Easton CT Real Estate

Homes for Sale in Easton, CT

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Fairfield County’s Agrarian Heart

Best coveted residential neighborhoods in Fairfield County

Easton is the town that proves you don’t have to leave Fairfield County to find genuine farmland,
horse country, and a pace of life governed by the seasons rather than the market. With a
population of approximately 7,600 — the smallest of the major residential communities in the
county — Easton has maintained an agrarian character that most Gold Coast towns
surrendered decades ago. Working farms still dot the landscape. Stone walls line roads named
after the families who settled them centuries ago. And a municipal commitment to land
conservation ensures that the open meadows, wooded hillsides, and rural vistas that define
Easton today will endure for generations.

The typical home value is approximately $927,000, up 4.1 percent year-over-year. That figure
positions Easton in a strategic sweet spot: more affordable than Weston and Wilton for
comparable acreage, more rural and private than Fairfield or Norwalk, and served by Joel
Barlow High School — the same regional school that draws families to neighboring Redding.
For buyers who want genuine country living within a forty-minute drive of the Westport or
Fairfield Metro-North stations, Easton delivers a combination of value, character, and
educational quality that is genuinely rare

The Easton Real Estate Market in 2026

Easton’s market is small by volume but strong by fundamentals. The 4.1 percent year-over-year
appreciation reflects steady demand from a buyer pool that skews toward families, equestrians,
and remote-work professionals. Inventory is structurally limited: the town’s two-acre minimum
zoning, absence of multifamily or commercial development, and conservation commitments
ensure that new supply is minimal. Properties range from approximately $400,000 for smaller
homes needing work to $3 million or more for premier estates with barns, paddocks, and
significant acreage.

The buyer profile in Easton overlaps with Weston and Redding but with a value advantage.
Families relocating from denser Fairfield County towns discover that their budget buys
significantly more land, more privacy, and more architectural character in Easton than in towns
closer to the coast. The Joel Barlow High School district provides the educational anchor, and
the town’s proximity to Fairfield and Westport means that dining, shopping, and cultural
amenities are minutes away even if they’re not within Easton’s borders.

Market Snapshot

Property TypePrice RangeAvg. Days on Market
Estate / Equestrian$1.5M – $3M+30 – 60 days
Updated Colonials$900K – $1.5M15 – 30 days
Mid-Range Homes$600K – $900K12 – 25 days
Starter / Value$400K – $600K10 – 20 days
Housing stock in Old Greenwich CT

Neighborhoods

Aspetuck

The southwestern section of Easton, bordering Weston, is one of the town’s most desirable
areas. The Aspetuck River valley provides scenic beauty and recreational trails. Properties here
feature rolling terrain, meadows, and mature woodland on multi-acre lots. The Aspetuck Valley
Country Club, shared with Weston, provides private golf and social amenities. Homes in
Aspetuck command some of Easton’s highest prices, reflecting the area’s combination of natural
beauty and proximity to Weston and Westport.

Sport Hill

The southern section of Easton, closest to Fairfield and Trumbull. Sport Hill Road is one of
Easton’s primary corridors, and the surrounding area features a mix of colonials, cape cods, and
newer construction on two-acre-plus lots. Silverman’s Farm, a working farm offering
pick-your-own apples, pumpkins, and seasonal events, is a local institution that anchors
community life in this part of town. Sport Hill represents Easton’s most practical entry point for
buyers who want country character with the shortest drive to I-95 and coastal amenities.

Easton Center

The historic core of town, centered around the Easton Town Green, the Congregational church,
and the Easton Public Library. Antique homes on generous lots surround the green, and the
Samuel Staples Elementary School serves the neighborhood. Easton Center embodies the
town’s identity: quiet, historic, and self-consciously preserved.

South Easton & Morehouse

Bordering Monroe and Trumbull, the eastern and southern reaches of Easton offer the most
affordable properties in town. Larger lots with older housing stock provide opportunities for
buyers willing to invest in renovation. The landscape transitions from manicured estates to more
rugged woodland and open terrain.

