Living in Wheaton: Schools, Neighborhoods, Taxes & Home Prices

Chicago Estates Co · Wheaton Buyer Command Center

Living in Wheaton: The Buyer’s Guide to Schools, Neighborhoods, Taxes & Home Prices

Wheaton is the DuPage county seat — a big, leafy town that delivers two A+ high schools, a charming historic downtown, and genuine space for the money. It’s one of the better value plays in the western suburbs: more house, a tax rate below higher-rate neighbors, and a single-family median around $560K. The honest trade is the commute, since Wheaton sits farther west. Start here before you tour.

6 in-depth local guides1 goal: where you should actually look

Wheaton at a Glance

The headline numbers — and the catch behind each one

~$560K
Single-family median
The all-homes figure (~$435K) is lower because it blends in condos and townhomes.
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Two A+ high schools
Wheaton North or Warrenville South
CUSD 200 (Niche #18 in IL) runs both; your address decides which campus.
Read the guide ›
~2.0%
Effective property tax (DuPage)
Around the DuPage average — and below higher-rate Glen Ellyn (~2.38%).
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~45–60 min
UP-West to Ogilvie
Two stations; farther west than Elmhurst/Glen Ellyn, and it ends at Ogilvie, not Union.
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The Wheaton Fit Finder

Find your best Wheaton area in 6 questions

Most buyers start with “What should I know about Wheaton?” The better question is where in Wheaton should I actually be looking? Answer six quick questions and we’ll point you to the two or three areas that fit your budget, schools, commute and lifestyle.

Answer all six to see your matches

Your best-fit Wheaton areas

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Schools

The school question, decoded

Wheaton is served by one strong unit district, CUSD 200 (Niche #18 in Illinois), with two A+ high schools — so families aren’t funneled into a single campus. Wheaton North serves the north side; Wheaton Warrenville South serves the south and Warrenville. Both are excellent; your address decides which. The full guide goes deeper.

Side of townHigh schoolNiche rank (approx.)
North (Monroe/Franklin feeders)Wheaton North (A+)~#31 in Illinois
South + Warrenville (Edison/Hubble)Wheaton Warrenville South (A+)~#39 in Illinois
Read the full schools guide

The Wheaton North vs. Warrenville South line runs by parcel and middle-school feeder; always confirm the exact assignment for a specific address with CUSD 200 before you offer.

Price Tier Explorer

What your budget buys in Wheaton

Pick a range to see the likely home type, areas, strengths and tradeoffs — then request current matching homes.

Under $500K

Likely home typeTownhomes, condos, and smaller or older single-family homes.
Likely areasBriarcliffe, Danada-area townhomes, outer pockets.
StrengthsThe attainable way into Wheaton and CUSD 200’s two A+ high schools.
TradeoffsDetached single-family in the core runs higher; condition and age vary.

$500K–$700K

Likely home typeEntry single-family — older or mid-century three-bedroom homes.
Likely areasOuter north and south sides, near Briarcliffe.
StrengthsA real family house in a top DuPage district at an attainable price.
TradeoffsUpdated homes near downtown cost more.

$700K–$900K

Likely home typeThe single-family core — classic three- and four-bedroom family homes.
Likely areasEstablished north- and south-side streets.
StrengthsWhere most families land — space and two A+ high schools for the money.
TradeoffsA mix of original and updated; verify which high school it feeds.

$900K–$1.2M

Likely home typeLarger or updated homes, and newer east-side construction.
Likely areasDanada, Arrowhead, better-located streets.
StrengthsMore space or newer build, still below Hinsdale/Naperville’s top pockets.
TradeoffsHistoric downtown homes can run higher for the walkability.

$1.2M–$1.5M

Likely home typeThe historic homes near downtown and the larger east-side homes.
Likely areasWheaton College area, premium Danada/Arrowhead.
StrengthsCharacter and walkability, or real size on the east side.
TradeoffsThe very top homes are limited at this size in Wheaton.

$1.5M+

Likely home typeThe top of the Wheaton market — the largest and most distinctive homes.
Likely areasPrime downtown/college blocks, the best east-side streets.
StrengthsSize, location, or historic character at the town’s high end.
TradeoffsA smaller pool of homes at this level; selection varies.

Property Tax Estimator

Estimate your Wheaton property tax

A quick, conservative estimate — not tax advice. For an exact figure, we’ll pull the specific parcel.

Estimate only. Wheaton’s effective rate runs ~2%, around the DuPage average and below higher-rate towns like Glen Ellyn. A median-priced home commonly runs ~$7,600-$8,900. Actual taxes depend on the parcel and exemptions. Not tax advice.

Try the home value tool

Commute Snapshot

Wheaton to Chicago commute snapshot

Wheaton has two UP-West Metra stations, including one in the walkable downtown. Two honest details follow — the terminal and the distance.

In the core

Wheaton Station (downtown)

Right in the walkable downtown, among the shops, restaurants, and the summer French Market — walk-to-train living for nearby homes.

West side

College Avenue Station

A second station near Wheaton College, convenient for the west side. Both stations are Zone 4; the line ends at Ogilvie, not Union, in ~45-60 minutes.

Read the full commute guide

FAQ

Wheaton buyer questions, answered

For families who want space and schools, it’s one of the best values in the western suburbs — two A+ high schools (CUSD 200), a walkable historic downtown, big parks like Cantigny and the Prairie Path, and genuine room, at a single-family median around $560K. The honest trade is the commute, since Wheaton sits farther west.

Two, both A+ rated: Wheaton North (around #31 in Illinois), serving the north side, and Wheaton Warrenville South (around #39), serving the south side and Warrenville. Your address determines which one a home feeds — we’ll help you confirm it.

A typical single-family home runs around $550,000–$580,000 in 2026. The all-homes median is lower (~$435K) because it blends in condos and townhomes. It’s strong value for two A+ high schools and the space you get.

They’re around the DuPage average, ~2% effective — and notably below higher-rate neighbors like Glen Ellyn (~2.38%). A median-priced home commonly runs $7,600-$8,900 a year. File your homeowner exemption, and use the Improvement exemption if you renovate.

About 45 to 60 minutes to Ogilvie (not Union Station) on the UP-West line, depending on express vs. local. Wheaton has two stations (downtown and College Avenue) and sits farther west than Elmhurst or Glen Ellyn, so plan on the longer end.

On price and taxes, often yes — Wheaton’s tax rate (~2%) is below Glen Ellyn’s (~2.38%) and you tend to get more space for the money. Glen Ellyn counters with a more walkable downtown and a slightly shorter commute. It comes down to walkability-and-commute vs. space-and-taxes.

Your Smarter Starting Point

Not sure which part of Wheaton fits you?

Tell us your budget, school preference, commute needs and home style. We’ll send you the two or three Wheaton areas that actually make sense — before you spend weekends touring the wrong homes.

  • The areas that fit your budget and schools
  • The real property-tax picture for your range
  • The commute that suits your schedule
  • Current listings that match — curated, not spam

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