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Just checked out the latest data on America's wealthiest neighborhoods and honestly, some of the numbers are pretty wild. Scarsdale in New York is still sitting at the top with households averaging over $600K in income, but what really caught my attention is how the richest neighborhood in america landscape is shifting. California's dominance is insane—17 suburbs in the top 50 now, and the home values there are absolutely bonkers. Los Altos is hitting $4.5M average, and Alamo just cracked the top 5 even though it wasn't even ranked last year.
Texas is making serious moves too. West University Place, University Park, and Southlake are all in the top 10, which is interesting because Southlake jumped from 13th last year. Meanwhile, the richest neighborhood in america conversation is getting more interesting because you're seeing wealth spread across different regions—Florida's got Palm Beach and Pinecrest holding strong, and Boston suburbs like Wellesley and Lexington are consistently wealthy even if the home values aren't as extreme as California's.
What's wild is the income-to-home-value ratio. Some of these suburbs have household incomes around $300K but homes worth $1-2M, while California suburbs with similar incomes have homes worth double that. If you're looking at where actual wealth is concentrated in America's richest neighborhoods, it's definitely a mix of the Northeast for old money, California for tech money, and Texas for that energy sector wealth. Pretty clear pattern if you're paying attention to the market.