going under contract.
All Martinsburg-area homes fall within Berkeley County Schools (BCS), a county-wide district — there is no independent city school system like Manassas City Public Schools in Virginia. Two main high school pyramids serve the area: Martinsburg High School (serving the city core and northern areas) and Spring Mills High School (serving the Spring Mills community and southern areas). Spring Mills HS is the higher-demand assignment among families relocating from Northern Virginia. School assignment is determined by your specific home address — never assume based on neighborhood name or ZIP code. Always verify at bcswv.net before purchasing if a specific school is a priority.
For families with school-age children where Spring Mills HS is a specific priority, the premium has consistently proven to hold its value. Homes confirmed in the Spring Mills pyramid typically command $15,000–$40,000+ more than comparable homes in the Martinsburg HS pyramid, and that gap has remained stable as NoVA family demand has grown. Buyers without school-age children or those with other priorities should evaluate whether the school premium makes sense for their situation — the Spring Mills community itself offers superior amenities regardless of the school angle, but the premium is primarily school-driven. Confirm your assignment at bcswv.net before making an offer on any Spring Mills area home.
Four issues come up most frequently in Martinsburg home inspections. First, radon — West Virginia is EPA Zone 1 (highest risk) and every home should be tested, no exceptions; budget $800–$2,500 for mitigation if results exceed 4 pCi/L. Second, well and septic systems on properties outside city utility service — confirm whether a home is on public water/sewer or private systems before contract, not after. Third, crawl space moisture and vapor barrier deficiencies in pre-2000 homes, which can lead to wood rot and mold if unaddressed. Fourth, outdated electrical in older homes — knob-and-tube wiring in pre-1950 structures, aluminum branch circuit wiring in 1960s–70s homes, and Federal Pacific or Zinsco panels that are known fire risks. Always include a radon test and sewer scope on any home built before 2000.
Yes — and this surprises most buyers and sellers who come from Virginia, Maryland, or DC. West Virginia requires a licensed attorney to be present at every real estate closing by state law. This is not optional and cannot be replaced by a title company acting independently. Attorney fees for a standard residential transaction in the Martinsburg area typically run $500–$1,500 depending on complexity. Budget for this as a closing cost line item on both the buyer and seller side. Make sure your agent is familiar with WV closing procedures — an agent who handles only VA or MD transactions may not know the WV-specific documentation and timeline requirements.
West Virginia charges an excise tax on the transfer of real property at $3.30 per $1,000 of sale price — split between a state portion ($2.20/$1,000) and a county portion ($1.10/$1,000). On a $300,000 sale that is approximately $990. On a $450,000 sale it is approximately $1,485. This is West Virginia's equivalent of Virginia's Grantor's Tax or Maryland's transfer tax, but at a different rate and structure. Sellers should include this in their net sheet calculations alongside attorney fees, title and settlement costs, and commission. Use our WV seller net sheet calculator for a complete breakdown including Berkeley County-specific closing costs.
Seller costs in Martinsburg typically include agent commission (flexible with our team), WV excise tax ($3.30/$1,000 of sale price), attorney fees ($500–$1,500 — required by WV state law), title search and settlement fees (~$400–$700), deed preparation (~$75–$150), recording fees (~$50–$100), prorated property taxes through closing, and any negotiated buyer closing cost credits or pre-listing repair costs. The most accurate way to understand your net proceeds is a WV-specific seller net sheet that accounts for Berkeley County excise tax and mandatory attorney fees. Run your free WV net sheet here — or contact our team and we will build one for your specific home before you sign anything.
It depends on your commute style. For buyers who want to walk to the MARC station, the Downtown / Adam Stephen District is the best choice — the station is within walking distance, and the Queen Street corridor gives the neighborhood genuine lifestyle quality. For buyers who drive to the station, Spring Mills and Falling Waters are both within 10–15 minutes of Martinsburg Station and offer newer housing stock with better community amenities. For buyers who split time between DC and Northern Virginia employers, Bunker Hill is the closest to the Virginia border via WV-51 and VA-7, cutting the drive time to Leesburg to approximately 38 miles. Tell us your specific commute setup and we will match neighborhoods to your schedule.
The four primary ZIP codes covering Martinsburg and the immediate surrounding area are 25401 (city core, downtown, historic district and the MARC station area), 25403 (northern and eastern Martinsburg), 25404 (southeastern areas), and 25405 (southwestern Martinsburg, including portions of the Spring Mills corridor). When searching for homes, run searches across all four ZIP codes — listing agents sometimes apply different ZIP codes to the same general market area, and searching only one will cause you to miss available inventory. Our team searches by map polygon rather than ZIP code to make sure you see everything relevant to your search area.
