Two names define Arizona luxury real estate — but they are not the same market. This guide gives you the data, the tradeoffs, and the real-world expert advice you need to pick the right address for your life and your investment.
The question arrives in my email constantly, usually from someone who just landed at PHX with a relocation package, a California equity check, or both: "Ryan, should I buy in Scottsdale or Paradise Valley?" It is the right question. And it does not have one right answer — it has a right answer for you, which depends on your lifestyle priorities, your family structure, your investment philosophy, and what you want Arizona to mean for you. This guide is the most comprehensive comparison I have written on this topic, built from years of working in both markets and advising clients at every price point from $1.5M to $30M+.
Before everything else, understand this: Scottsdale is a city; Paradise Valley is a town. That single structural fact drives nearly every other difference between them.
Scottsdale, incorporated in 1951, was designed to grow. Today it spans 184.2 square miles and is home to 281,000+ residents. It is a full-service city with its own police department, municipal court, fire department, public utilities, parks system, arts infrastructure, convention center, Scottsdale Airport (general aviation), and one of the most recognized tourism brands in America. Scottsdale contains Old Town, Scottsdale Fashion Square, the McDowell Sonoran Preserve (36,400 acres — the largest urban preserve in the United States), a resort corridor that attracts millions of visitors each year, Mayo Clinic Scottsdale, and master-planned communities including DC Ranch and Desert Mountain. It is many things to many people, and that breadth is both its greatest strength and its primary limitation for the ultra-luxury buyer who wants pure residential exclusivity.
Paradise Valley, incorporated in 1961, was created specifically to prevent Scottsdale and Phoenix from annexing the dramatic, mountainous land between them and developing it commercially. The founders of Paradise Valley wanted one thing and one thing only: a quiet, exclusive, single-family residential enclave with large lots, no industry, and no commercial sprawl. They succeeded beyond what most observers would have predicted. More than six decades later, Paradise Valley remains a town of approximately 14,500 residents within 15.3 square miles — less than one-tenth the area of Scottsdale. The town has maintained its residential character with remarkable discipline. There is essentially no commercial zoning in PV except for a small number of resort properties (the original exception that funded the town's tax base). There are no gas stations on every corner. There are no strip malls. There are no apartment buildings. There is no town police department — the Maricopa County Sheriff's Office provides patrol under a contract arrangement.
When Paradise Valley incorporated in 1961, its founders made a calculated exception: resort hotels would be permitted in very limited locations to generate the tax revenue necessary to operate a functioning town without commercial strips. That exception is why Sanctuary Camelback Mountain Resort, The Hermosa Inn, Mountain Shadows, and a handful of others exist within PV’s borders today. The resorts quietly fund the town — and in exchange, PV remains free of the commercial encroachment that defines the suburbs around it. It is a bargain that has worked for 65 years and shows no sign of unraveling.
Paradise Valley occupies a visually dramatic position in the Valley of the Sun. It is bordered approximately by Camelback Road to the south, McDonald and Lincoln Drives to the north, the 56th–68th Street corridor to the west, and Tatum Boulevard to the east. Within those boundaries sit three of the most iconic natural features in all of metro Phoenix:
Camelback Mountain (2,704 feet) defines PV's southern horizon. It is the most-hiked mountain in Arizona, protected permanently as a Maricopa County Park, with both the Echo Canyon Trailhead (on the Phoenix side) and Cholla Trailhead (on the Scottsdale side) accessible from PV. Properties that back to Camelback Mountain or enjoy direct unobstructed views of its iconic profile command premiums of $500,000 to several million dollars above otherwise comparable lots. Because Camelback is a protected county park, its view corridor is as close to permanent as a view can be in the suburban Southwest.
Mummy Mountain rises entirely within Paradise Valley’s borders and is the defining topographic feature of the town’s interior. The mountain’s profile — a reclining figure visible from the south — gave it its name. A small number of high-value homes are built on its slopes and ridgelines. Addresses on or immediately adjacent to Mummy Mountain are considered trophy even within PV’s already exclusive inventory; these properties are rarely listed publicly and often change hands off-market.
