Cleveland's housing market is expected to be one of the more active markets in the country in 2026. But the reason it's gaining attention isn't speculation or rapid price growth. It's something more structural: buyers are re-evaluating where it actually makes sense to live, and Cleveland is emerging as a market that aligns with those priorities.
After several years of volatility, the U.S. housing market is entering a period of recalibration. Affordability, long-term risk, and day-to-day livability are carrying more weight in housing decisions than they did during the pandemic boom. In that environment, Cleveland isn't breaking out suddenly — it's being chosen deliberately.
The beauty of Cleveland is that it has always made room for reinvention without abandoning its roots. That shows up in how neighborhoods don't all evolve at the same pace here. Reinvestment tends to arrive in layers, and older spaces are more likely to be reworked than replaced outright.
Over time, the institutions that last in Cleveland tend to follow that same rhythm, shaped by their surroundings and sustained by the people who keep showing up for them. That kind of growth shows up not just in long-standing businesses and organizations, but in the cultural events that continue to find their place in the city.
Since its launch in 2010, Brite Winter has grown into one of those events, respondingto Cleveland as it changes while staying true to the spirit that shaped its earliest years. As it expanded, the festival moved through the city to meet practical needs...
In Cleveland, the projects that matter most rarely arrive all at once. They take time. They settle in. They change as people start to use them. The Red Line Greenway fits that pattern. It feels like a place people are still getting to know and use in different ways.
Since opening in 2021, the Greenway has offered a two-mile, off-road path running alongside the RTA Red Line. It connects neighborhoods from the Michael J. Zone Recreation Center to the Centennial Lake Link Trail, following a former rail corridor that many people passed by for years without a second thought. Today, it gives people a safer place to walk, bike, commute, or just get outside.
What becomes clear pretty quickly is that the Greenway isn't something you understand all at once. You experience it in pieces. You notice which entrances feel obvious and which ones don't. You feel where the pat...
Every city has its landmarks. Cleveland's strongest ones don't always stand on corners — they live in its culture.
As a real estate agency, we think a lot about landmarks — the buildings, streets, and spaces that define a city.
But Cleveland's strongest landmarks don't always stand on corners. They don't necessarily have marble facades or shiny signage. They live in its culture — built by people who care enough to keep showing up.
For nearly fifty years, WCSB was one of those landmarks. A small, volunteer-run college radio station with a modest budget, a loyal community, and an enormous heart, it gave this city a voice. They filled the airwaves with sound, language, and ideas — connecting neighborhoods through music and meaning...

Establishing an easily sustainable routine can be an effective strategy when it comes to losing weight. While many people avoid dining out while dieting, our real estate agents embrace it. Cleveland has several excellent restaurants that make it easy to create a healthy eating routine without having to cook every night. Whether you're trying to lose weight or count macronutrients, here are some of the top health-focused eateries around town.