The Berkeley County market is active and competitive but not hypercompetitive across the board. The county median days on market is approximately 31 days, and homes close at around 98% of list price — meaning sellers generally retain pricing power when homes are presented and priced correctly. The Spring Mills sub-market is the most competitive segment, with well-priced homes regularly attracting multiple offers. Bunker Hill is the fastest-moving specific sub-market per early 2026 data. Homes that are overpriced or have unaddressed WV-specific inspection items (radon, crawl space, electrical) tend to sit and require price reductions. Buyers should be prepared to move quickly in Spring Mills and on well-prepared in-town homes, while having more time to evaluate on rural fringe and as-is properties.
The word "best" is subjective, but there are concrete things to evaluate. The Jamil Brothers Realty Group holds a West Virginia broker license and has closed over 840 transactions and $500M+ in sales volume across Virginia, Maryland, DC, and West Virginia — including active, ongoing experience in the Eastern Panhandle market. When evaluating any agent for a Martinsburg transaction, look for: a WV broker license (not just VA or MD), demonstrated knowledge of WV closing procedures and the excise tax structure, cross-state marketing reach into the DC/NoVA/MD buyer pool, familiarity with Berkeley County school boundaries and sub-market pricing differences, and a transparent WV net sheet provided before you sign anything. If you would like a no-obligation consultation and a tailored strategy for buying or selling in Martinsburg, start here to connect with our listing team or build your buyer plan here.
Have a question that isn't answered here? Reach our team directly — we're WV-licensed and respond fast.
Selling in Martinsburg: Pricing, Prep & What WV Buyers Pay Extra For
Everything Martinsburg sellers need — from high-ROI prep items and WV inspection red flags to a full breakdown of West Virginia and Berkeley County closing costs, including the mandatory attorney fee and excise tax.
Flexible Commission Program:
Keep More Equity in Martinsburg's Growing Market
Most Martinsburg sellers don't know that commission is negotiable — and most local WV agents won't tell them. Our Flexible Commission Program gives you full-service representation with cross-state DC marketing reach, while keeping more of Berkeley County's 9.3% annual appreciation in your pocket.
Exact savings vary by sale price and structure. All net sheets include WV excise tax ($3.30/$1,000) and mandatory attorney fee calculations.
Explore Flexible Commissions →High-ROI Prep Items
Common WV Inspection Flags
What Martinsburg Buyers Pay Extra For
Typical Seller Closing Costs — Martinsburg WV
Estimated ranges only — not a guaranteeAll cost figures are estimated ranges. Run a full WV net sheet for your specific home — includes Berkeley County excise tax and mandatory WV attorney fee calculations.
Commute & Local Life in Martinsburg
The honest picture of MARC rail access, car commute times to DC and NoVA, grocery anchors, and what daily life actually looks like in Berkeley County — before you decide where to buy.
MARC Commuter Rail
Brunswick Line — weekday only, limited departures
Car Commute Times
Off-peak estimates via I-81 / I-70 / VA-9 corridors
Grocery & Essentials
Key retail anchors in and around Martinsburg
Dining, Parks & Lifestyle
What daily life in Martinsburg actually looks like
MARC Brunswick Line — Station Timeline to DC
Eastbound toward Union Station — approximate travel times from Martinsburg WV
Want to model your full commute cost before committing? Build your commuter buyer plan with our team — we'll map your schedule against the MARC timetable and identify the right neighborhoods for your situation.
What's Moving in Martinsburg Right Now
Five observations on buyer behavior, seller dynamics, and what's shaping the Berkeley County market in early 2026 — based on actual transaction data, not headlines.
Bunker Hill Is the Fastest-Moving Sub-Market in Berkeley County
Early 2026 transaction data confirms Bunker Hill as the quickest-absorbing pocket in the county. Its proximity to the Virginia border — just 38 miles from Leesburg via WV-51 and VA-7 — makes it the natural entry point for buyers making the cross-state move from Northern Virginia. Well-priced homes here are attracting quick offers and seeing minimal time on market compared to the county median.
New Construction Has Pulled Back — Resale Is Absorbing the Demand
Berkeley County's resale closings increased year-over-year in early 2026 while new construction dropped significantly — from 91 closings to 43 in the same period. Buyers who previously defaulted to new builds are now competing on quality resale inventory instead. This is creating stronger conditions for well-maintained, move-in-ready resale sellers, particularly those who have addressed WV-specific inspection items before listing.
The Spring Mills Pyramid Premium Is Holding — and Buyers Are Specifically Seeking It
Families relocating from Loudoun County are arriving with Spring Mills High School on their must-have list before they've even toured a home. This assignment-specific demand has kept the Spring Mills price premium stable against the broader county market. Sellers confirmed in this pyramid who price accurately and present well are consistently seeing competitive interest. Sellers outside the pyramid who assume the same pricing logic applies are experiencing longer market times.