Phoenix Mountain Preserve borders PV to the west and northwest, providing an additional undevelopable natural backdrop for homes on PV’s western reaches.
No other municipality in the Phoenix metro — and very few in the country — can claim this simultaneous proximity to three preserved mountain features. It is the foundational physical asset of Paradise Valley real estate.
The PV real estate market is defined above all by scarcity. With only 15.3 square miles of land and 1-acre minimum lot sizes, there are a finite number of properties. Town-wide inventory at any given time is typically 60–120 active listings. Annual sales volume ranges from 400 to 600 transactions. Compare this to Scottsdale’s thousands of annual transactions, and the fundamental dynamic difference becomes clear: PV is an illiquid market, and illiquidity has profound consequences for both buyers and sellers.
At PV’s entry price tier, the buyer is almost always purchasing a 1960s–1980s ranch-style home whose primary value lies in the land beneath it, not the structure above it. The home itself may be livable but is typically dated — original kitchen and bathrooms, single-car or tandem garage, dated mechanical systems. Many buyers at this tier purchase with the explicit intent to scrape (demolish) and rebuild a custom home to their specifications. The lot — its acreage, orientation, topography, and view potential — is the asset. Done correctly, a $1.8M land play can become a $4.5M+ custom finished home, representing meaningful appreciation of both capital and lifestyle.
This tier represents genuine, meaningful participation in Paradise Valley’s residential character. Expect: properly updated or newer-construction homes on 1–2+ acre lots; 3,500–7,000 sqft of living space; resort-quality pools with spa and water features; 3–5 car garages with EV charging; separate casitas for guests or multi-generational family; professional desert landscaping with mature palo verde, saguaro cactus, accent uplighting, and seamless indoor-outdoor flow; mountain views on many (not all) lots; and the full PV prestige package including address recognition and the permanent residential character of the surrounding town.
Properties in this range represent exceptional PV real estate: lots specifically selected for direct Camelback or Mummy Mountain views; homes designed by named Arizona architects (or nationally known firms) with resort-grade amenities including outdoor kitchens, bocce courts, putting greens, separate guest houses, home theaters, wine rooms, fitness centers; 6,000–12,000 sqft of living area; and the kind of sweeping indoor-outdoor connection that Arizona’s climate —300+ sunny days annually — demands. This tier attracts CEOs, professional athletes, entertainment industry principals, and multi-generational wealth from California, Texas, New York, and internationally.
The very top of Paradise Valley’s market encompasses a very small number of properties in any given year. These are typically spec mansions by Arizona’s premier luxury builders (Cullum Homes, Calvis Wyant Luxury Homes, Camelot Homes, Lee Sandifer Custom Homes) targeting ultra-high-net-worth buyers from California, New York, Latin America, and Asia. Features include: 10,000–20,000+ sqft; Camelback or Mummy Mountain-facing orientation as the primary lot selection criterion; architectural signatures recognizable to design-aware buyers; full compound configurations with multiple guest structures, staff quarters, motor courts, and security systems; pool environments that rival boutique resort facilities; interior specifications including European limestone, custom millwork, imported stone and hardware throughout. Days on market at this tier are measured in months, not weeks; the buyer pool is global and thin. If you are selling at this tier, the right agent relationship — one with genuine international reach and a specific buyer network in this bracket — is everything.
Paradise Valley’s hotels and resorts are not incidental — they are the public face of PV and a genuine amenity for residents who use them regularly for dining, spa treatments, private events, and entertaining guests:
These resorts create a high-end hospitality ecosystem that PV residents access without the intrusion of commercial retail. It is the carefully structured tradeoff that has defined PV since its founding: exceptional dining and resort amenities within the borders, delivered through hotel infrastructure that pays the town’s bills while keeping gas stations and strip malls out.
PV’s privacy advantage is structural, not just perception. Because the town has no commercial activity generating foot traffic, the residential streets inside PV have very little through-traffic. Unlike north Scottsdale luxury communities that border retail corridors, a PV homeowner’s daily environment is entirely residential — the neighbors are families and property owners, not hotel guests or shoppers passing through.
