Geneva|News|
For $390,000, Which Home Would You Buy?
You could purchase one of three comparably priced homes for around $390,000 in Batavia, Geneva or St. Charles. Which would you choose?

You could purchase one of three comparably priced homes for around $390,000 in Batavia, Geneva or St. Charles. Which would you choose?

You could purchase one of three comparably priced homes for around $275,000 in Batavia, Geneva or St. Charles. Which would you choose?

Find a list of open houses in Geneva on this page every week, from our partners at Zillow.
First in a Series: Geneva businessman and development Joe Stanton says he'd love to see a restaurant return to the iconic riverfront property, but a more likely scenario would be high-density riverfront living.
Every week, Patch profiles a luxury home currently for sale in the Tri-Cities.
Find homes for sale in Geneva on this page every week, from our partners at Zillow!
Every week, Patch profiles a luxury home currently for sale in the Tri-Cities.
Crain's Chicago Business reports 24.1 percent of Geneva homeowners own their homes outright.
Every week, Patch profiles a luxury home currently for sale in the Tri-Cities.
See what's been sold—and for how much—around your neighborhood, and get an idea of what your home might sell for if you decided to put it on the market.
See what's selling around Batavia, Geneva and St. Charles.
Median sale prices continue to drop year-over-year, but at least one expert is predicting that sales volume will continue to rise dramatically in 2013.
Share your memories of the store that's served Geneva for more than 87 years.
Spokesman says new investors have been looking at the property.
Sale comes amid continued reports of improvements in the St. Charles housing market.
While the price of homes sold in Batavia and St. Charles went up for the month of October, Geneva's median sale price dropped almost 24 percent from a year ago.
Geneva's real estate boomed in September as the rest of the Chicago area saw a bump in year-over-year comparisons.
But the bad news is that distressed homes are accounting for 40 percent of sales.