The Buyer Profile Has Shifted: DC Hybrid Workers, Not Daily Commuters
The most active buyer in the Martinsburg market right now is not a daily MARC commuter — it is a federal employee, contractor, or private sector professional on a two-to-four-day hybrid schedule who has done the math and chosen space over proximity. This buyer is well-researched, financially prepared, and already comparing Martinsburg against Leesburg, Frederick MD, and Hagerstown. They are not impulse buyers, which means properly presented listings that address their specific concerns close cleanly — and overpriced or as-is listings sit.
Sellers Who Address WV Inspection Items Before Listing Are Outperforming Those Who Don't
The single clearest pattern across the Martinsburg market in 2026 is this: sellers who proactively mitigate radon, install crawl space vapor barriers, and resolve electrical red flags before listing are generating cleaner offers, fewer contingency negotiations, and faster closings than sellers who wait for the buyer's inspection to surface these issues. Buyers coming from Northern Virginia are methodical and thorough — they bring inspectors who know WV-specific concerns and they react strongly to flagged items. A seller who has mitigated radon ($800–$2,500) and encapsulated the crawl space ($3,000–$5,000) has removed the two most common leverage points buyers in this market use to renegotiate after going under contract. The difference in how offers come in — and how they close — is consistent and measurable.
Ready to act on what's moving? Let's build a plan tailored to your Martinsburg buying or selling goals.
Get My Martinsburg Plan →Quick Answers: Martinsburg WV Real Estate
Fast, specific answers to the questions buyers and sellers ask most about the Martinsburg market.
What is the average home price in Martinsburg WV?
The Berkeley County median home price is approximately $295,000–$310,000 as of early 2026, with the Eastern Panhandle seeing roughly 9.3% annual appreciation. Starter townhomes begin around $185,000, mid-range single-family homes run $295,000–$520,000, and newer construction on larger lots can reach $450,000–$750,000+. Prices remain significantly below comparable Northern Virginia communities.
How far is Martinsburg WV from Washington DC?
Martinsburg is approximately 75 miles from Washington DC — roughly 90 to 110 minutes by car off-peak via I-81 South and I-70 East. By MARC Brunswick Line train, the trip to Washington Union Station takes approximately 110 minutes. Martinsburg is about 50 miles from Leesburg VA and about 35 miles from Hagerstown MD.
What county is Martinsburg WV in?
Martinsburg is the county seat of Berkeley County, West Virginia, located in the Eastern Panhandle of the state. Berkeley County is consistently the fastest-growing county in West Virginia, driven by Washington DC-area commuters and remote workers. Martinsburg is the largest city in Berkeley County with approximately 23,500 residents.
How many MARC trains run from Martinsburg to DC each day?
The MARC Brunswick Line runs only three inbound trains from Martinsburg each weekday morning and three outbound trains in the evening. Service is weekday-only with no weekend trains. This limited schedule makes Martinsburg best suited for hybrid commuters going into DC two to four days per week — not daily five-day commuters. Verify current schedules at mta.maryland.gov.
What ZIP codes cover Martinsburg WV?
The four primary Martinsburg ZIP codes are 25401 (city core, downtown, MARC station area), 25403 (northern and eastern areas), 25404 (southeastern Martinsburg), and 25405 (southwestern Martinsburg, including portions of the Spring Mills corridor). Search all four ZIPs when looking for homes — listings sometimes appear under different codes for the same general market area.
Is Martinsburg WV a good place to live for DC commuters?
Yes — for the right type of commuter. Martinsburg works best for hybrid or remote workers going into DC two to four days per week. The MARC train eliminates driving on office days, and savings of $150,000–$300,000+ versus comparable Northern Virginia homes make the trade-off worthwhile for flexible-schedule professionals. Daily five-day commuters will find the limited MARC schedule genuinely constraining.
What is the property tax rate in Berkeley County WV?
Berkeley County's real estate property tax rate is approximately $0.61 per $100 of assessed value — significantly lower than Fairfax County VA ($1.135/$100) or Loudoun County VA ($1.045/$100). On a $300,000 home that's approximately $1,830 per year, versus roughly $3,400 for a comparable home in Fairfax County. Verify the current rate at the Berkeley County Assessor's office before closing.
What are the best communities in Martinsburg WV for families?
Spring Mills is the most sought-after community for families with school-age children — offering pools, trails, and access to Spring Mills High School, the highest-demand school assignment in Berkeley County. Bunker Hill offers established neighborhoods closest to the Virginia border. Falling Waters provides newer construction with good school access and a more affordable entry point than Spring Mills.
Does West Virginia require an attorney at real estate closings?
Yes — West Virginia law requires a licensed attorney to be present at every real estate closing. This is mandatory, not optional, and differs from Virginia, Maryland, and DC where title companies can conduct closings independently. Budget $500–$1,500 for attorney fees as a closing cost when buying or selling in Martinsburg. Ensure your agent is familiar with WV closing procedures.
