Thinking About Moving to Kennesaw, GA?
A relocation and lifestyle guide to Kennesaw from Team Haigh Realty — neighborhoods, schools, commute, market data, and an honest take on what life is really like in this Kennesaw State University-anchored Cobb County city. Whether you're moving for KSU, the I-75 commute, or the Town Center area, here's what to know before you commit.
Kennesaw, GA — A University City in Northwest Cobb County
This page is the editorial companion to our standard Kennesaw Overview, Kennesaw Listings, and Kennesaw Market pages. It's written for people who are seriously considering a move to Kennesaw and want the local picture in plain English — from people who actually sell here. If you're relocating from out of state, our broader Relocation Guide for Northwest Metro Atlanta walks you through the rest of the process: timing, mortgage, school zones, and what to expect at the closing table.
Kennesaw sits in northwest Cobb County, roughly 24 miles northwest of downtown Atlanta along the I-75 corridor. The city covers about 9.8 square miles and was originally chartered in 1887 under the name Kennesaw — before that it was known as "Big Shanty," a Civil War-era railroad shanty town that became the staging ground for the Great Locomotive Chase on April 12, 1862. The Cherokee origin name "Ganisahv" translates roughly to "burial ground" or "cemetery," referring to nearby Kennesaw Mountain.1
What makes Kennesaw different from neighboring cities is Kennesaw State University. KSU is the third-largest public university in Georgia by enrollment (~35,000 students), an R2 doctoral research institution, and the single biggest economic and demographic engine in the city. The university campus sits adjacent to the city limits rather than directly inside them, but its gravity shapes the demographic profile, the rental market, the dining scene, and the commute pattern of half the city. The median age in Kennesaw is 35.6 (Census ACS 2024) — meaningfully younger than nearby Acworth's 39.9, almost entirely because of KSU.2
The city's two primary ZIP codes are 30144 (the historic core, downtown Main Street, and most of the older single-family neighborhoods) and 30152 (the newer west-side residential growth toward Burnt Hickory and the Cobb-Paulding line). Two additional ZIPs — 30156 and 30160 — cover unincorporated "Kennesaw, GA" mailing addresses outside the city limits. What we tell buyers: Kennesaw and Acworth share a school district, a highway, and a county, but they don't share a vibe. Kennesaw feels younger, more commercial, more amenity-dense; Acworth feels more residential and lake-centered. Neither is better — they're different answers to different priorities.
"Kennesaw confuses a lot of buyers because of how the geography works. The university is right next door but technically not in the city, the Town Center mall is the retail anchor but it's at the edge of town, and Marietta Country Club — named for the next city over — is in our Kennesaw MLS area. Our advice: don't get too hung up on the city-limits map. Pick the lifestyle and the school zone first; the city name on the mailing label is a smaller decision than people think."
— Campbell & Beth Haigh, Team Haigh Realty
Quick Facts — Kennesaw, GA
| County | Cobb County (with mailing extensions in 30156 and 30160 to unincorporated areas) |
| Population | ~34,605 (U.S. Census Bureau ACS 2024 5-year) |
| Area | 9.8 sq mi (city limits) |
| Zip Codes | 30144 (primary) · 30152 · 30156 · 30160 |
| Avg. Home Value | $399,088 (Zillow Home Value Index, March 2026) |
| School District | Cobb County School District (2nd largest in Georgia) |
| Average Commute | 28.6 minutes (Census ACS 5-year, 2024) |
| Major Routes | I-75 · I-575 · US-41 · GA-92 |
1 Source: Wikipedia / U.S. Census Bureau geography files. 2 Source: City of Kennesaw + Kennesaw State University.
Kennesaw, Georgia — At a Glance
Data compiled by Team Haigh Realty — May 2026
Know Your Kennesaw Neighborhoods
Kennesaw's communities split roughly into three groups: established country-club neighborhoods clustered along the older 30144 corridor, larger master-planned subdivisions on the west side in 30152, and a handful of smaller pockets near the historic downtown and KSU. Below are three of the most asked-about — links to the full Lofty subdivision listing pages are at the bottom of this section.
Legacy Park — Kennesaw's Largest Amenity Community
Legacy Park is one of the largest master-planned communities in Cobb County, with several thousand homes spread across multiple villages, an extensive amenity center, swim and tennis facilities, walking trails, and its own community charter. Construction began in the late 1990s and continued through the 2000s and 2010s, so housing stock ranges from updated traditional builds to newer townhomes and detached homes. Popular with families wanting amenity depth without country-club fees, and with move-up buyers from Acworth or Marietta wanting more for their money.
