Submitted by AloneManagement8650 t3_113gr08 in massachusetts

I am looking for 3bd houses in an excellent (8+ rating) school district in Massachusetts, with good community/neighborhood. I work in Cambridge thus wanted to keep commuting distance under 1hr. Can you suggest few good towns and approx. house price. Thanks!!!

0

Comments

You must log in or register to comment.

Unique-Public-8594 t1_j8q4fqy wrote

Price range for house is a key piece of information you didn’t include.

Please also mention if you have a realtor and are using zillow.

72

oyvey1982 t1_j8q6fas wrote

Not sure if that exists - good luck!

26

RMFouche t1_j8q6pcj wrote

Price range is definitely key, given the school district standards and under 1 hour commute -- cities and towns like Newton, Lexington, Belmont, and Concord are quite expensive.

I grew up in Waltham (the "working class" town abutting Newton, Lexington, etc.) and was able to get an excellent honors level education, but its system does deal with a larger percentage of children with various learning challenges. However, the adults who run the gifted and honors programs make sure to keep academically advanced kids engaged.

12

hoponflop t1_j8qe3uk wrote

Based on your criteria, Melrose is a great spot. I think it was rated one of the top zip codes in the country.

11

Dseltzer1212 t1_j8qve1e wrote

Holliston is the coolest little town in MA. Good schools (our daughter went through French Immersion). Homes go from $350k up to a million. It’s a quiet town with excellent high school sports teams, there’s a real sense of community. It’s everything you’d expect from a small New England town. Until a few years ago there were only two stoplights in the entire town. There are now four lights.

8

himanshuy t1_j8qvw2t wrote

Pretty generic and half baked ask. What have you researched so far? Do you have question about any specific town? What’s your budget? Would you prefer commuting via train?

14

charons-voyage t1_j8r4md7 wrote

If your budget is under $700K and you want “excellent” schools within an hour to Cambridge, you’re in a tough spot. Most public schools in MA are pretty good. Good parents raise good kids. I would look at Quincy. We got our house for $600K in a quiet neighborhood. Our kids are still in daycare but all our neighbors sent their kids to NQHS and they are all in quite successful careers now (engineers, finance, law, etc). I work in biotech and know a few people who went to NQHS.

64

Sprucey26 t1_j8r88vq wrote

“Good parents raise good kids”

Could not agree more. We are in Massachusetts. You will get a great education in pretty much most schools here as long as you have parental support at home.

87

modernhomeowner t1_j8rab93 wrote

This is the tale of my two brother in laws. Same school system, the same activities, everything. One was challenged by his parents, went on to get a master's at MIT. The other one, the parents gave excuses for his laziness, got high daily in college and flunked out. It's not the school, it's the parents who make the kid.

Two kids I went to school with,(I went to a highly rated school) one graduated top 5, spent all his time in the music suite, went to Julliard; still at 38 years old playing gigs for near quarters in Manhattan. Another kid, graduated in the bottom half, didn't go to college, but had spent all his time in the business wing of the high school, started a concrete business at 18, and a real estate business a few years later; if I had to guess he makes more a day than the top 5 kid makes in a month.

I think the real key is to nurture your kid and find a house within budget; being stressed about money isn't good at all. Being able to save in your retirement plan, 529 plans, etc will pay off better than almost any public school compared to another.

29

Al_simmons13 t1_j8rb71h wrote

I had a house in Ashland and loved the area. It has a great school system and I could be in cambridge in 30 minutes except during rush hour. I work 6-2 so it was fine but if I left the city after 4:30 it was an hour commute easy. But that will be the case anywhere if you are traveling at that time.

5

WinsingtonIII t1_j8reo2y wrote

I really wouldn’t pay too much attention to those school rating sites that assign numbers to schools. They tend to be heavily based on standardized test scores, which means they are essentially just a proxy for the wealth of a town.

Remember that MA has the best public schools in the US. Even an “average” or above average school district in MA is quite good by US standards.

The other reality is that even in towns with a big income range (and therefore lower average standardized test scores), the middle and higher income kids still have good outcomes. It’s the lower income kids that unfortunately tend to be more likely to struggle, in large part due to reasons outside of school.

40

Illustrious-Mix9904 t1_j8rf8ay wrote

Budget needs to be double what you have now if you want good schools and a home that doesn't need major work within commuting distance.

12

rakdoc t1_j8rhdy5 wrote

I don’t understand how people talk like this if they’ve lived in Massachusetts for a long time.

21

1000thusername t1_j8rmqck wrote

So you:

  • don’t know where you want to live
  • haven’t done any of the research yourself re: school etc
  • don’t know what houses cost where (an easy search…)
  • what is and isn’t a one hour commute radius

Got it.

I work in Cambridge and live in about what you’re seeking, but the level to which you want everyone to do your basic research for you is grand.

51

PabloX68 t1_j8ro6ng wrote

Your combination of requirements isn't happening at your budget ($700k).

If you as a parent put in the effort, your kid will do fine in a lower rated school system and still get into a good college. You might find something at that price in Tewksbury, Wilmington, Billerica, Chelmsford, Maynard, Marlborough, etc. Avoid Saugus.

27

SeaJay1187 t1_j8rp7rc wrote

These transplants are so delirious lol. I love having the conversation of these make believe towns in Massachusetts with the new coworkers.