For residents who want additional privacy layers beyond PV’s inherent character:
If you plan to build custom or significantly renovate in Paradise Valley, understand the process before you commit to a timeline:
One of the most practically important differences between PV and Scottsdale luxury communities is the utility infrastructure. In Scottsdale’s master-planned communities (DC Ranch, Desert Mountain, Grayhawk), municipal-grade utilities are standard — city water, city sewer, natural gas in many areas, APS or SRP electricity with established infrastructure. In Paradise Valley, the picture is more varied and requires specific due diligence:
These infrastructure items don’t make PV homes worse — they make them different, and buyers who are aware of them can budget and plan accordingly. The SPDS (Seller Property Disclosure Statement, required under ARS §33-422) must disclose known material defects and utility configurations. Review it carefully on any PV property.
Scottsdale’s luxury real estate market is not one market. It is several distinct markets, each with its own character, price range, buyer profile, community infrastructure, and lifestyle delivery. Understanding which Scottsdale context fits your life is nearly as important as the Scottsdale vs. PV decision itself.
DC Ranch is arguably Arizona’s most successful luxury master-planned community. Built on approximately 3,700 acres of Sonoran Desert terrain in the 85255 ZIP code, DC Ranch creates a complete lifestyle ecosystem within a single address:
The DC Ranch lifestyle is fundamentally community-oriented by design. Organized events, maintained trails, a Club, schools within the community radius, and walkable retail — DC Ranch builds social infrastructure into its residential fabric. Buyers who want neighbors who become friends, organized recreational activity, and the comfort of managed community amenities fit DC Ranch extremely well. Buyers who want pure isolation or who bristle at HOA management will find PV a better answer.
Desert Mountain is Arizona’s definitive golf community and the right answer for one specific buyer profile: the serious golfer who wants the finest golf-centric residential environment in the state. Located in north Scottsdale near the Cave Creek corridor:
The Troon corridor of north Scottsdale occupies a middle position — between DC Ranch’s community infrastructure and Desert Mountain’s golf-club dominance. Troon Mountain provides a dramatic desert backdrop:
Grayhawk is one of Scottsdale’s most successful family-oriented master-planned communities — the balanced option for buyers seeking luxury infrastructure, excellent school proximity, and community amenities at a price point accessible below the Silverleaf tier:
Old Town Scottsdale is categorically different from all other luxury options in this guide. It is the only genuinely walkable, urban luxury experience in the Phoenix metro — the answer for buyers who want city energy, cultural programming, and walkable restaurants within a desert luxury context:
Gainey Ranch is established, resort-adjacent, and mid-north Scottsdale — an option for buyers who want mature luxury infrastructure with convenient Scottsdale Road access:
Understanding what the same dollar buys in each market is one of the most useful exercises for buyers comparing PV and Scottsdale. Here is the honest breakdown by budget tier:
Paradise Valley: PV does not have meaningful product below $1.5M. At $1.5M–$2.5M, you are buying an older home on a PV lot — the land is the primary value; the home likely needs significant updating or demolition. Very limited turnkey options exist at this price point.
Scottsdale: Excellent options across multiple communities. In Grayhawk, McDowell Mountain Ranch, or Troon Village, $1.5M–$2.5M buys a newer or recently renovated home of 2,500–4,500 sqft with community amenities. Strong turnkey value; far more inventory to choose from than PV offers.
Paradise Valley: This is PV’s core market — properly updated or newer homes on 1–2 acre lots; 3,500–6,500 sqft; resort pools; genuine mountain view access at the upper end of this range. This tier represents real, meaningful PV living. The address premium is real and the land guarantee is permanent.
Scottsdale: At $2.5M–$5M, you are in DC Ranch, Silverleaf entry, Troon premium zone, or Desert Mountain’s mid-to-upper range. You are getting more square footage per dollar, golf club access options, community infrastructure, and newer construction than PV provides at the same price. The Scottsdale buyer gets more house; the PV buyer gets more land and a more exclusive address.