Pinetree Country Club — Kennesaw's Established Golf Community
Pinetree is the city's classic country-club address — a private golf course community wrapping established 1970s–1990s-era homes on larger lots. The neighborhood has the mature-tree character newer subdivisions can't replicate; many of the homes have been thoroughly renovated, others are still in original condition (read: opportunity for buyers willing to update). Country-club membership is a separate decision from buying in the neighborhood. Best fit for buyers who value golf access, mature landscaping, and an established community feel over new construction.
Marietta Country Club & The Overlook — Gated Luxury
Despite the "Marietta" name, Marietta Country Club and its companion enclave The Overlook at Marietta Country Club sit in the THR Kennesaw MLS area on the city's southwest edge. The community is gated and wrapped around a private 27-hole Tom Fazio-designed course, with custom-built estate homes on larger lots and a full-service clubhouse with golf, tennis, swim, and dining. Architecture leans Southern traditional and European-influenced; lot sizes are generally 0.5 acre and up. The address that goes on top of most buyers' "luxury Kennesaw" lists.
Subdivision-level guides are in development. In the meantime, browse current listings in each community via the links below — these point to the standard Lofty area pages with live MLS inventory.
Types of Homes in Kennesaw, GA
Kennesaw's housing stock is more varied than most northwest Cobb cities — everything from 1970s ranch homes near the historic core to new-construction townhomes near KSU and estate-scale custom builds at Marietta Country Club. The four categories below cover the bulk of what's currently active on the MLS.
Single-Family Traditional
The Kennesaw core — 3 to 4 bedroom traditional and craftsman builds from the late 1990s through 2010s. Concentrated in Legacy Park's interior villages, Hickory Springs, Hamilton Township, Westport, and Summerhour. Typical lot sizes 0.15–0.4 acre. Most are two-story with main-level primary options in newer phases. The mid-band sweet spot for move-up buyers.
Townhomes & Attached
Newer townhome construction along Cobb Parkway / US-41, the Town Center area, and pockets near KSU. Most are 3-bed/2.5-bath with attached garage and small fenced yard. Strong rental demand from KSU's graduate student and young-professional pool keeps this segment competitive — also attracts first-time buyers and downsizers wanting less maintenance.
Move-Up & Country-Club
The bulk of Pinetree Country Club, Legacy Park's larger sections, Lost Creek, and Burnt Hickory Registry fall here. Expect 4–5 bedrooms, finished or stub-out basements, larger lots, and amenity packages of varying depth. Best fit for buyers already in the market who want longer-term space and a stable neighborhood culture.
Estate & Gated Luxury
Marietta Country Club and The Overlook anchor Kennesaw's luxury tier with custom-built estate homes on larger lots inside a gated community. Architecture leans Southern traditional and European-influenced. Inventory in this band is thin; serious buyers should expect to wait for the right property and budget for club initiation if golf membership is part of the plan.
Schools in Kennesaw, GA
Most of Kennesaw falls within the Cobb County School District — the second-largest district in Georgia, with strong AP/honors programs at the high-school level and consistently above-average state-test performance. Several K–5 elementary schools serve the city; high-school zoning splits primarily between North Cobb HS, Kennesaw Mountain HS, and Harrison HS depending on address and ZIP. Always verify the exact school zone for a specific street before making an offer.
| School | Grades | District | Address | Notable |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kennesaw Mountain High School | 9–12 | Cobb County | 1898 Kennesaw Due West Rd NW, Kennesaw | Magnet program for math/science; serves west Kennesaw 30152 and parts of 30144 |
| North Cobb High School | 9–12 | Cobb County | 3400 Hwy 293, Kennesaw | International Studies magnet; also serves portions of east Acworth |
| Harrison High School | 9–12 | Cobb County | 4500 Due West Rd NW, Kennesaw | Largest Kennesaw-area HS; serves southwest 30152 and parts of west Marietta |
| Awtrey Middle School | 6–8 | Cobb County | 3601 Nowlin Rd NW, Kennesaw | Feeds primarily into North Cobb HS |
| Palmer Middle School | 6–8 | Cobb County | 690 N Booth Rd, Kennesaw | Feeds primarily into Kennesaw Mountain HS |
| Big Shanty Elementary | K–5 | Cobb County | 1575 Ben King Rd NW, Kennesaw | Serves the historic core and central Kennesaw |
| Kennesaw Elementary | K–5 | Cobb County | 3155 Jiles Rd NW, Kennesaw | Paired with McCall Primary in Acworth for some zones |
School assignments depend on exact address. Verify boundaries at the Cobb County School District boundary lookup before making a purchase decision. Note: a small number of "Kennesaw, GA" mailing addresses on the city's edges actually attend Cherokee County or Paulding County schools; the lookup tool is the only definitive source.