Schools and Education

Easton students attend schools in the Region 9 district, sharing Joel Barlow High School with
Redding. The elementary and middle school levels are served by Samuel Staples Elementary
School and Helen Keller Middle School, both located in Easton. Joel Barlow High School
provides a comprehensive academic program with AP courses, strong arts and athletics, and a
student-teacher ratio that allows personalized attention. The small district size — approximately
1,500 students combined from Easton and Redding — creates a tight-knit educational
community that many families find preferable to the larger district structures in Fairfield or
Norwalk.

Recreation and Lifestyle

Easton’s lifestyle is defined by its relationship to the land. Silverman’s Farm draws families
year-round for pick-your-own produce, a market, and seasonal events that have made it a
Fairfield County institution. The Aspetuck Land Trust manages conservation properties
throughout town, and the town’s open space network includes hundreds of acres of permanently
protected woodland and meadow. The equestrian community is active, with horse properties,
riding trails, and an agricultural culture that distinguishes Easton from more manicured
neighbors.

Lake Mohegan, shared with Fairfield, offers swimming and picnicking. The town’s extensive
road network — quiet, winding, and largely free of through-traffic — makes Easton popular with
road cyclists and joggers. Community events, centered on the town green and local farms,
create social connections that feel organic rather than programmed.

Old Greenwich housing market

Commuting from Easton

Easton does not have a train station. Commuters drive to the Fairfield, Fairfield Metro, or
Westport Metro-North stations, each approximately 15 to 25 minutes by car. Total commute time
to Grand Central Terminal ranges from 75 to 95 minutes door-to-door. The Merritt Parkway is
accessible via Route 136 and Route 59. As with Weston and Redding, remote work has
expanded Easton’s buyer pool significantly — the town is most attractive to professionals who
commute two to three days per week and value their home environment on the remaining days

Why Buyers Choose Easton

Easton buyers are making a deliberate lifestyle choice: they want genuine country living —
working farms next door, horses in the pasture, starlight unspoiled by streetlamps — within a
Fairfield County framework of strong schools, accessible amenities, and reasonable property
values. The $927,000 average home value buys significantly more land and privacy than the
same budget would deliver in Wilton, Weston, or any coastal town. Joel Barlow High School
provides the academic quality that families require. And the town’s conservation ethic ensures
that the landscape character is permanent, not a temporary condition awaiting the next
development cycle.

For investors, Easton represents Fairfield County’s deepest value play for rural residential real
estate. The 4.1 percent appreciation is solid, inventory is structurally limited by two-acre zoning,
and the growing remote-work population is expanding demand for exactly what Easton offers.
As Weston prices continue to climb and Wilton’s supply tightens, the value migration to Easton
and Redding — towns with comparable character at lower price points — is a trend that favors
patient, strategic buyers.

Frequently Asked Questions

$927K avg value, up 4.1% YoY. Range:
$400K–$3M+.

No. Residents drive to Fairfield/Westport Metro-North
(15–25 min). Total to Grand Central: 75–95 min.

Aspetuck (Weston border, scenic), Sport Hill (closest to I-95,
Silverman’s Farm), Easton Center (historic green), South Easton (value/acreage)

Region 9 district sharing Joel Barlow HS with Redding. Strong AP, arts,
small classes. Samuel Staples Elementary is well-regarded.

Active. Horse properties common. Riding trails throughout
town. Agricultural culture embedded in community identity.

Deepest value play for rural Fairfield County. 4.1%
appreciation, two-acre zoning limits supply, remote work expanding buyer pool.

Explore Easton with Blaise Punturo Real Estate

Blaise Punturo brings over 30 years of experience. Whether seeking a working farm, an
equestrian estate, or a family colonial on wooded acres, Blaise provides the expertise this
unique market requires.

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This information is not verified for authenticity or accuracy and is not guaranteed and may not reflect all real estate activity in the market. Copyright 2026 Beaches Multiple Listing Service, Inc. All rights reserved. Information Not Guaranteed and Must Be Confirmed by End User. Site contains live data.

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