Logan Circle DC Real Estate
Homes for Sale Near 14th & P, Whole Foods & the Historic Circle. From Marc Dosik & the Fed City Team, your DC real estate experts.
Search Logan Circle HomesMarc Dosik knows Logan Circle block by block.
Marc Dosik has been selling real estate in Washington, DC, Maryland, and Virginia since 1998. Our office sits at 843 Upshur Street NW in Petworth, and Logan Circle has been a core part of the Fed City Team's business for years.
Logan Circle holds some of the most architecturally significant Victorian rowhomes in DC. We know the blocks where original detail is intact, the condo conversions that retained their character vs. those that gutted it, and the trade-offs between living on the circle vs. one block back.

Living in Logan Circle
Dining & Nightlife
The 14th Street corridor is one of DC's best stretches for restaurants and bars. Le Diplomate, Barcelona Wine Bar, Estadio, Pearl Dive Oyster Palace, and dozens of others span every cuisine and price point. A Trader Joe's at 14th and U and a Whole Foods on P Street put groceries within easy walking distance for most residents.
Culture & Entertainment
Studio Theatre on 14th Street is one of DC's most respected small theaters, producing a full season of contemporary plays. The neighborhood is also walking distance to the 9:30 Club and Howard Theatre, both technically in neighboring Shaw but a short stroll or one Metro stop away.
Transit & Commute
Two Metro stations sit roughly 10 minutes on foot from the circle: U Street/Cardozo (Green/Yellow lines) to the north and McPherson Square (Blue/Orange/Silver) to the south. Multiple bus lines run along 14th Street, P Street, and Rhode Island Avenue, and the 15th Street protected bike lane connects to downtown and the National Mall.
What makes Logan Circle distinctive.

Logan Circle's story is one of reinvention. Originally Iowa Circle until 1930 (when it was renamed for Civil War General John A. Logan), the neighborhood was for decades one of DC's most prominent African American communities. By the 1970s and 1980s, disinvestment hit hard. The turnaround began in the late 1990s and accelerated through the 2000s, as buyers recognized the value in the housing stock: grand three- and four-story Victorians with original details that would cost millions to replicate today.
Logan Circle also holds a central place in DC's LGBTQ+ community. The neighborhood has been a hub for LGBTQ+ residents and businesses for decades, and that identity remains strong. Annual Capital Pride events center on the area, and many of the bars, restaurants, and community organizations along 14th Street reflect that history.
What ties it all together is walkability. Logan Circle regularly scores above 95 on Walk Score. You can walk to groceries, restaurants, Metro, parks, and nightlife without getting in a car. That is not marketing language; it is the daily reality for residents.
Explore Logan Circle Block by Block
14th Street Corridor
The blocks immediately flanking 14th Street are the most urban and the most walkable. You are steps from restaurants and nightlife, but you also get more street noise, more foot traffic, and tighter parking. Properties here tend to be condos in newer buildings or converted rowhomes. This is where many first-time buyers in Logan Circle start.
Residential Side Streets
Move a block or two off 14th, to 13th, 12th, 15th, or the lettered streets, and the feel shifts noticeably. Quieter, more residential, lined with the classic Victorian rowhomes that define the neighborhood's character. This is where you find the $1.5M to $2.5M single-family homes.
North Toward U Street
The northern edge of Logan Circle blends into the Shaw and U Street corridor. Slightly more affordable prices, proximity to U Street Metro, and easy access to the restaurants and bars along U Street. The trade-off: you are farther from the circle itself and from McPherson Square Metro.
Logan Circle Real Estate Market
$1.2M–$2.5M
Victorian Rowhome Range
$350K–$900K
Condo Range
10 min
Walk to Metro
95+
Walk Score
Logan Circle's housing stock is dominated by two property types: historic Victorian rowhomes and condominiums. The Victorians are primarily three-story brick rowhouses built between the 1870s and 1910s, many featuring bay windows, turrets, original woodwork, stained glass, and ornate cornices. A fully renovated single-family Victorian typically lists between $1.2M and $2.5M, with the highest prices on blocks directly facing the circle and on the most desirable stretches of P Street and Vermont Avenue.
Some rowhomes have been converted into two- or three-unit condos, providing one of the more accessible ways to own a piece of Logan Circle's historic architecture. Condo units in converted rowhomes generally range from the mid-$400s to $900K, depending on size and finish.
New and newer construction condos along the 14th Street corridor and between 14th and 15th Streets typically range from $350K for a studio to $1M+ for a two-bedroom with high-end finishes. Inventory is consistently tight: the neighborhood is largely built out, and most rowhomes are protected by the Logan Circle Historic District, which limits demolition and significant exterior changes.
For sellers, our We Pay to Fix Your Home program is particularly relevant for Logan Circle Victorians, especially estate sales where an inherited rowhome may need updates before it is market-ready.
Logan Circle agents who know the historic rowhome stock.