Where to Eat in Kennesaw, GA
Kennesaw's dining scene splits roughly into three zones: the walkable historic Main Street district near the Big Shanty Museum, the Town Center / Barrett Parkway corridor anchoring the chain and casual-dining options, and the KSU-adjacent strip along Chastain Road that catches both student and faculty traffic. Below are six places we send clients regularly.
Trackside Grill
The Main Street institution next to the railroad tracks — literally. Strong shrimp and grits, a respectable burger program, and patio seating that catches every train rolling through downtown. Reliable for any meal, and a hard-to-beat lunch spot.
Find on Google →Burger 21 Kennesaw
One of the better burger options in the Town Center corridor — expanded menu beyond just burgers (try the ahi tuna or the spicy thai shrimp), full bar, and reliable for a casual weeknight dinner with kids. Convenient if you're already at the mall.
Find on Google →The Garage Door Grill
Local favorite for craft beer, wings, and a casual neighborhood-bar feel. Open garage doors when the weather cooperates make this a go-to summer-evening hang. Strong selection of Georgia craft taps.
Find on Google →Olde Towne Tavern & Grille
Long-running tavern in the Old Town Kennesaw stretch — full menu, sports on the TVs, and one of the few places in the historic core open consistently late. Reliable for a casual meal or a post-game crowd.
Find on Google →Big Pie in the Sky Pizzeria
Known across northwest Atlanta for the namesake 30-inch pie. New York-style by-the-slice during the day, family-sized whole pies at dinner. Cash-friendly, kid-friendly, and a Friday-night staple for a lot of Cobb families.
Find on Google →Burnt Hickory Brewery
Independent Kennesaw-based brewery with a taproom open most weeks. Civil War-themed names, a rotating tap list, and food trucks on event nights. Worth the stop if you appreciate craft beer or want a date-night change of pace.
Visit Website →Listings are independent recommendations — verify hours and menus directly. Restaurant landscape changes; let us know if a favorite has moved or closed.
Shopping & Everyday Essentials in Kennesaw
Kennesaw is the retail anchor of northwest Cobb. Town Center at Cobb sits at the convergence of I-75 and I-575 just over a mile from the city's western edge, drawing shoppers from across Cobb, Cherokee, and Bartow counties. Daily-needs shopping is concentrated along Cobb Parkway / US-41, Barrett Parkway, and the Chastain Road corridor near KSU.
Town Center at Cobb & Surrounding Big-Box Corridor
Town Center at Cobb is the regional indoor mall — Belk, Macy's, Dillard's, JCPenney, plus a full food court and a multiplex movie theater. The surrounding Barrett Parkway / Cobb Place corridor adds Costco, Target, Best Buy, and dozens of restaurants. Not walkable from most Kennesaw neighborhoods, but a quick drive for almost everyone in the city.
Publix at Old Town Kennesaw
The downtown-adjacent Publix that anchors the historic core's grocery needs — full pharmacy, bakery, easy parking. Closest grocery to most 30144 neighborhoods.
North Cobb Pkwy / US-41, KennesawCostco Wholesale
Anchor of the Town Center area — with a full gas station, pharmacy, and one of the busier locations in metro Atlanta. Membership-required but a reason a lot of people pick this side of Cobb.
Cobb Place Blvd, KennesawThe Home Depot & Lowe's
Both major home-improvement chains have full-format stores along Cobb Parkway, within minutes of one another. Useful given Kennesaw's mix of older homes and active renovations.
US-41 / Barrett Pkwy, KennesawWellStar Kennestone Hospital (Marietta)
The closest full-service hospital is WellStar Kennestone in Marietta, ~20 minutes south. Outpatient WellStar facilities and Northside Cherokee facilities also serve Kennesaw addresses.
