Homes For Sale in Reynolds Mountain, NC Real Estate Market
Median sale price
Find houses for sale in Reynolds Mountain, NC from Allen Tate. We have an office conveniently located in north Asheville on Merrimon Avenue and our real estate agents are experts in the community. In addition to local expertise, all Allen Tate REALTORS® are backed by an outstanding support staff and committed to the highest standards of customer service. Find a home for sale in Reynolds Mountain that’s right for you. Continue browsing this page to see all Reynolds Mountain, NC real estate listings.
Below is a selection of properties in Reynolds Mountain -- find yours today!
Median sale price
Reynolds Mountain offers premiere real estate literally minutes from the cultural richness of downtown Asheville, making it the perfect place to start and finish your search for a luxury home.
The Reynolds Mountain community features lush landscaping, a 16-acre nature preserve, and green space. Many Reynolds Mountain homes have magnificent views, and luxurious finishes impress even the most discriminating. Select your choice of lot/home packages, land for your custom home, condos, and townhomes.
For home mortgage services through Allen Tate, visit our Mortgage Services office in Downtown Asheville, NC.
Reynolds Mountain is located just north of Asheville in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Western North Carolina. As the seat of Buncombe County and the largest city in the region, Asheville offers many amenities within minutes of each of the area’s various neighborhoods, including public, private, and charter schools; an extensive county library system; access to state-of-the-art medical facilities, including Mission Hospital, the largest in the region; and innumerable shopping, entertainment, and dining options. Asheville is also conveniently located near Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Pisgah National Forest, and the Blue Ridge Parkway, a sightseer's and cyclist's haven.
Woodfin: 2 minutes
Grove Park: 9 minutes
Weaverville: 10 minutes
Downtown Asheville: 11 minutes
Biltmore Village: 15 minutes
Biltmore Forest: 18 minutes
Asheville Regional Airport: 21 minutes
Black Mountain: 24 minutes
Asheville is the largest city in Western North Carolina, but surrounding towns and neighborhoods in Buncombe County offer small-town flair and varied amenities. The four-season temperate climate with average snowfall of only 13 inches makes year-round living easy. Average elevation is 2,165 feet above sea level with surrounding mountain elevations of up to 6,685 feet at Mount Mitchell, the highest peak east of the Mississippi River. Because of this broad range of elevations and corresponding climates and plant growth, the area is one of the most biodiverse in the United States and the world.
Tax rates are per $100 of assessed valuation.
Asheville City: $ 0.9679
Asheville CIty and City School: $ 1.0879
Buncombe County: $ 0.5390
Nestled along Highway 25 (Weaverville Highway) between downtown Asheville and Weaverville, NC, Reynolds Mountain offers many opportunities to Live the Life You Choose. Around the corner, residents can shop at a gourmet grocery store, hike the nature trails of Beaver Lake, or sip coffee at one of several local cafes. The area is also just minutes from the Country Club of Asheville and historic Omni Grove Park Inn, offering a variety of amenities including golf, spas, and fine dining.
Asheville has been renowned as a place to retreat and take in natural wonders since the 1800s, when George Vanderbilt built a railway through the area and settled in his Biltmore Estate, the largest private home in North America. Much of downtown, north Asheville, Biltmore Village, and the town of Biltmore Forest exist because of the pre-Great Recession development boom begun by Vanderbilt and continuing through the 1910s and 1920s.
Within walking or biking distance, downtown Asheville is today a booming central business district, exploding with commerce, dining, art, and entertainment. The renovation of old buildings and careful construction of new ones in recent decades represents the delicate balance of tradition and innovation seen throughout Asheville’s many arts and industries.
Outdoors enthusiasts find no shortage of activities in or near north Asheville, whether it’s hiking, biking, and climbing in nearby mountains; paddling and fishing on the French Broad River and local lakes; or golfing at one of the area's renowned golf courses. Asheville is such an outdoors destination that in 2015, SmarterTravel.com named it #5 on their “10 Best Outdoor Towns in America.”