Price Per Square Foot Calculator
Part of Home Buying Calculators
Compare property values quickly by calculating price per square foot. Essential metric for evaluating whether a property is priced fairly relative to the market.
Understanding Price Per Square Foot
Price per square foot is one of the most common metrics in real estate, calculated by dividing a property's price by its total square footage. If a 2,000 square foot house sells for $400,000, the price per square foot is $200 ($400,000 ÷ 2,000 = $200/sq ft). This standardized metric allows easy comparison between properties of different sizes.
Real estate agents, appraisers, and investors use this metric daily to quickly assess value. It provides an apples-to-apples comparison: a 1,500 sq ft home at $180/sq ft costs less than a 2,500 sq ft home at $150/sq ft, but the smaller home is actually more expensive per square foot, suggesting it may be in a better location or have superior finishes.
How to Calculate Price Per Square Foot
The formula is simple: Price Per Square Foot = Property Price ÷ Square Footage
Use the property's asking price (or sale price for closed transactions) and the total finished square footage. For example: $325,000 property with 1,800 sq ft = $180.56 per square foot. Round to the nearest dollar for simplicity.
You can also reverse the calculation to estimate value: If homes in a neighborhood sell for $175/sq ft on average and you're looking at a 2,200 sq ft house, estimated value = 2,200 × $175 = $385,000.
When Price Per Square Foot is Useful
Quick market comparisons: When scanning multiple listings, price per square foot helps identify outliers. If most homes in an area are $150-175/sq ft and you see one at $220/sq ft, it's either in a premium location, completely renovated, or overpriced. Conversely, a property at $110/sq ft might be a bargain or have significant issues.
Appraiser tool: Appraisers use comparable sales (comps) and adjust for differences. If a comp sold for $180/sq ft and your subject property has superior finishes, the appraiser might value yours at $190/sq ft based on that adjustment, multiplied by your square footage.
New construction pricing: Builders often quote prices per square foot for different floor plans and upgrade packages. A base model at $125/sq ft versus a premium package at $145/sq ft helps buyers understand the cost impact of their choices.
Renovation budgeting: Home improvement professionals price work per square foot—flooring at $8/sq ft installed, painting at $3/sq ft, etc. Knowing your home's square footage helps estimate total project costs quickly.
Limitations and Pitfalls
Not all square feet are equal: A 2,000 sq ft penthouse condo in Manhattan commands far more per square foot than a 2,000 sq ft ranch house in rural Iowa. Location drives most of the value, not just the size. Always compare price per square foot within the same market and similar property types.
Smaller homes cost more per square foot: Construction has fixed costs regardless of size—foundation, roof, kitchen, bathrooms. A 1,000 sq ft home might cost $200/sq ft to build while a 3,000 sq ft home costs $140/sq ft because you're spreading fixed costs over more square footage. This is normal, not a sign of overpricing.
Square footage measurement inconsistencies: Different sources measure differently. Some include basements and garages, others don't. Listing square footage might differ from county records or appraisals. These discrepancies can significantly skew price per square foot calculations. Always verify the source and methodology.
Quality and condition ignored: A gut-renovated home and a fixer-upper might both be 1,800 sq ft, but price per square foot will differ dramatically. The metric doesn't account for updates, finishes, mechanical systems, or deferred maintenance. Use it as one data point, not the only factor.
Land value excluded: In areas where land is expensive, two identical 2,000 sq ft houses on different lot sizes will have different price per square foot. The metric doesn't separate land value from structure value, potentially misleading buyers in markets where lot size varies significantly.
Better Comparisons
To use price per square foot effectively, compare properties that are truly similar: same neighborhood or immediately adjacent neighborhoods, built within 10-15 years of each other, similar style and quality, comparable lot sizes, and similar condition and updates.
When analyzing an investment property, also calculate price per bedroom and price per unit (for multifamily). A fourplex might have a high price per square foot but an excellent price per door, making it a strong investment despite appearing expensive on a square foot basis.