677 Church St, MariettaTransportation & Commute from Kennesaw
Kennesaw sits at the intersection of I-75, I-575, US-41 (Cobb Parkway), and GA-92. The I-75/I-575 split happens just south of the city, which means Kennesaw residents have direct access to both the main I-75 corridor (south to Atlanta, north to Cartersville and Chattanooga) and the I-575 corridor (north into Cherokee County toward Woodstock, Holly Springs, and Canton). That dual-highway access is a meaningful advantage over neighboring Acworth for commuters.
| Destination | Distance | Drive Time | Route |
|---|---|---|---|
| Downtown Atlanta | ~24 mi | ~35–45 min | I-75 South |
| Hartsfield-Jackson Atl. Airport | ~36 mi | ~45–55 min | I-75 South to I-285 |
| Cumberland / The Battery (Truist Park) | ~12 mi | ~18–25 min | I-75 South |
| Kennesaw State University | 1–3 mi | ~5–10 min | Local roads (varies by neighborhood) |
| Marietta Square | ~9 mi | ~15–22 min | US-41 South |
| Woodstock | ~10 mi | ~17–22 min | I-575 North |
| Acworth | ~6 mi | ~10–15 min | US-41 North |
| Town Center at Cobb | ~2 mi | ~5–10 min | Local roads |
Drive times are approximate off-peak estimates via Google Maps. Peak commute (7-9 AM south, 4-7 PM north) routinely adds 15–30 minutes to the I-75 southbound run, particularly Monday–Thursday. The metro's PEACH Pass-equipped I-75 Northwest Express Lanes can shave time during peak hours; budget for the toll if you're a daily Atlanta commuter. Note: KSU class-change traffic on Chastain Road and Frey Road can add 10–15 minutes to local runs during the academic year.
Recreation & Things to Do in Kennesaw
Kennesaw's recreation centers around two anchors: Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park (one of the most-visited Civil War sites in the country) and the KSU campus event calendar (sports, arts, conferences). Add a strong city park system and a busy slate of festivals, and the activity calendar fills up faster than buyers usually expect.
Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park
2,888 acres of preserved Civil War battlefield with hiking trails, a visitor center, and the summit road to the top of Kennesaw Mountain (1,808 ft). The 1.2-mile mountain hike is the local-favorite morning workout. National Park Service-managed; free admission.
Southern Museum of Civil War & Locomotive History
Smithsonian-affiliated museum on Main Street, home to the General — the locomotive at the center of the 1862 Great Locomotive Chase. Worth a visit for new residents wanting to understand why "Big Shanty" matters to Kennesaw's identity.
Kennesaw State University Athletics & Arts
KSU's full Division I athletic program (Owls football, basketball, baseball, soccer) plus the Bailey Performance Center hosting concerts, theater, and visiting speakers throughout the academic year. Free or low-cost entry to many events.
Swift-Cantrell Park
40-acre city park anchoring the recreation system — multiple ballfields, walking trails, a skate park, and an inclusive playground. The default "where do I take the kids?" answer for most Kennesaw families.
Big Shanty Festival
April's signature event — over 200 arts and crafts booths along Main Street, food vendors, a parade, and 60,000+ attendees from across north Georgia. The kickoff to the city's busy spring/summer event calendar.
Lake Allatoona & Red Top Mountain (Nearby)
Lake Allatoona's marinas and Red Top Mountain State Park (1,950 acres) are both 15–20 minutes north on I-75. Boating, hiking, lakeside camping, and a swimming beach — all close enough to be a normal weekend, not a trip.
Kennesaw Real Estate Market Snapshot
Live Kennesaw market data — current listings, recent sales, days on market, and trend lines — lives on the dedicated Kennesaw Market Insights page. The most recent broad benchmarks: average home value $399,088 (Zillow Home Value Index, March 2026, +0.3% YoY) and median sale price ~$352,000 (Redfin, March 2026, +2.5% YoY). Homes are pending in around 9 days according to Zillow's most recent data — faster than Acworth's typical pace, partly because Kennesaw's lower price points and townhome inventory move quickly. For interpretation specific to your situation — whether to buy first or sell first, what your home would likely sell for in the current window, what the right pricing strategy looks like — reach out for a custom market review.
Data last verified: May 2026. Market conditions, inventory, and school assignments can change. Always confirm current details before making a purchase or sale decision.
Thinking About Kennesaw? Start Here
If you're narrowing in on Kennesaw, the first three pages below cover the rest of the picture — the overview, what's currently for sale, and how the market is moving. The next three are journey-specific: pick the one that matches your situation.
