The West End is the most concentrated luxury residential pocket in Richmond city. The area west of I-95 stretching to Goochland, organized loosely around Cary Street Road, the Country Club of Virginia, the University of Richmond, and the River Road corridor, holds the longest history of high-end residential ownership in the metro.
This guide is for buyers and sellers who want a real picture of what the West End is in 2026: which neighborhoods sit where, what the price points look like, and what each enclave is actually like to live in.
How the West End breaks down
For a buyer just learning the geography, here is the practical map:
- Windsor Farms. The English-village benchmark. Tree-lined winding streets, Colonial Revival, Tudor, and Georgian homes on substantial lots. Most concentrated luxury within Richmond city.
- Westmorland Place and adjacent enclaves. Slightly smaller lots, similar architectural pedigree.
- Hampton Hills, Hampton Gardens, Tuckahoe Terrace. Established residential streets with mid-century to traditional architecture, walking distance to portions of Cary Street Road.
- Hillcrest, Glen Burnie, Stonewall Court, Colonial Place, LockGreen. Smaller pockets, each with their own feel; LockGreen leans newer-luxury, the others established.
- The River Road corridor. From Three Chopt out toward Goochland. Larger lot sizes, more privacy, more variation in style and vintage.
- Far West End / University of Richmond area. Family-heavy with strong school feeders, slightly less luxury price-point and more mid-to-high range.
Price bands in 2026
Richmond’s West End is not a single price band. A working framework for 2026:
- $700,000 to $1.1 million: well-renovated traditional homes in Hampton Hills, Hampton Gardens, parts of Tuckahoe Terrace, and the smaller enclaves
- $1.2 million to $2.5 million: the Windsor Farms and Westmorland Place core, larger River Road corridor homes
- $2.5 million-plus: top-of-market estates in Windsor Farms, premier River Road parcels, and the small handful of LockGreen and adjacent custom builds
Buyers shopping the West End for the first time should expect older homes than newer suburbs, with renovation history that matters more to value than recent paint. A 1939 Windsor Farms Georgian with a 2018 kitchen and 2022 primary suite often outperforms a 1989 home with cosmetic updates only.
What life is like in each pocket
Windsor Farms
The Windsor Farms experience is, in a word, settled. Long ownership tenures, mature landscaping, narrow winding streets, and consistent architectural character. Neighbors know each other.
Schools: Mary Munford Elementary feeds the area, with private school enrollment notably high (St. Catherine’s, St. Christopher’s, Collegiate, Trinity Episcopal, Steward, all within a short drive). Public-school families do attend Munford, then move on to the standard RPS feeders, but the practical pattern in much of Windsor Farms is private K-12.
Lot sizes: typically 0.3 to 0.7 acres, with some larger.
Walkability: light. Walking to Cary Street Road retail is workable from some streets. Most residents drive.
Hampton Hills, Hampton Gardens, and Tuckahoe Terrace
These neighborhoods sit just east and north of the Country Club of Virginia. Architecture mixes mid-century brick ranches with traditional two-stories and a meaningful number of well-renovated 1950s and 1960s homes.
Schools: same Mary Munford feeder for parts, with some streets in Henrico zones (Maybeury Elementary, Tuckahoe Middle).
Lot sizes: 0.2 to 0.5 acres, with quite a few near 0.3.
Walkability: strong by Richmond city standards. Walk to portions of Cary Street Road, parks, and the River Road corridor’s western edges.
River Road corridor
From Three Chopt out into Goochland, River Road’s residential side branches into several distinct enclaves. Lots get larger as you move west. Architecture ranges from estate-scale traditional to modern transitional builds. Some of Richmond’s most distinctive private homes sit on River Road tributaries.
Buyers wanting privacy, larger acreage, and a more rural-leaning version of luxury often land here rather than in the more urban Windsor Farms or Hampton Hills feel. For comparable larger-acreage Goochland luxury, see Hallsley vs Kinloch.
LockGreen, Glen Burnie, and the smaller enclaves
LockGreen leans newer-luxury, with custom builds and renovations from the past twenty years. Glen Burnie, Hillcrest, and similar pockets each have their own consistent feel. These are the streets where buyers shopping for “Windsor Farms-adjacent” often find good fits at slightly lower entry points.
How West End luxury compares to suburban luxury
A practical comparison for buyers considering both:
- West End: older homes, mature trees, walkability, established social feel, private-school adjacency, smaller lots, premium per square foot.
- Wyndham (Glen Allen): newer construction, golf and country-club amenities, larger lots, master-planned consistency, public schools considered strong. See our Wyndham buyer’s guide.
- Hallsley (Chesterfield): newest construction, Eagle Construction-built, semi-custom finishes, master-planned, family-leaning amenities.
- Kinloch (Goochland): larger lot sizes, lake-fronted, golf, more rural-private feel.
For buyers choosing among these, the question is usually less about price and more about lifestyle. Older charm versus newer finishes. Walkability versus space. Established versus newly planted.
For a price-point reality check, see our million-dollar Richmond home guide.
What to look for in a West End purchase
Five items that matter more in West End buying than in newer suburban purchases:
- Renovation history. A home with major systems, kitchen, and primary suite renovated within ten years is a different house than one without. Read the disclosures and the permits.
- Foundation condition. Older homes have older foundations. Get a thorough inspection, including a structural review on any home over fifty years old.
- Schooling plan. Public versus private decisions affect what the buyer is paying for. Some Windsor Farms families pay private tuition; some attend Munford. Either is fine; a clear plan saves money.
- Property taxes. Richmond city’s tax rate is $1.20 per $100 of assessed value, materially higher than Henrico or Chesterfield. On a $1.5 million home, that gap matters. See property taxes in Richmond, Henrico, and Chesterfield.
- Future zoning. The Code Refresh changes some land-use rules in adjacent areas. Most established West End streets are unaffected; ask directly for the specific parcel.
Frequently asked questions
Where do most luxury buyers live in Richmond? The West End (Windsor Farms, Hampton Hills, the River Road corridor), Wyndham in Glen Allen, Hallsley in Chesterfield, and Kinloch in Goochland concentrate most of the metro’s luxury inventory.
What is the most expensive neighborhood in Richmond? Windsor Farms and the River Road corridor consistently produce the highest sales in the city. Top-of-market sales in these areas regularly exceed $3 million.
Are West End homes worth the premium over the suburbs? For buyers who value architecture, mature trees, and walkability, the premium is real value. For buyers who prioritize newer systems and master-planned amenities, suburban luxury is often the better fit.
Do most Windsor Farms families attend private schools? Many do. Private K-12 enrollment is notably higher in this corridor than in most other Richmond-area neighborhoods. Public-school families do still attend RPS feeders.
Is a 1940s Windsor Farms home a good investment? With proper inspection, attention to systems, and a renovation plan, yes. Older Windsor Farms homes have generally appreciated steadily, though the renovation cost factor is non-trivial.
Want a luxury tour of the West End?
We work the West End regularly across price bands and architectural styles. If a curated tour of three to five homes that match a specific buyer’s brief would help, that is what we do. Reach out to Daniel for a free first conversation.
[Featured image to upload. Image prompt: Photoreal exterior of a stately Georgian brick home in Windsor Farms Richmond Virginia, slate roof, mature boxwood hedges, tree-lined cobblestone-edge street, late afternoon light, no people, editorial real estate photography]