Paradise Valley: Premium PV with meaningful mountain views. Camelback-view lots, Mummy Mountain proximity, and mountain-backing positions become achievable. Custom homes on 1.5–4+ acres. At $7M+, you are in serious estate territory with compound potential, resort pools, guest casitas, and the full PV experience at its best.
Scottsdale: Silverleaf estate lots; Desert Mountain trophy homes; custom builds in the Pinnacle Peak corridor. At $8M in Silverleaf, you are competing directly with PV’s upper tier in terms of home quality and finish. The distinguishing factors become: (a) address recognition (85253 vs. 85255), (b) view orientation (Camelback/Mummy Mountain vs. McDowell Mountains), and (c) community infrastructure (Silverleaf Club vs. PV’s independent estate isolation).
Paradise Valley: This is PV’s domain. The true trophy properties: Mummy Mountain slope homes; Camelback-backing estates with layered mountain views; multi-acre compound configurations; spec mansions from Arizona’s premier luxury builders. International buyers — particularly from Asia and Latin America — specifically seek PV at this price point because the address has global recognition in UHNW circles.
Scottsdale (Silverleaf Estate): Silverleaf’s estate tier (a specific sub-community) competes at $10M+ with its own custom estate lots, McDowell Mountain views, and Silverleaf Club infrastructure. It is the only Scottsdale product that genuinely competes with PV’s trophy tier, and it does so with the added benefit of a private club lifestyle. PV’s address still edges Silverleaf in pure prestige recognition among globally mobile UHNW buyers, but the gap is narrowing as Silverleaf matures.
Arizona’s property tax system operates differently from most states, and understanding the mechanics matters before committing to either market:
The Town of Paradise Valley maintains an exceptionally low municipal tax rate because the town operates minimal direct services — no police department (MCSO contracted), no sanitation (private contracted), limited municipal staff. The combined rate in PV is typically 10–20% lower per dollar of assessed value than comparable Scottsdale addresses.
Example calculation (approximate, 2026) on a $5M PV home:
Example calculation on a $5M Scottsdale (north) home:
At the $5M price point, the PV tax advantage may be $5,000–$10,000 per year — meaningful but not necessarily decisive relative to the overall investment. At the $15M+ level, the annual tax advantage of PV vs. Scottsdale can approach $20,000–$40,000 per year.
Arizona property tax rates vary by parcel — different school district overlays, special tax districts, bond levies, and community facilities districts (CFDs) can materially affect the effective rate on a specific address. Use the Maricopa County Assessor’s online parcel search at mcassessor.maricopa.gov to get the exact rate schedule and estimated annual taxes for any property you are seriously considering. I pull this data for every client before they make an offer.
Arizona’s Senior Valuation Protection program freezes the Limited Property Value for qualifying primary-residence owners who are 65 or older, have owned their home for at least two years, and meet income thresholds (limits are modest and favor moderate-income seniors, not luxury homeowners — confirm current income limits with the Assessor). For the right buyer profile, this program can represent significant long-term savings as a property appreciates while the tax base is frozen. Worth understanding early in the planning process for buyers in their mid-60s and beyond.
The school situation in Paradise Valley is one of the most commonly misunderstood aspects of buying there — and clarifying it is one of the most important things I can tell any buyer with school-age children.
Paradise Valley Unified School District (PVUSD) does NOT primarily serve the incorporated Town of Paradise Valley. PVUSD is a large K–12 district that primarily covers north-central Phoenix, the Moon Valley area, and portions of unincorporated Maricopa County. The name overlap is a historical coincidence. The geographic connection between the town of Paradise Valley and the school district named Paradise Valley USD is minimal.
Most homes in the incorporated Town of Paradise Valley (the 85253 ZIP code) are actually served by Scottsdale Unified School District (SUSD). A small number of PV addresses near specific geographic boundaries may fall in PVUSD or other jurisdictions — which is exactly why address-specific verification is critical.