What is the WV excise tax on home sales in Martinsburg?
West Virginia charges an excise tax on real property transfers at $3.30 per $1,000 of sale price — split between state ($2.20/$1,000) and Berkeley County ($1.10/$1,000) portions. On a $300,000 sale that equals approximately $990. This is WV's equivalent of Virginia's Grantor's Tax or Maryland's transfer tax. Use our WV net sheet calculator for a full breakdown.
How long does it take to sell a home in Martinsburg WV?
Well-priced, move-in-ready Berkeley County homes are selling in approximately 25–35 days on average as of early 2026. The county's sale-to-list ratio is approximately 98%, meaning sellers retain pricing power when homes are correctly prepared and priced. Homes in Spring Mills move faster. Properties with deferred maintenance, WV-specific inspection red flags, or overpricing sit significantly longer.
What real estate commission should I expect when selling in Martinsburg WV?
Traditional agents in the Martinsburg market typically charge 2.5–3% in listing commission. The Jamil Brothers charge a 1.5% full-service listing fee for Martinsburg sellers — saving approximately $4,500 on a $300,000 sale compared to a 3% commission. Our team is WV-licensed and provides a complete net sheet including excise tax and attorney fees before you sign anything. Learn more here.
Still have questions about Martinsburg? Connect with our WV-licensed team — we know this market and respond fast.
Buyer & Seller Tools for Martinsburg
Run the numbers, stress-test your commute, and understand your WV-specific closing costs — before you make any decisions.
Buyer Tools
For buyers exploring Martinsburg and Berkeley County
Model your payment at today's rates on Martinsburg-range home prices — before you fall in love with a Berkeley County listing you may not qualify for.
Understand what makes a competitive offer in Martinsburg — WV-specific contingencies, attorney closing timeline, radon and septic inspection requirements, and what DC commuter buyers are competing on.
Map your specific schedule against the 3 available MARC departures from Martinsburg — before committing to a home that only works if the train fits your office days. The single most important pre-offer step for DC commuters.
Seller Tools
For Martinsburg homeowners considering a sale
See your estimated proceeds after commission, WV excise tax ($3.30/$1,000), mandatory attorney fees ($500–$1,500), and title costs — the full Berkeley County closing cost picture before you list.
Get a current estimate of your Martinsburg home's value based on recent Berkeley County comparable sales — cross-referenced against the DC metro buyer pool that actually drives demand here.
See how our 1.5% full-service listing fee compares to traditional Martinsburg commission structures — and what you keep in equity on Berkeley County's rising home values.
Tools provide estimates only — confirm WV-specific closing costs, excise tax rates, and attorney fees with a licensed local expert before making financial decisions.
Find Your Best-Fit
Neighborhood in Martinsburg
Answer 6 quick questions — budget, commute style, school priority, HOA tolerance, home type, and must-haves. Our WV-licensed team will match you to the right Martinsburg pocket within one business day.
Start My Neighborhood Match → Prefer to text your criteria? Start here →What Working With Us in Martinsburg Actually Looks Like
Anonymized outcomes from real Martinsburg-area buyers and sellers — including the WV-specific details that made the difference.
Federal Contractor Relocating from Reston — Confirmed Spring Mills Before Offer
This buyer had been comparing a Spring Mills townhome against three Loudoun County options. We ran the Spring Mills HS address through bcswv.net before they fell in love — confirmed. Radon test returned 6.4 pCi/L (above EPA's 4 pCi/L action level). We negotiated a $2,200 pre-closing mitigation credit rather than asking the seller to mitigate — faster close, buyer controlled the contractor. MARC schedule aligned with their Tuesday–Thursday DC office requirement using the 6:24 AM departure. Closed in 28 days with no surprises at the WV attorney closing.
Bunker Hill Seller — Relisted After 47 Days Stale, Sold in 19
This homeowner had listed with another agent for 47 days at a price that wasn't connecting with DC commuter buyers — who were comparing the home against Falling Waters new construction at similar price points. We addressed three items before relisting: installed a radon mitigation system that had killed the prior deal at inspection, documented HVAC service history, and repainted the interior in two neutral tones. We repriced at $318,000 and specifically marketed across the DC/NoVA buyer pool rather than only in Berkeley County. Received two offers in the first weekend. Closed at $321,500.
We spent six months trying to make Loudoun County work. When we finally ran the real numbers on Spring Mills — home price, property taxes, commute cost — the answer was obvious. Our kids are confirmed for Spring Mills High School, my husband catches the MARC on the mornings he needs DC, and we have a yard that actually qualifies as a yard. We paid $289,000 less than anything comparable in Ashburn. I genuinely do not miss Northern Virginia.
Ready to create your own outcome? Start your buyer plan or get your seller net sheet — our WV-licensed team responds within one business day.





















