Established + walkable
Eagle’s closest cousin in personality at a more grounded price point.
Active listings
School district
From North Meridian you’re minutes to everything
Downtown Boise
Boise airport
Eagle downtown
Bogus Basin
Brian’s personal take
I grew up in South Meridian. When clients ask me where the most balanced part of the valley is, I tell them North Meridian. It has everything Eagle has (top schools, established feel, walkability in the right pockets) at a more grounded price, and you’re 10 minutes from anywhere that matters.
[Placeholder for Brian’s full personal take.]
Who North Meridian is for
For you if
For you if
For you if
For you if
Consider elsewhere if
You want brand-new construction (try South Meridian or Star). You want acreage (Middleton is the better play). You want urban walkability (try Boise Northend or Downtown).
Subdivisions worth knowing
Living in North Meridian, Idaho isn’t for everyone
North Meridian is for the family that wants new construction, great schools, and everything within a ten-minute drive. If any of that’s a mismatch, these three are where I’d start instead.
If you have the budget to stretch and want quieter streets with more character, Eagle is two miles north and feels like a different world. The commute is nearly identical and the schools are just as strong.
If North Meridian feels too dense and you want more lot size without giving up the new construction quality, Star is growing fast and still has communities where you can get a three-car garage and a real backyard.
If you need to be closer to the I-84 corridor for work or want lower prices with the same school district, South Meridian gives you West Ada schools and better freeway access at a lower entry point.
Proof, not hype
Relocation proof
“Brian had so much info for all the areas and houses we visited. He’s Boise/Idaho born.”
Public client review
Client proof
“Brian did a great job for us… he went the extra mile.”
Public client review
The point
You are not just picking a city. You are picking the daily life, commute, tradeoffs, and neighborhood fit that actually work for your family.
Brian’s relocation approach