Many PV families elect private schooling, and the area surrounding PV has an excellent private school ecosystem that makes this option attractive:
I cannot overstate this: school district boundaries do not follow city limits or ZIP code lines in the Phoenix metro. A home in Paradise Valley, DC Ranch, or anywhere else may feed into a different school than the general neighborhood assumption suggests. Before any purchase where schools matter, verify the exact elementary, middle, and high school assignment for the specific address using the relevant district’s online enrollment tool or by calling the enrollment office directly. I make this call for every client I serve with school-age children.
Many PV buyers are surprised to learn that most of Paradise Valley has no community HOA. Unlike Scottsdale’s master-planned communities where HOA membership is mandatory and dues are automatic, PV properties in the general residential areas are governed entirely by the Town’s own zoning code and building regulations. This means:
There are exceptions: some PV subdivisions established by specific developers — Camelback Hills Estates, Paradise Valley Estates, and a handful of others — do carry HOA CC&Rs. I always verify HOA status and review CC&Rs as standard due diligence for any PV purchase.
Regarding short-term rentals in PV: The Town of Paradise Valley has implemented STR regulations under the framework of ARS §9-500.39. While Arizona state law prevents cities from outright banning STRs, PV has enacted licensing requirements and nuisance regulations that substantially constrain STR activity. Combined with the town’s overall residential-only character, PV is definitively not an STR investment market. It is a primary residence and seasonal luxury residence market.
Most luxury Scottsdale communities have active HOAs — and in many cases, the HOA is a core part of what you are paying for:
When comparing a $4M PV home (likely $0/month HOA) to a $4M DC Ranch home ($400–$600/month HOA plus potential Silverleaf Club dues), the total annual carrying cost difference from HOA fees alone can be $10,000–$40,000 per year — offset by the community amenities those dues fund. For buyers who value the amenities, it is a fair exchange. For buyers who want none of it, PV’s freedom from HOA governance is a genuine attribute.
Scottsdale holds an overwhelming advantage in dining variety. Within a 10-minute drive of most Scottsdale luxury zip codes, you have access to hundreds of restaurants across every cuisine and price point:
Paradise Valley dining is resort-dependent within town limits. PV’s restaurants are resort restaurants — excellent, expensive, intimate, and limited in number. For variety, PV residents drive 5–15 minutes to Scottsdale or Phoenix. For many PV residents, this is not a hardship — they actively want the quiet separation from dining-district activity. But it is a real lifestyle difference.
PV has no retail within its borders. PV residents use Scottsdale Fashion Square and the Biltmore corridor for luxury retail needs — typically a 10–20 minute drive from any PV location.
| Category | Town of Paradise Valley | North Scottsdale (85255/85260/85266) | Scottsdale Silverleaf (Ultra-Luxury) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry Price (House) | ~$1.5M–$2M (land value; dated home) | ~$600K–$900K (communities vary widely) | ~$3M+ (estate lots from $2M+) |
| Typical 3,000 sqft Home | $2.5M–$4.5M | $1.2M–$2.5M | $3.5M–$8M |
| Typical 5,000 sqft Estate | $4M–$12M | $2.5M–$6M | $6M–$20M+ |
| Minimum Lot Size | 1 acre (most residential zones) | 6,000 sqft–1 acre (varies by community) | Varies; estate lots 1–4+ acres |
| HOA Existence | Mostly NO — some subdivisions yes | YES — most communities have mandatory HOA | YES — DC Ranch Master + Silverleaf sub-HOA |
| Typical HOA Dues | $0 (no HOA) or $100–$400/month | $150–$600+/month depending on community | $600–$1,500/month (plus Club dues) |
| Prop. Tax Rate (Combined) | Lower (~$8.50–$10.00/$100 AV) | Slightly higher (~$9.50–$11.50/$100 AV) | Same as N. Scottsdale |