We are not a team that covers Logan Circle from a suburban office 30 miles away. Our office is at 843 Upshur Street NW in Petworth, a straight shot down 14th Street from Logan Circle. Marc Dosik has been selling real estate in DC, Maryland, and Virginia since 1998, and our agents know Logan Circle's inventory block by block.
For Buyers
Buying a Victorian in the Logan Circle Historic District comes with preservation requirements that affect what you can and cannot do to the exterior. We help buyers understand those rules before they make an offer, not after, and we help first-time buyers access up to $17,500 in DC down payment assistance through grant programs most people do not know exist.
For Sellers
Our We Pay to Fix Your Home program covers pre-sale repairs and updates upfront. If you are selling a Logan Circle rowhome that needs work to compete in this market, we cover the cost upfront and you pay us back at closing. We have closed over 544 transactions, including 130+ short sales, and we know how to navigate the title complications that come with century-old homes.
A fully renovated Victorian rowhome in Logan Circle can list for $1.5M to $2.5M+ on the most desirable blocks.
That premium is driven by limited historic-district inventory, near-zero new construction of single-family homes, and constant demand for the Victorian housing stock that defines the neighborhood. Whether you are buying one of these rowhomes or selling one your family has owned for decades, we have walked through dozens of these deals on these exact blocks and know how the historic district rules affect what you can and cannot do to the exterior.
Logan Circle Real Estate FAQs
What is the average home price in Logan Circle DC?
It varies significantly by property type. Condo units typically range from $350K to $900K. Single-family Victorian rowhomes generally list between $1.2M and $2.5M. The median sale price for all property types in Logan Circle has been trending above $700K.
Is Logan Circle a good investment?
Logan Circle has shown consistent appreciation over the past two decades, driven by limited inventory, high demand, historic district protections, and its central location. No investment is guaranteed, but the fundamentals here are strong.
How walkable is Logan Circle?
Very. Walk Score consistently rates Logan Circle above 95. Most daily needs (groceries, dining, transit, entertainment) are within a 10-minute walk.
What Metro stations serve Logan Circle?
U Street/Cardozo (Green/Yellow lines) to the north and McPherson Square (Blue/Orange/Silver lines) to the south. Both are roughly a 10-minute walk from the circle itself.
Are there parking challenges in Logan Circle?
Yes. Street parking is limited and permit-restricted, and many rowhomes do not have garages or driveways. If dedicated parking is important to you, make it a priority in your search criteria; we can help you focus on properties with a garage or deeded space.
Can I renovate a rowhome in the Logan Circle Historic District?
Interior renovations are generally unrestricted. Exterior changes (windows, doors, roofing materials, additions) require review and approval from DC's Historic Preservation Review Board. This is something we help buyers evaluate before making offers.
Get in Touch
Ready to buy or sell in Logan Circle? Call the Fed City Team today.
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