Regional Variations
Price per square foot varies enormously by market. As of recent data, San Francisco averages $800-1,200/sq ft, New York City $900-1,500/sq ft, Austin $250-350/sq ft, Phoenix $180-250/sq ft, and Cleveland $80-140/sq ft. These ranges demonstrate why you must compare within your specific market.
Even within a metro area, suburbs can be 30-50% cheaper per square foot than urban cores. Luxury neighborhoods might be 2-3x the price per square foot of working-class areas just miles away. Micro-markets matter more than city-wide averages.
Price Per Square Foot for Investors
Real estate investors use this metric differently than homebuyers. Investors care more about rent per square foot and whether the purchase price per square foot allows profitable renting. A property at $100/sq ft that rents for $1.00/sq ft monthly (1% monthly rent ratio) typically cash flows better than one at $200/sq ft renting for $1.20/sq ft.
Investors also calculate construction and renovation costs per square foot. If you can buy a distressed property at $80/sq ft, invest $40/sq ft in renovations, and end up at $120/sq ft all-in when comparable renovated homes sell for $160/sq ft, you've created $40/sq ft in equity through the rehab.
Using This Calculator
Enter the property price and total square footage to calculate price per square foot instantly. Use this to compare multiple properties you're considering, or to see if a listing is priced in line with recent comparable sales in the area.
Remember to verify the square footage source—use the same measurement method (MLS, county records, or appraisal) for all properties you're comparing. Small measurement differences can create large price per square foot discrepancies that don't reflect actual value differences.
Combine this metric with others like price per bedroom, cap rate (for investors), comparable sales, and neighborhood trends for complete analysis. Price per square foot is a valuable tool but just one piece of the property evaluation puzzle.
Once you've compared properties, check if they fit your budget with the Home Affordability Calculator. Estimate property taxes and closing costs for each option.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I include basement square footage in the calculation?
It depends on whether the basement is finished. Most appraisers exclude unfinished basements but include fully finished, heated, above-grade-quality basement space at 50-75% of above-grade value. The MLS practice in your market matters: in Chicago and Minneapolis finished basements often count, while in California they rarely do. For apples-to-apples comparisons, stick to above-grade square footage only.
Why does a $400/sq ft condo cost less than a $400/sq ft single-family home?
Condos exclude land value. A 1,000 sq ft condo at $400/sq ft is $400,000 with no yard. A 1,000 sq ft house at $400/sq ft on a quarter-acre lot bundles structure plus land. That's why urban condos can show high per-sq-ft prices yet be cheaper than suburban houses overall.
What's a good price per square foot for new construction?
National averages for new builds run $150-200/sq ft for production homes, $200-300/sq ft for semi-custom, and $400+/sq ft for custom luxury. These exclude land, permits, and site work. In high-cost metros like Seattle or Boston, even production builds can hit $300-350/sq ft.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Comparing across different markets: $200/sq ft is a steal in San Francisco but a premium in Cleveland. Always compare within the same ZIP code or sub-market, not across cities.
- Ignoring price per square foot tier penalty: Small homes (under 1,200 sq ft) naturally show 15-25% higher $/sq ft than mid-size homes in the same neighborhood due to fixed kitchen/bath costs. This is normal, not overpricing.
- Using listing square footage uncritically: Agent measurements often differ from appraisal by 5-10%. A 100 sq ft discrepancy on a 1,500 sq ft home shifts $/sq ft by ~7%.
- Forgetting condition adjustments: A renovated kitchen and bath can justify $30-50/sq ft premium over a comparable unrenovated property of identical size.
Quick Reference
| Market Tier | Example Cities | Avg $/sq ft |
|---|---|---|
| Ultra-high cost | San Francisco, Manhattan | $900 - $1,500 |
| High cost | Seattle, Boston, DC | $450 - $700 |
| Above average | Denver, Austin, Miami | $280 - $400 |
| National median | Phoenix, Atlanta, Charlotte | $200 - $280 |
| Affordable | Indianapolis, Memphis, Kansas City | $130 - $190 |
| Low cost | Cleveland, Detroit, Buffalo | $80 - $140 |