$2 MILLION
The Math That Surprises Everyone

What $2 Million
Buys in JoCo.

The single most common conversation I have with relocating executives. They come in expecting Johnson County to feel like a step down. They leave wondering why they didn't move sooner.

$2M
Budget
5
Markets Compared
4,500
Avg Sq Ft in JoCo
0.5+
Acres in JoCo
2x
vs Denver/Dallas
The Honest Answer

$2M in Johnson County buys a different life.

I do this comparison constantly. Executives flying in from Denver, Dallas, Chicago, the Bay Area, or the East Coast usually arrive with a price-per-square-foot mental model that doesn't survive the first house tour. The math doesn't compute for them — until they're standing in the kitchen.

Here's what $2,000,000 actually buys in each market, based on what's closing right now. These aren't hypotheticals — these are the kinds of homes I'm closing this quarter.

Side-by-Side

$2 million, five different markets.

$2M
Leawood, KS
~4,500 sq ft custom home on 0.5+ acre. Blue Valley schools. Five bedrooms, four-and-a-half baths, three-car garage, finished lower level with bar and theater, gourmet kitchen with walk-in pantry, primary suite with sitting room and island closet, real outdoor living (covered patio, fire feature, professional landscaping). Often in a desirable subdivision like Pavilions of Leawood or near Hallbrook.
$2M
South Overland Park, KS
~5,000+ sq ft on 0.4+ acre. Mills Farm, Wolf Valley, or the Nicklaus corridor. Even more square footage than Leawood for the same money. Blue Valley feeders. Often newer construction with the latest finishes. Larger lots than you'd get in older Leawood neighborhoods. The smart money for executive families who don't need the Leawood address specifically.
$2M
Hallbrook (Leawood)
~3,800–4,200 sq ft custom on premium lot. Gated golf community, country club membership available, custom architecture (not production-built), real privacy. Smaller in square footage than the South OP options but you're paying for the gated lifestyle and the address. Hallbrook deep dive →
$2M
Denver, CO
~2,200–2,800 sq ft on small urban lot in a good neighborhood (Cherry Creek, Wash Park). Half the square footage, much smaller lot, often older construction needing updates. Better mountain views, worse house. The square footage gap with Leawood is real and shocking to most Denver buyers when they see it firsthand.
$2M
Dallas, TX
~3,000–3,500 sq ft on suburban lot in Highland Park, University Park, or Preston Hollow. More square footage than Denver, less than JoCo. No basement (Texas), so usable square footage gap with JoCo is bigger than it looks. Strong schools but property taxes are dramatically higher.
$2M
Chicago, IL (suburbs)
~3,500–4,200 sq ft in Hinsdale, Wilmette, or Naperville. Closer in square footage to JoCo than Denver or Dallas. But property taxes in Illinois are some of the highest in the country — a $2M home in Hinsdale carries $35,000+ in annual property tax. The same $2M home in JoCo runs roughly half that.
$2M
Bay Area, CA
~1,400–1,800 sq ft on a postage stamp lot in a good Peninsula neighborhood, or a starter home in Atherton/Hillsborough. The shock is genuine. California buyers arriving in JoCo regularly tell me they didn't know homes like this existed at this price.
"The square footage gap with the coasts isn't subtle. It's a different life."
Becky Harper · Johnson County Luxury
Beyond Square Footage

The things that aren't on the listing.

Square footage is just the start. Here's what the same $2M delivers in JoCo that doesn't show up on Zillow's price-per-square-foot comparison.

$2M in JoCo · Beyond Square Footage
Lot Size0.5+ acre
Property Tax (Annual)~$18-22K
Income Tax (KS)5.7% top rate
Basements?Yes (full, finished)
Garage3-4 car standard
SchoolsBlue Valley / SME
Commute to Airport25-35 min
PrivacyReal

Property Tax Savings (Annual)

JoCo is the cheaper market. The annual property tax delta — what you'd save moving here from a high-tax metro (Illinois, New Jersey, parts of California) — is often $15,000–$25,000 per year. Over a 10-year hold, that's $150,000–$250,000 you keep instead of writing checks to a county assessor. Most relocating executives don't run that math until they're already here.

Basements Are A Real Thing

You can't get a basement in Dallas, Phoenix, or much of California. You can get one almost everywhere in Johnson County. A finished lower level adds 1,500-2,500 sq ft of livable space to your home without showing up on the official square footage — second living room, home theater, gym, guest suite, wine room. That's a real life upgrade.

The Lot Is The Game

$2M in JoCo routinely gets you half an acre or more, deep setbacks, mature trees, and real backyards. Your kids can have a swing set, you can entertain outdoors, you can put in a real pool. The "yard" you get for $2M in Bay Area or Manhattan-adjacent markets is functionally non-existent.

Privacy Is Built In

Coastal luxury at this price point usually means a beautiful home with someone else's window looking into yours. JoCo at this price point means real privacy — fencing, landscaping, distance. That's a quality-of-life difference you feel every day.

Related

More on the JoCo luxury market.

Common Questions

$2M in JoCo FAQs

The questions relocating executives ask most.

Ask Becky Directly

Yes. The luxury entry point in JoCo is around $750K. $2M puts you in the heart of the luxury market — well above median, in the top tier of executive family inventory. You're competing for the kind of homes most other markets call "estates."

Kansas property tax rates are slightly higher than Missouri's, but both are dramatically lower than Illinois, New Jersey, or Texas. On a $2M JoCo home, you're typically looking at $18-22K annual property tax. The same home in Texas would run $40K+, in Illinois closer to $35K.

Realistic. The square footage and lot size figures are typical mid-market for each comparison area at the $2M price point. You can find outliers — a tiny luxury condo in Leawood for $2M, or a sprawling Texas property for the same number — but the patterns above match what most relocating executives actually see when they shop both markets.

JoCo luxury appreciation has been steady at 6-8% YoY recently. That's calmer than the boom-bust cycles of coastal markets but more consistent. You don't get the 25% in a year that the Bay Area saw in 2021, but you also don't get the 15% drop that followed. For a primary residence, stability is usually the right thing.

$1M is the entry to luxury here. You're looking at well-finished 3,000-4,000 sq ft homes on quarter-to-half-acre lots in good neighborhoods, top schools, and quality construction. Newer Mills Farm or Wolf Valley homes, established Leawood properties needing minor updates, or smaller Hallbrook homes. Still a real upgrade over what $1M buys in most metros.

Want the actual
comparison for your situation?

Generic comparisons are useful for setting expectations. Real ones happen on a call where I look at your current home, your target budget, and exactly what's on the market right now. Let's run it.

Office6850 College Blvd
Overland Park, KS 66211