| Police Department | NO — MCSO contracted patrol | YES — Scottsdale PD | YES — Scottsdale PD + community security |
| Primary School District | Scottsdale USD (verify by address) | Scottsdale USD or Cave Creek USD | Scottsdale USD (Pinnacle HS area) |
| Population | ~14,500 | ~100,000 (north Scottsdale sub-area) | ~2,500 (Silverleaf community) |
| Commercial Zoning | NO — resort hotels only | YES — extensive retail, office, medical | NO — residential only within gates |
| Golf Course Access | Nearby (not on-community) | YES — many options; some private | YES — Silverleaf CC (private, Tom Weiskopf) |
| Gated Community Option | Some subdivisions only; not universal | YES — many fully gated options | YES — full guard gate |
| Camelback Mtn. Access | Excellent — within/adjacent to PV | Good — 15–25 min drive | Good — 20–30 min drive |
| McDowell Preserve Access | Good — Phoenix Mtn Preserve closer | Excellent — many community trailheads | Excellent — DC Ranch trail connection |
| STR Viability | Restricted — town regulations limit STRs | Community-dependent; many HOAs prohibit | Prohibited by Silverleaf HOA CC&Rs |
| Mayo Clinic Proximity | ~20–25 min (from central PV) | ~10–20 min (85259 area closest) | ~15–20 min |
| Scottsdale Fashion Square | ~15–20 min | ~10–20 min (varies by location) | ~20 min |
| National Prestige Level | 10 — Arizona’s #1 prestige address | 7–8 (Scottsdale recognized; PV more exclusive) | 9 (Silverleaf emerging global luxury brand) |
| Privacy Rating (1–10) | 9–10 (estate isolation; no commercial) | 6–8 (community feel; some through traffic) | 8–9 (gated; managed; community scale) |
| Dining Within 10 Min. | Resort restaurants (excellent; limited variety) | Hundreds of options; Quarter, Kierland | Market at DC Ranch + Scottsdale Rd corridor |
| Resale Liquidity | Low — thin market; long DOM | High — deep buyer pool; fast transactions | Moderate — small community; longer DOM |
| International Buyer Recognition | Excellent — globally known luxury address | Good — Scottsdale brand recognized | Growing — Silverleaf gaining global profile |
| New Construction Availability | Custom/semi-custom; scrape-rebuild market | Available — community lots; custom builders | Limited estate lots; premium priced |
| Natural Gas Availability | Inconsistent — many homes use propane | Generally available in established communities | Available within DC Ranch infrastructure |
| Municipal Sewer Available | Mixed — many homes on septic | YES — municipal sewer standard | YES — municipal sewer |
| Buyer Profile | Recommended Market | Specific Community | Price Tier | Key Decision Reason | Lifestyle Fit (1–10) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Executive needing prestige address + privacy | Paradise Valley | Central PV; Camelback views | $3M–$8M | PV address = board room credibility; estate isolation; no HOA | 10 |
| Golf fanatic — needs on-site course | Scottsdale | Desert Mountain or DC Ranch/Silverleaf | $1.5M–$10M+ | PV has no on-community golf; Desert Mountain has 6 Nicklaus courses | 9 (Scottsdale) / 4 (PV) |
| Family with 3+ school-age children | Scottsdale | DC Ranch, Grayhawk, or Troon-adjacent | $1.2M–$4M | Community infrastructure, parks, clear school zones, family neighbors | 9 (Scottsdale) / 6 (PV) |
| Remote worker — outdoor access + quiet | Either | PV west side OR Troon North | $2M–$6M | Both deliver; PV gives pure quiet; Troon gives desert trail lifestyle | 9 (both) |
| California transplant — recognized address | Paradise Valley | Central or south PV | $2.5M–$10M | CA wealth circles know PV; equivalent prestige transfer; cash common | 10 (PV) / 8 (Scottsdale) |
| International buyer (Asia / LatAm) | Paradise Valley | Any PV; trophy properties preferred | $5M–$30M+ | PV brand known globally in UHNW circles; scarcity is a feature | 10 (PV) / 7 (Scottsdale) |
| STR investor | Scottsdale (Old Town area) | Old Town or south Scottsdale near events | $400K–$1.5M | PV restricts STRs; Old Town Scottsdale STR demand is strongest in AZ | 2 (PV) / 8 (Old Town Scottsdale) |
