
SouthPark vs. Myers Park: Which Charlotte Neighborhood Holds Value Best?
SouthPark and Myers Park are two of Charlotte's most sought-after addresses, but they serve different buyers and perform differently in the market. If you are deciding between them, or if you already own in one and are wondering whether to stay or move, the data tells a clear story about appreciation, liquidity, and long-term value retention.
I work with buyers and sellers in both neighborhoods regularly. What I see on the ground often differs from what the headlines suggest. This post gives you the real picture.
The Numbers as of Early 2026
Myers Park is performing at a level that few Charlotte neighborhoods can match. The median sale price sits at approximately $1.7 million as of February 2026, up 8.4 percent year over year according to Zillow, with Redfin reporting a 19 percent increase in March 2026 compared to the prior year. That kind of appreciation in a luxury segment is not typical, and it reflects genuine scarcity. Myers Park does not produce new inventory. The homes there were built between 1910 and 1970, and the lots are not being subdivided. When a home comes available, buyers compete for it.
SouthPark tells a different story. The median sale price is approximately $675,000 as of March 2026, up 2.2 percent year over year per Redfin, with an average home value of $850,000 per Zillow. Days on market average 49. SouthPark is a mixed-use luxury district, meaning it includes high-rise condos, townhomes, and single-family homes across a wide price range. That variety creates more liquidity but also more competition from new inventory, which puts a ceiling on appreciation in certain segments.
| Metric | Myers Park | SouthPark |
|---|---|---|
| Median Sale Price (March 2026) | ~$1.7M | ~$675K |
| Year-over-Year Appreciation | +8.4% to +19% | +2.2% to +4.4% |
| Average Days on Market | 30 to 45 | 49 |
| Housing Stock | Historic single-family estates | Mixed: condos, townhomes, SFH |
| New Inventory Risk | Very low (no new construction) | Moderate (ongoing development) |
| Price per Sq Ft (avg) | $350 to $500+ | $250 to $350 |
What Drives Myers Park's Appreciation
Myers Park's appreciation story is rooted in scarcity and prestige. The neighborhood was developed in the early 20th century as Charlotte's first planned residential community, and it has maintained its character through strict deed restrictions and historic preservation norms. You cannot build a spec home in Myers Park. You cannot tear down a 1920s colonial and replace it with a modern build without community resistance. That constraint protects values in a way that no HOA rule can replicate.
The buyer profile in Myers Park skews toward executives, physicians, attorneys, and generational wealth. These buyers are not rate-sensitive in the way that first-time buyers are. When mortgage rates rise, Myers Park slows slightly but does not correct the way that entry-level markets do. That resilience is a meaningful advantage for sellers and long-term holders.
The neighborhood also benefits from its proximity to Uptown Charlotte, the Mint Museum, and some of the city's best private schools. Families who prioritize walkability to cultural institutions and a specific school zone are willing to pay a significant premium, and that premium has been consistent for decades.
What Drives SouthPark's Appeal
SouthPark's appeal is different. It is a lifestyle neighborhood built around convenience. SouthPark Mall, the surrounding retail corridor, and the concentration of restaurants and services make it one of the most walkable areas in Charlotte outside of Uptown. For buyers who want luxury without the maintenance demands of a large historic estate, SouthPark condos and townhomes offer a compelling alternative.
The single-family homes in SouthPark, particularly in the Foxcroft and Barclay Downs sections, have appreciated steadily and hold value well. These are not the same price point as Myers Park, but they offer strong liquidity. A well-priced SouthPark home in good condition typically receives multiple offers within the first two weeks.
The risk in SouthPark is the condo and new construction segment. When developers add supply, it creates downward pressure on resale values in those product types. If you are buying a condo in SouthPark as an investment, you need to understand that you are competing with new construction for every future buyer.
Which Neighborhood Holds Value Best?
The honest answer depends on what you mean by value.
If you are measuring raw appreciation and long-term equity growth, Myers Park wins. The combination of scarcity, prestige, and a buyer pool that is insulated from rate cycles produces appreciation that outpaces most of Charlotte's luxury market. The entry price is higher, but the compounding effect over a 10 to 20 year hold is significant.
If you are measuring liquidity and ease of transaction, SouthPark is competitive. The lower price point brings more buyers into the market, and the lifestyle amenities create consistent demand. A SouthPark home priced correctly will sell. The appreciation may be more modest, but the transaction is typically cleaner.
If you are buying a condo, neither neighborhood offers the same value retention as single-family homes. Condos in both areas are subject to HOA fee increases, special assessments, and competition from new supply. I generally advise buyers who are focused on long-term value retention to prioritize single-family homes in both neighborhoods.
What This Means for Sellers
If you are selling in Myers Park, you have pricing power that most Charlotte sellers do not. The key is not to overprice and sit. Myers Park buyers are sophisticated and they know the comps. A home priced at market will generate competition. A home priced above market will sit, and sitting in Myers Park sends a signal that something is wrong.
If you are selling in SouthPark, condition and presentation matter more. You are competing with new construction in some segments, and buyers have options. Investing in staging, fresh paint, and updated fixtures before listing will close the gap between your home and the new builds that buyers are also considering.
My Recommendation
Both neighborhoods are strong long-term holds. If your budget allows for Myers Park and you are planning to stay for at least five years, the appreciation trajectory and scarcity premium make it one of the best real estate decisions you can make in Charlotte. If SouthPark fits your lifestyle and budget better, focus on single-family homes in the Foxcroft and Barclay Downs sections rather than condos or townhomes.
The decision between these two neighborhoods is not just financial. It is about how you want to live. Myers Park is quieter, more private, and oriented around estate living. SouthPark is more active, more convenient, and more connected to Charlotte's commercial core. Both are excellent. The right answer depends on you.
If you want to talk through the specific numbers for a property you are considering in either neighborhood, reach out. I work in both markets and I can give you a clear picture of what the data actually means for your situation.
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