My Honest Take on Kennesaw
What I Tell Buyers Who Ask About Kennesaw
The honest pitch is that Kennesaw is the best-value version of "established Cobb County suburban" — you get the schools, the highway access, and the amenity density of a larger city without the price-per-square-foot of East Cobb or Vinings. Town Center at Cobb keeps almost everything you need within a 10-minute drive. Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park gives you a real piece of nature inside the city limits. KSU keeps the demographics younger and the dining options more diverse than Acworth or Dallas. And the I-75/I-575 split right at the southern edge of the city means you can get north into Cherokee County, south into Atlanta, or east toward Roswell without ever doubling back. For a lot of move-up buyers leaving Marietta or Smyrna, Kennesaw is the obvious next step.
What Kennesaw Doesn't Do Well
Two honest tradeoffs we tell every buyer up front. First, the KSU effect cuts both ways. The university gives Kennesaw its dining scene and event calendar — it also means student-housing pressure on neighborhoods within walking or short-driving distance of campus, more rental turnover than buyers expect, and Chastain Road / Frey Road traffic that gets ugly during class changes. If you're moving with school-age kids, the demographic skew is a non-issue; if you're rightsizing into a quieter retirement, look further west in 30152 or consider Acworth instead. Second, Kennesaw doesn't have a true downtown destination scene. Old Town Kennesaw has Main Street, the Southern Museum, and a handful of restaurants — but it's not Marietta Square or downtown Woodstock. Most "going out" still means a drive to Town Center, the Avenue West Cobb, or Marietta.
Who Kennesaw Is Best For — And Who Should Look Elsewhere
Best for: Move-up buyers from Marietta, Smyrna, or Powder Springs who want more home for the dollar with comparable schools. Families with KSU faculty/staff connections or commute to the university. Country-club seekers in the $650K–$1M+ range looking at Marietta Country Club or Pinetree. Buyers who prioritize highway access (I-75 + I-575) over walkable downtown character. First-time buyers in the $250K–$400K band — townhome and starter-home inventory is deeper here than most northwest Cobb cities.
May not suit: Buyers wanting a walkable downtown with restaurants and shops at their door — Marietta Square, Woodstock's downtown, or Roswell would fit better. Retirees prioritizing quiet residential character over amenity convenience — Acworth, Cartersville, or Holly Springs are calmer alternatives. Daily commuters to East Cobb or Sandy Springs employment hubs — the I-75 south route is workable, but those areas are closer to Marietta or Roswell.
Frequently Asked Questions About Kennesaw
What is it actually like living in Kennesaw?
Kennesaw feels like a mid-sized university suburb with two distinct halves: the older 30144 historic core (Main Street, Big Shanty Museum, Pinetree CC) and the newer 30152 west side (Legacy Park, Hamilton Township, the Marietta Country Club edge). Median age is 35.6 (Census ACS 2024), notably younger than nearby cities, almost entirely because of Kennesaw State University's ~35,000 students. Town Center at Cobb anchors the retail scene; Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park anchors outdoor recreation. The city has a solid event calendar (Big Shanty Festival in April, KSU sports and arts year-round) without being a destination downtown like Marietta Square or Woodstock.
How much does a house cost in Kennesaw right now?
The Zillow Home Value Index puts the average Kennesaw home at $399,088 as of March 2026 (up 0.3% year-over-year), and Redfin's median sale price was ~$352,000 in March 2026 (up 2.5% year-over-year). The actual range is wider: townhomes start around the $240Ks, single-family traditional sits roughly $300K–$475K, country-club move-up homes run $475K–$850K, and estate properties at Marietta Country Club reach $2.5M+. Kennesaw is generally a more accessible price band than Marietta or East Cobb, and homes pend in around 9 days according to Zillow — faster than most northwest Cobb cities. Always pull a custom report for your specific price band; averages mask a lot of variation.
Which neighborhood in Kennesaw is best for families?
It depends on price band and amenity preference. Legacy Park is the most amenity-deep family pick — multiple pools, tennis, trails, several thousand homes across multiple villages. Hamilton Township and Hickory Springs work for families wanting a quieter master-planned feel without country-club fees. Pinetree Country Club appeals to families wanting golf adjacency and mature trees. For the highest-end private amenities and security, Marietta Country Club / The Overlook is the answer. School zoning matters — verify your specific street's elementary, middle, and high school assignment before committing.
How far is Kennesaw from downtown Atlanta?