| Professional athlete — privacy + compound | Paradise Valley | Larger PV lots; 2+ acres; Mummy Mtn. area | $4M–$20M+ | Many current/former pros in PV; compound configurations; minimal through traffic | 10 (PV) |
| Empty nester — walkability + dining | Scottsdale | Old Town or DC Ranch Market Street area | $800K–$3M | PV has no walkable amenities; Scottsdale’s urban nodes deliver walkable luxury retirement | 9 (Scottsdale) / 4 (PV) |
| Builder / flipper — value-add upside | Paradise Valley (scrape-rebuild) | Mid-PV; under-improved 1970s–1980s homes | $1.5M–$3M buy / $4M–$8M exit | PV’s scrape-rebuild market is active; strong margins if you know the process | 8 (PV scrape) |
| Luxury retiree / snowbird | Either | PV (resort dining); Scottsdale (golf + social) | $2M–$8M | PV for quiet + resort access; Scottsdale for golf + community; both work for 5-month snowbird | 8–9 (both) |
| Medical professional (Mayo proximity) | Scottsdale (north) | 85259 area or DC Ranch | $800K–$3M | Mayo Clinic Scottsdale proximity; HonorHealth Shea nearby; PV is farther | 9 (Scottsdale) / 6 (PV) |
Paradise Valley wins on prestige, isolation, land permanence, privacy, and trophy-tier scarcity value. Scottsdale wins on lifestyle variety, golf, community infrastructure, school access, healthcare proximity, and resale liquidity. The buyers I work with who are happiest in their choice are the ones who were honest with themselves about which attributes actually matter to how they live. Both markets are exceptional — the question is which exceptional matches your life. I have helped clients move from PV to Scottsdale and from Scottsdale to PV. Both decisions were right for those clients. Let me help you figure out which is right for you.
REALTOR® | My Home Group | ADRE License SA643872000 | Top 1% Nationally
Serving Paradise Valley, North Scottsdale, Silverleaf, DC Ranch, Desert Mountain, and all Phoenix metro luxury markets.
Phone: (480) 227-9143 · Email: moxleysellsaz@gmail.com
Paradise Valley is a small, exclusively residential incorporated town of approximately 14,500 residents covering 15.3 square miles. Every home in PV is single-family residential; there are no condos, no apartment buildings, and no attached products within the town borders. PV has 1-acre minimum lot sizes, virtually no commercial zoning (only a handful of resort hotels are the exception to pure residential), no municipal police department (the Maricopa County Sheriff contracts patrol), and the highest median home value of any municipality in Arizona. Entry prices start around $1.5M–$2M for older homes valued primarily for their land; trophy properties reach $50M+.
Scottsdale is a full-service city of 281,000+ residents spanning 184.2 square miles with its own police department, fire service, municipal courts, utilities, parks, arts infrastructure, convention center, and general aviation airport. Scottsdale encompasses Old Town (urban entertainment and walkable luxury), mid-Scottsdale (mixed residential and commercial), north Scottsdale (master-planned luxury communities including DC Ranch, Silverleaf, Grayhawk, and Desert Mountain), and very north Scottsdale’s desert corridor. Scottsdale real estate ranges from $250K condos to $50M+ custom estates, serving buyers at virtually every price point within the luxury spectrum.
Whether PV is worth the premium is genuinely the question that drives most of my buyer consultations in the luxury space, and the honest answer is: it depends on your specific priorities. PV’s premium over Scottsdale (at comparable price tiers) purchases several things that Scottsdale genuinely cannot match: Arizona’s most universally recognized luxury address (known nationally and internationally in wealth circles); guaranteed 1-acre+ minimum lot sizes that are permanently protected by town zoning; the Camelback and Mummy Mountain visual backdrop from within the town itself; maximum estate isolation with no commercial foot traffic in the surrounding environment; and in most cases, the absence of HOA dues and restrictions.
