Hamilton County's historic county seat — market data, price trends, and neighborhood intelligence for Noblesville buyers and sellers. Updated monthly.
| City | Median Sale | Avg DOM | L/S Ratio | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carmel | ~$510,000 | ~42 days | ~98.3% | ↑ ~3% |
| Cicero | ~$385,000 | ~35 days | ~98% | ↑ ~6% |
| Fishers | ~$405,000 | ~55 days | ~97% | ~Flat |
| Noblesville — You are here | ~$375,000 | ~45 days | ~98% | ↑ ~2% |
| Sheridan | ~$280,000 | ~50 days | ~97% | ↑ ~3% |
| Westfield | ~$450,000 | ~65 days | ~98% | ↑ ~5% |
Noblesville serves as Hamilton County's county seat and its most accessible entry point, with a median near $375,000 — well below Carmel ($510K) and Westfield ($450K). For buyers who want Hamilton County schools and community at a lower price floor, Noblesville has long been the answer.
As of early 2026, the Noblesville market is firmly in normalization mode. Days on market have extended to around 45 days from near-instant absorption during peak years. The list-to-sale ratio sits near 98%, giving buyers modest negotiating leverage — a meaningful change from the all-cash, waived-contingency environment of 2021–2023.
Noblesville's appeal rests on genuine assets: access to Geist Reservoir, a revitalized downtown square, Hamilton Southeastern and Noblesville school districts, and growing commercial development along SR-37. The city attracts buyers priced out of Carmel and Fishers who still want Hamilton County's quality of life at a relative discount.