16

EtonRd t1_j8rxib6 wrote

Would you also like us to set up appointments for you to view properties in this mythical town that doesn’t exist?

13

bryanhealey t1_j8s8qsl wrote

if budget is no object, Groton is within an hour and has incredible schools (public and private). Concord, too. but both are... well, let's just say your average software engineer would probably be the poor person in town lol

2

BeingFosterRr t1_j8s99am wrote

With that price range you are going to have to go an hour out, maybe Shrewsbury, Boylston, Westborough, Northborough, Grafton

2

LocalSalesRep t1_j8sl18z wrote

Where in Cambridge? If anywhere near porter square, look out west along the Fitchburg line of the commuter rail.

5

g_rich t1_j8sp7yo wrote

Newton would be you're best bet, but that's if it's in your budget (high six figures to start). Other options are Lexington and Wellesley, but they too will be in the high six figures.

3

Foxcecil t1_j8tk88k wrote

It's nice to know millionaires spend their time on reddit just like me.

3

ohnoabigshark t1_j8tpv0h wrote

Acton area might work for you. The commute isn't too bad. Route 2 literally cuts it in half. Might be out of your price range but the schools are great.

1

PurpleTurle711 t1_j8tvp5q wrote

Canton $655k, Weston $2M, Wellesley $1.6M, Hopkinton $700k, Newton $1M…

Good luck.

2

Dramatic-Purpose-103 t1_j8u4110 wrote

I'm in Burlington. For a decent house her budget needs to be $700-800k. That price is a bit of a fixer upper. Even then could be tough.new construction is at $1.5-2 million. We also have major water problems. Something to consider. I am very happy with the schools though.

5

riqk t1_j8udaii wrote

That budget is absolutely fine up to an hour outside of Cambridge, are you kidding? Housing prices are bad, sure, but their radius puts them almost anywhere from Cambridge to New Bedford going south, my guy. Plenty of good places to live with that budget.

Edit- just noticed it said UNDER an hour, so not as big a radius as I thought, but the point still stands

4

Any_Advantage_2449 t1_j8udkvu wrote

Lol please do my research for me I am to lazy to read a spread sheet with school information and the. Type those towns into Redfin.

Lazy lazy people.

1

BeastCoast t1_j8ueb8u wrote

Best school districts sub 1 hour (remember traffic is a thing too) are gonna be starting in the 800s for 3bd that aren’t falling apart. I’m probably even being a little generous on the price.

11

crispinclover t1_j8uiazd wrote

Swampscott- 25 min to North Station and so easily within a 1hr commute unless you're working around Alewife. You can get 3BRs for <650 in some parts of town. Good schools and a new k-5 school going in right now if you have young kids.

2

CatoFriedman t1_j8ujjxz wrote

Sharon has a great school system and they might have a 3bd home in your price range. If you take the commuter rail, you can be at south station in 40 mins.

2

vgraz2k t1_j8wc5q2 wrote

Saw a meme the other day on one of those satire “news” companies (not The Onion). It was like “research shows that Boston is an hour’s drive away from Boston”. Basically making fun of how awful the traffic is for commuters.

5

1000thusername t1_j8wcjpe wrote

Hahah it’s the sad truth too. I used to work over at BU but coming from the north, and the crawl from the Bunker Hill area to the office was longer than the other 25 miles. And the T for that path was even worse

2

Dramatic-Purpose-103 t1_j8xftxw wrote

Currently we get water from 3 sources: 1.) Mill Pond 2.) Vine Brook and 3.) MWRA. Our main sources of water are number one and two. Unfortunately, both number 1 and 2 are contaminated. They have high levels of PFAS's and other chemicals like dioxane. The water in town has been toxic for decades. Recently Massachusetts changed the acceptable level of PFAS'S that can be in a water source (In my opinion it should be zero as any is toxic, but MA allows up to 20 ppt). Burlington along with dozens of other Massachusetts communities were over that new limit. The town has been in process of installing a filter on Mill Pond that will hopefully filter out PFAS's to acceptable levels. Once that is done they will close down the Vine Brook facility. Additionally, they are in the process of building more pipelines to connect to MWRA. Right now we get 1 million gallons a day from MWRA, but I believe with the new pipeline they are hoping for 3 million. The Mill Pond filter supposed to be done in April. I forget when the new pipeline will be done. In the meantime, we have been using bottled water (from a company where we have vetted if they have PFAS and other chemicals in their water) for years for cooking and drinking. We do not consume the tap water (even for cooking). For showers and baths there's nothing we can do about it. Hopefully this new filter helps, but I still probably won't trust the water. I wish we could fully be on MWRA. Unfortunately, this is not a Burlington specific problem. Dozens of other communities in Massachusetts (most towns not on MWRA) have this same problem.

2

cheerocc t1_j8zdkxr wrote

This is 100%. It all starts at the home and if the home fails, there's a high chance it will fail the kids as well. I went through the Chelsea school system, not known for a very good school system at all but we had two very good parents that pushed us to succeed. Long story short, all three of us graduated from the Chelsea school system and all got our degrees from college and now live in Topsfield, Andover and Stoughton (my younger bro is still single so school system for him doesn't matter, unlike my sister and I who have kids).

1