Real Estate in Keene, New Hampshire — Homes for Sale 2026
Keene at a glance
Keene is a small, lively New England city in Cheshire County with a population near 23,000 and a compact downtown centered on Main Street and Central Square. The city combines a college-town vibe (Keene State College), local healthcare and light industry, and recreational access to Mount Monadnock and surrounding woodlands — features that keep steady buyer interest in both owner-occupant and investor segments. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
10-year demand & price trend (2016–2025 → planning for 2026)
Over the past decade Keene’s housing market has shown modest but persistent appreciation with some variability by submarket. Major aggregator snapshots show mid- to upper-hundreds median values and positive year-over-year movement in recent years. Zillow’s city-level Home Value Index places Keene’s average home value in the mid-hundreds (roughly the $340k–$380k range depending on the feed and date), while Redfin and other listing services report median sale prices in the low-to-mid $300k range and per-square-foot metrics that help compare micro-markets. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
Key pattern (2016–2025): steady growth, a sharper post-2020 rise in demand for renovated move-in homes, and increased competition for well-located properties near Keene State College or downtown amenities. Thin inventory at times results in faster sales and price premiums for turnkey listings.
Price conversions — from $/ft² to $/m² (practical)
U.S. listing feeds usually show $ per square foot. To display metric prices for international visitors or consistent comparison use:
1 ft² = 0.092903 m² — multiply $/ft² by 10.7639 to get $/m².
Representative tier
Example $ / ft²
Converted $ / m²
Context
Renovated downtown / college-adjacent
$230 / ft²
$2,476 / m²
Premium finishes, proximity to Keene State College.
Typical single-family neighborhoods
$190 / ft²
$2,045 / m²
Most owner-occupied homes across Keene.
Entry / fixer / small multi
$95 / ft²
$1,022 / m²
Older units or properties that need renovation.
Use the specific listing $/ft² to compute an exact $/m² for any property — the examples above are illustrative and intended for easy conversion and comparison.
Neighborhoods & price geography — where to look
Keene’s market is a patchwork: historic rowhouse streets and walkable downtown blocks, quiet residential wards, and nearby small suburbs and towns that feed commuter demand. Commonly referenced local areas include:
City Center / Downtown & Main Street: walkable, mixed-use — strong rental and condo market.
Keene West & North Keene: family neighborhoods, larger lots and newer renovations.
South Keene / Marlborough & Swanzey corridor: quieter residential and suburban pockets.
Broadly speaking:
• Most expensive: renovated homes near downtown and college corridors, and upscale properties in Keene West and some adjacent towns.
• Mid-range: stable single-family neighborhoods across Keene with steady demand.
• Most affordable: older central blocks, small multifamily buildings and fixer-uppers popular with investors. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
Safety & infrastructure — practical notes
Keene publishes regular crime reports and the city’s police department provides monthly statistics — these show variation across blocks and over time. Third-party analyses indicate Keene’s violent crime rate is near national averages while property crime is higher than some peer towns — this makes block-level checks essential before purchase. Municipal improvements (lighting, downtown activation) have helped reduce incidents in several corridors. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
Infrastructure strengths that influence housing demand:
Education: Keene State College brings consistent rental demand and seasonal buyer interest near campus.
Healthcare: Cheshire Medical Center and regional clinics are local employment anchors.
Transport: Good local road network, quick access to Route 101/Route 9 and regional highways for commuting to Manchester and further.
Four neighborhoods we’ll profile (short intros)
Below are four districts chosen for deeper pages — each will include active comps, school context, micro-safety maps and renovation guidance.
1. Downtown / Main Street & Central Square
The cultural core with restaurants, shops, theatres and strong walkability. Housing includes converted lofts, small condos and some rowhouses. High demand from renters and buyers seeking urban convenience; renovated units command premiums.
2. Keene West — family neighborhoods
Keene West offers tree-lined streets, larger lots and proximity to parks and schools. It’s popular with families and buyers seeking move-in-ready single-family homes at upper-mid market pricing.
3. North Keene & Keene State College corridor
North Keene and areas near Keene State see strong rental demand and steady buyer activity — a mix of student housing, duplexes and owner-occupied properties that trade at a premium for proximity to campus.
4. South Keene / Swanzey & nearby small towns
South Keene and the Swanzey corridor provide more affordable single-family options and easy commuter access; excellent choices for buyers prioritizing yard space and lower entry prices.
Neighborhood snapshot — indicative table
The table below summarizes indicative medians, $/m² ranges and safety notes for the four focus districts. Figures are illustrative and rounded for planning — request current MLS data for transaction decisions.
Neighborhood
Indicative median (USD)
Indicative $ / m²
Safety / notes
Downtown / Main Street
$350k–$480k
$1,888–$2,590 / m²
High activity; premiums for renovated condos; strong rental market.
Keene West
$320k–$420k
$1,730–$2,270 / m²
Family neighborhoods; good schools and parks.
North Keene / College corridor
$280k–$370k
$1,515–$2,000 / m²
Strong rental demand; mixed owner/renter market.
South Keene / Swanzey corridor
$210k–$320k
$1,135–$1,730 / m²
More affordable single-family options; commuter friendly.
Buyer & investor takeaways
Practical signals to guide next steps in Keene:
Move-in ready buyers: expect to pay premiums for renovated downtown and college-adjacent homes but gain immediate comfort and lower short-term maintenance risk.
Value seekers & investors: target entry-level properties and small multifamily for renovation upside and steady rental demand driven by the college and healthcare employers.
Families: Keene West and surrounding suburbs typically deliver more yard space and higher-performing school access.
Data & methodology (brief)
This page synthesizes public listing platform snapshots (Zillow, Redfin, Realtor/MLS summaries), municipal crime reports and neighborhood directories to produce comparative medians, $/ft²→$/m² conversions and indicative trend summaries. Key market statements above reference major listing feeds and local crime reporting; analytical summaries and rolling medians were produced with AI assistance and manually reviewed by the author to ensure clarity and consistency. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
Numbers are indicative and rounded for planning and comparison. For any purchase or investment decision obtain an up-to-date MLS report, a licensed appraisal and a property inspection.