Real Estate

Here Are The Most Recent Property Sales In Ridgefield

Five homes changed hands in Ridgefield between June 30 and July 2, with a top price of $2,135,000, according to Zillow.com.

RIDGEFIELD, CT — Ridgefield closed out June and kicked off July with a flurry of high-end transactions, including a pair of multimillion-dollar sales on consecutive days. Here's a look at the five most recent closings recorded on Zillow.com, from newest to oldest.

The most recent sale in this batch belongs to 35 Highview Drive, which closed July 2 at $900,000. The four-bedroom, two-bath single-family home offers 2,484 square feet on 1.13 acres — a well-proportioned package of living space and land at roughly $362 per square foot. Highview Drive earns its name, and a four-bedroom home at just under a million dollars represents the most accessible entry point among the single-family sales in this roundup — though "accessible" is, of course, a relative term in Ridgefield.

Three properties closed on July 1, and they span an extraordinary range — from a two-bedroom condo to a nearly 7,000-square-foot estate.

Starting at the top of the price ladder: 36 Golf Lane sold for $2,135,000, the highest sale price in this entire batch. The four-bedroom, three-bath single-family sits on 1.03 acres and encompasses 4,587 square feet — a substantial home at approximately $465 per square foot, the highest price-per-foot among the single-family sales this week. Golf Lane is one of those Ridgefield addresses that tells its own story: tucked near the Ridgefield Golf Course, it draws buyers who want proximity to the course without sacrificing the privacy of a proper estate lot.

Just a shade behind on price, 85 Norrans Ridge Drive sold for $2,040,000 and is the week's most impressive home by sheer size. At 6,805 square feet — nearly 2,200 more square feet than the Golf Lane property — the four-bedroom, six-bath single-family sprawls across 1.5 acres and clocks in at approximately $300 per square foot, the lowest per-foot price of any single-family in this roundup. Norrans Ridge Drive is one of Ridgefield's established prestige corridors, where homes of this scale and configuration are not uncommon, but where they rarely linger on the market for long.

Rounding out the July 1 closings is 6 Sugar Maple Lane #6, a two-bedroom, two-bath condominium that sold for $485,000. At 1,074 square feet, it is by far the most compact home in this batch — but at roughly $452 per square foot, it is actually the highest price-per-square-foot of any sale in the entire week's roundup, multimillion-dollar estates included. That number reflects the premium buyers are willing to pay for turnkey, right-sized living in a town where the alternative is spending seven figures for a yard.

The week's earliest closing, 15 Still Hollow Place, went to contract on June 30 at $1,525,000. The four-bedroom, five-bath single-family home offers 4,174 square feet on 1.57 acres — the largest lot in this batch — at roughly $365 per square foot. Still Hollow Place has the cadence of a Ridgefield street name that takes itself quite seriously, and a five-bath home on one and a half wooded acres is exactly what the address suggests: generous, private, and built for people who have decided that compromise is someone else's problem.

What this says about the Ridgefield market: Five sales in three days, with four of them topping $900,000 and two clearing $2,000,000, speaks to the sustained strength of Ridgefield's upper tier. The town has long attracted buyers who are priced out of Westchester County to the south but unwilling to sacrifice the quality of schools, streetscape, and social fabric they expect — and this week's transactions suggest that dynamic is very much intact heading into the second half of 2026. Notably, the week's highest price-per-square-foot came not from a sprawling estate but from a two-bedroom condo, a reminder that in Ridgefield, the premium for convenience and location knows no minimum square footage.