Historic Downtown. Top Schools. Competitive Market.
Wayne County's most walkable city—historic downtown, strong schools, and quick access to Ann Arbor and Detroit
$460K
Median Home Price
36,000
Population (City + Township)
Top 10%
Michigan School Ranking
17
Avg Days on Market
Browse active listings filtered specifically for Plymouth — updated in real time from MLS.
Browse Plymouth Homes →Plymouth has a walkable downtown, one of the strongest school districts in Wayne County, and Hines Park trail access. Days on market consistently run below 20.
Old Village has older homes with character and walking distance to Kellogg Park. Plymouth Township offers newer construction on larger lots at slightly lower prices, while keeping the PCCS school district and Hines Park access.
Plymouth's proximity to Ann Arbor (25 minutes on M-14) and Detroit (30 minutes on I-275) makes it viable for buyers commuting in either direction. That dual-corridor access draws a buyer profile that's both financially stable and highly competitive—which is why Plymouth has one of the lowest days-on-market figures of any market I work in.
Plymouth-Canton Community Schools serves 17,000 students across 26 schools, with Plymouth High School serving city residents.
Plymouth High School consistently produces strong college placement numbers and has a competitive academic environment. For buyers comparing Plymouth against Northville or Novi, the school quality is comparable and the community character argument often tips the decision toward Plymouth.
View on GreatSchools →17,000
PCCS students enrolled
26
Schools in district
Top 10%
Michigan school ranking (per MI Dept. of Education)
Plymouth
High School
Plymouth's historic residential core—the most competed-for product in the market
Price Range
$450K – $900K
Character
Historic Walkable
Walk to Downtown
Yes
Old Village homes don't come available often, and when they do, they move in days. The combination of neighborhood character, downtown walkability, and lot sizes that feel generous for an urban neighborhood makes this the most competitive product I see in the Plymouth market. If you're targeting Old Village specifically, you need to be pre-approved, ready to move, and realistic about what offers look like. I can prepare you for that.
What keeps buyers coming back to Plymouth
Plymouth's central town square surrounded by restaurants and shops, hosting the Plymouth Ice Festival every January—one of the largest outdoor ice sculpture events in the country.
Operating since 1941 and still running independent and classic films, the Penn is one of the few surviving single-screen theaters in Michigan.
A 14.5-mile non-motorized trail running through Wayne County's Hines Park, accessible right from Plymouth. The trail connects to the broader regional trail system.
Plymouth's historic residential core—older homes with character and walking distance to Kellogg Park.
Dana Incorporated, a global automotive supplier, is headquartered in Maumee, Ohio but maintains significant Plymouth-area operations. Beyond automotive, Plymouth residents access a broad employment base across Wayne, Oakland, and Washtenaw counties via the I-275, M-14, and I-96 corridors. The 25-minute drive to Ann Arbor and 30 minutes to Detroit gives Plymouth one of the widest employment catchments in southeast Michigan.
Plymouth's downtown economy is driven by local restaurants, boutiques, and professional services rather than a single corporate anchor.


Whether you're buying, selling, or just getting a read on the market—I can give you a straight answer.