The district you buy into affects your monthly payment, your resale pool, your competition level, and what neighborhoods you can actually afford. This guide covers the 9 most relevant St. Louis districts for buyers — from entry-level South County to elite Central Corridor — with honest tradeoffs at every price point.
A lot of buyers approach school districts as a schools question. It is actually a price question, a competition question, and a resale question wrapped into one. The district shapes everything about what buying a house in that location actually means.
Families with school-age children are often the most motivated buyers in the market. When a district is in demand, homes move faster and with more competition. That affects what you have to offer, not just what you pay.
When you go to sell, your buyer pool gets filtered by the same district decision you made. Elite districts like Clayton, Ladue, and Kirkwood hold demand even in slow markets. Value districts can still perform — but the pool is narrower.
Moving from Affton to Lindbergh, or from Mehlville to Kirkwood, is not a small price difference. In some cases it's a $600–$900 monthly payment gap for comparable square footage. That gap is real and it does not show up on Zillow's school badge.
A large district like Mehlville or Parkway can feel like completely different markets depending on the specific neighborhood, high school boundary, and street. Two houses in the same district can be priced $150K apart and attract entirely different buyers.
Boundary disclaimer: School boundaries can vary by exact property address. A ZIP code, neighborhood name, or suburb name does not guarantee school assignment. Always verify assigned schools directly with the district, county records, or your buyer agent before writing an offer. Never rely on a Zillow school badge or MLS field as final confirmation.
All 9 districts covered in this guide, sorted by buyer tier and price range.
| School District | Region | Buyer Tier | Typical Price Range | Best For | Guide |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clayton School District | Central Corridor | Elite | $650K–$1.5M+ | Executives, physicians, prestige and commute combined | Full Guide → |
| Ladue School District | Central Corridor | Elite | $600K–$2M+ | High-budget buyers who want land, privacy, and long-term prestige | Full Guide → |
| Kirkwood School District | Central Corridor / South | Elite | $350K–$900K | Walkability, downtown feel, strong resale, community identity | Full Guide → |
| Webster Groves School District | Central Corridor / South | Elite | $300K–$750K | Buyers who want character, front porches, arts culture, and community | Full Guide → |
| Rockwood School District | West County | Elite | $325K–$950K | Families who want space, trails, larger subdivisions, and West County schools | Full Guide → |
| Parkway School District | West County | Elite | $300K–$800K | Relocation buyers, move-up families, buyers wanting West County flexibility | Full Guide → |
| Lindbergh Schools | South County | Strong | $220K–$500K | Families who want elite school perception without full West County pricing | Full Guide → |
| Mehlville School District | South County | Strong | $175K–$375K | First-time buyers, VA buyers, families who want South County function and flexibility | Full Guide → |
| Affton School District | South County | Value | $140K–$280K | First-time buyers who need an affordable South County entry point | Full Guide → |
Each card covers buyer fit, price positioning, and the neighborhoods buyers actually shop. Click through for the full tradeoff analysis.
Typical range: $140K–$280K
The most affordable South County option covered here. Practical brick ranches, entry-level buyers, and a price point that still leaves room in the budget after closing. Not flashy — but the district is more stable than many buyers expect at this price.
Read full guideTypical range: $175K–$375K
One of the better value plays in South County. A large district with wide price flexibility — Oakville pulls the strongest demand, while Lemay and Concord give buyers a lower-cost way in. The mistake is treating it like one uniform market. It isn't.
Read full guideTypical range: $220K–$500K
Top South County school reputation without the West County price tag. Buyers often come in chasing a dated kitchen but write offers anyway because the district solves the bigger problem. Clean, well-priced homes get multiple offers fast.
Read full guideTypical range: $300K–$750K
Buyers pay for feel, community, and walkable streets as much as for schools. Webster is expensive because buyers are not just buying a house — they are buying the lifestyle around it. If you want the best deal in Webster, you have already missed most of the options.
Read full guideTypical range: $350K–$900K
School reputation, downtown Kirkwood, and resale demand that holds. Buyers who try to negotiate like the home has no audience usually lose. If the price is fair and the street is good, you are rarely the only person who noticed.
Read full guideTypical range: $300K–$800K
A massive district where a buyer in Manchester is having a completely different conversation than a buyer in Town and Country. The Parkway name earns the premium, but buyers who lean on the district name without understanding the specific pocket can overpay significantly.
Read full guideTypical range: $325K–$950K
Bigger homes, bigger lots, trails and parks, and schools buyers trust. The part that catches people is the drive. A house can look perfect on the screen and still not work once you test the school route, the office commute, and Saturday errands.
Read full guideTypical range: $650K–$1.5M+
You are paying for scarcity. Small geography, elite school reputation, central location, and a buyer pool with serious financial positions. Even ordinary homes feel expensive here because the land and district are doing most of the pricing work.
Read full guideTypical range: $600K–$2M+
Old-money St. Louis. Larger lots, estate homes, durable buyer demand. Buyers walk in thinking their budget is enormous and leave recalibrating what enormous means here. Even at high prices, condition and lot still decide whether any specific home makes sense.
Read full guideA $300K buyer and a $700K buyer are not shopping the same version of St. Louis. Here is a plain-language map of what each budget realistically opens.
St. Louis school districts cluster geographically. The region affects commute, lifestyle, and price ceiling as much as the district name itself.
The map will let you click a neighborhood and see which district it falls inside, with direct links to the full buyer guide for that district.
Until then, use the comparison table and district cards above to find the right fit, and contact George to verify the boundary for any specific address before writing an offer.
I've spent 13 years working South County, West County, and the Central Corridor. One conversation can tell you whether the district, the neighborhood, and the house actually align — before you're under contract and it's too late to reconsider.
Call George — 314.435.1087No obligation. No pitch. Just a straight conversation about your situation.