At the $3M–$6M comparison tier, a PV home typically delivers less finished square footage than a comparable Scottsdale property (DC Ranch, Silverleaf, or Troon). A $4M PV home might be 4,000–5,500 sqft on 1.25 acres; a $4M Silverleaf home might be 5,500–7,000 sqft with Silverleaf Club access and a newer build. The Scottsdale buyer gets more house and community infrastructure. The PV buyer gets the address, the land guarantee, and the isolation. For buyers who prioritize prestige, privacy, and land over square footage and amenities — PV is worth every dollar of premium. For buyers who prioritize golf at their doorstep, walkable retail, community social life, or newer construction for the money — Scottsdale likely delivers more value at the same price point.
Paradise Valley property taxes are generally lower than comparable Scottsdale properties, primarily because the Town of PV has an exceptionally low municipal tax rate. PV funds minimal direct municipal services — there is no town police department (MCSO is contracted), no municipal sanitation (private pickup), and limited town staff and infrastructure. The town’s own tax levy is therefore very small relative to a full-service city like Scottsdale. The combined property tax rate in PV (county primary + county secondary + town + school district + any special levies) is typically 10–20% lower per dollar of assessed value than comparable north Scottsdale addresses.
Arizona’s property tax system: Residential primary homes (Class 3) are assessed at 10% of Limited Property Value (LPV). LPV is capped at 5% annual increase for existing owners but resets to approximately full cash value at purchase. So a new buyer at any price sees a tax reset. Approximate annual taxes on a $3M primary residence in PV: $10,000–$18,000. On a $3M Scottsdale home: $12,000–$22,000. On a $5M PV home: $18,000–$30,000. On a $5M Scottsdale home: $22,000–$36,000. These figures are approximate — always verify the specific parcel’s exact rate at mcassessor.maricopa.gov before closing.
This is one of the most consistently misunderstood aspects of purchasing in the Town of Paradise Valley. Despite the name, most homes in the incorporated Town of Paradise Valley (85253 ZIP code) are served by Scottsdale Unified School District (SUSD) — not Paradise Valley Unified School District (PVUSD). PVUSD is a large district that primarily serves north-central Phoenix; the name overlap with the town is a geographic coincidence that has confused buyers for decades.
PV addresses in SUSD typically feed Saguaro High School (central/western PV) or Arcadia High School (southern PV near the Camelback corridor) — both solid SUSD schools with strong reputations. Private school options near PV include Phoenix Country Day School (K–12, independent, highly regarded), Brophy College Prep (Jesuit, co-ed, 9–12, Arizona’s most competitive private preparatory school), and Xavier College Preparatory (all-girls, Catholic, 6–12). For north Scottsdale luxury communities, Basis Scottsdale (nationally top-ranked charter, free, open enrollment lottery), Pinnacle High School (SUSD), and Cave Creek USD schools (Cactus Shadows HS, Cave Creek HS) are the primary options depending on exact location. Always verify the specific school assignment using the exact property address — school boundaries do not follow city limits or ZIP code lines in the Phoenix metro, and the specific assignment for any PV or Scottsdale property must be confirmed directly with the relevant district.
I specialize in both markets and work with buyers across the $1.5M–$30M+ range in PV, DC Ranch, Silverleaf, Desert Mountain, and all north Scottsdale luxury communities. I have access to off-market inventory in both markets and can arrange private tours of available properties. Let’s find the right address for you.
Disclaimer: All prices, tax rates, school assignments, HOA details, and market statistics in this guide are approximate and reflect conditions in mid-2026. Real estate markets change frequently. Verify current prices with a licensed REALTOR®, school assignments with the relevant district, and property taxes with the Maricopa County Assessor’s Office before making any purchase decision. Ryan Moxley is a licensed Arizona REALTOR® (ADRE SA643872000) affiliated with My Home Group. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice.
Whether Paradise Valley’s prestige and mountain backdrop is calling you, or north Scottsdale’s lifestyle infrastructure fits your family, I can help you find the right property. I work both markets daily and have access to off-market listings in PV and all north Scottsdale luxury communities.
(480) 227-9143 — Call Ryan Request Private Luxury Tour