Downtown Atlanta is ~24 miles southeast via I-75. Off-peak drive time is roughly 35–45 minutes; peak weekday southbound (7–9 AM) routinely runs 50–75+ minutes door-to-door. The PEACH Pass-equipped I-75 Northwest Express Lanes can shave time during peak hours but charge a variable toll. Hartsfield-Jackson Airport is ~36 miles, ~45–55 minutes off-peak. Cumberland/Truist Park is closer (~12 miles, 18–25 min off-peak) and a more realistic daily commute target than downtown. Kennesaw's biggest commute advantage over Acworth: direct access to BOTH I-75 and I-575 (the split is right south of the city), giving you flexibility most northwest Cobb cities don't have.
What school district serves Kennesaw and is it any good?
Most of the city is served by the Cobb County School District — the second-largest district in Georgia and consistently one of the higher-performing large districts in the state. Three high schools serve different parts of Kennesaw: Kennesaw Mountain HS (magnet for math/science, west side), North Cobb HS (International Studies magnet, north/east), and Harrison HS (largest of the three, southwest). Important caveat: a small number of Kennesaw mailing-address parcels on the city's edges actually attend Cherokee County or Paulding County schools instead. Always run the address-specific school-zone lookup before assuming a school.
Is Kennesaw a safe place to live?
Kennesaw's reported crime rates are generally below state and national averages for cities of its size, with property-crime incidents (vehicle break-ins, package theft) being the most common reports. The Kennesaw Police Department is well-staffed and shares a 9-1-1 call center with neighboring Acworth. Like any city of 34,000+ with an adjacent university, conditions vary block by block — areas immediately surrounding KSU experience the typical college-town pattern. We recommend pulling current FBI UCR data and visiting your prospective neighborhood at different times of day before deciding. Not a substitute for due diligence on a specific street.
What are property taxes like in Kennesaw?
Cobb County is consistently among the lower-millage counties in Metro Atlanta, with combined county/school/city millage that translates to a roughly 0.85% effective property tax rate on a typical Kennesaw home (rates change annually with millage adjustments — verify current with the Cobb County Tax Commissioner). On a $400,000 home, that's approximately $3,400/year. Georgia's homestead exemption reduces taxable value if you owner-occupy, and seniors qualify for additional school-tax exemptions starting at age 62. The exact bill depends on your specific tax district, exemptions, and current millage.
Is Kennesaw a good place to buy a home right now?
Honest answer: it depends on your situation more than the market. Kennesaw's market has been moving briskly — modest appreciation (~0.3% YoY per Zillow as of March 2026), homes pending in around 9 days, and a deeper inventory mix than smaller neighboring cities (more townhomes, more entry-level options, more move-up homes, more luxury at Marietta Country Club). Whether now is right for you depends on your interest rate sensitivity, whether you're buying first or selling first, your price band, and how long you plan to hold. We're happy to walk through your specific situation in a no-pressure conversation — that's exactly what the buyer/seller strategy calls are designed for.
About Team Haigh Realty
Team Haigh Realty — Campbell & Beth Haigh
Maximum One Realty Greater Atlanta
Team Haigh Realty is a husband-and-wife team led by Campbell and Beth Haigh. With 360+ homes sold, $104M in sales volume, nearly 300 five-star reviews, and over a decade of full-time experience in Northwest Metro Atlanta, we've built our practice around one idea: clear communication, honest advice, and protecting our clients' interests at every step. You work directly with both of us — no handoffs, no junior agents, no "set it and forget it" listings.
Our focus is Cobb, Paulding, Cherokee, and Bartow counties — including Acworth, Kennesaw, Marietta, Powder Springs, Vinings, Smyrna, Dallas, Hiram, Cartersville, Emerson, Woodstock, Holly Springs, and Canton. Most of our clients are making a real life change — growing families needing more space, empty nesters rightsizing, or out-of-state buyers relocating — not just a real estate move. We pair AI-driven pricing and marketing with deep local knowledge, then guide you through both the financial and emotional sides of the process.
Ready to Talk About Your Move to Kennesaw?
Whether you're relocating from out of state, moving up within Cobb County, or rightsizing into a different community — we help you find the right neighborhood, school zone, and price band, and time the move with the rest of your life. No pressure; just a real conversation about what fits.
Explore Kennesaw & Surrounding Areas
Equal Housing Opportunity. Maximum One Realty Greater Atlanta is committed to compliance with all federal, state, and local fair housing laws. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin in the sale, rental, or financing of housing.
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