Ask five different people what their favorite among Edina’s neighborhoods is, and you’ll probably get five different answers — and they’ll all make a good case. Edina isn’t one big suburb with a single personality. It’s more like a cluster of small towns that happen to share a ZIP code, each with its own architecture, price point, and pace of life. Some streets feel like a stroll through 1928. Others feel like a quiet cul-de-sac built last decade. If you’re house hunting in Edina right now, knowing the difference between, say, Country Club and Parkwood Knolls isn’t trivia — it’s the difference between finding the right home and just finding a home in the right city.
Country Club: Edina’s Most Storied Address
If you’ve spent any time house hunting in the Edina neighborhoods near 50th & France, you’ve probably driven through Country Club without realizing it — until you noticed the sidewalks only run on one side of the street, the trees form a canopy overhead, and every home looks like it was built with the same careful hand. That’s not an accident. Country Club was platted in 1924 by developer Samuel Thorpe as one of the first planned communities in Minnesota, and it earned a spot on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980 for good reason.
Today, the 14-block district is still governed by a historic designation that protects street-facing facades, which means the Tudor and Colonial Revival homes you see today look remarkably close to how they looked decades ago. Buyers love that consistency, and they’re paying for it: the median sale price in Country Club has been hovering around $1.5 million, with homes typically moving in roughly a month. Walkability is a huge draw too — residents can stroll to the Edina Country Club itself (golf, tennis, a pool, and a clubhouse) or over to the boutiques and restaurants at 50th & France without ever getting in a car.
It’s a neighborhood that rewards buyers who value history and don’t mind a little structure — literally, since exterior changes go through a city approval process. For the right family, that trade-off is the whole point.
Morningside: Small-Town Charm, Big-City Access
Just south and west of Country Club, Morningside has its own following — and a noticeably different feel. This is one of the more affordable Edina neighborhoods, with a median sale price closer to $800,000, and it shows in the housing stock: charming 1930s and ’40s bungalows alongside newer custom builds, set on lots that average around a quarter acre. The vibe here is more village than estate. Locals describe it as the spot where Edina’s suburban comfort meets Minneapolis’s urban energy, sandwiched between the shops along Excelsior Boulevard, the boutiques at 50th & France, and the coffee shops near Lake Harriet.
Families gravitate here for the schools — Concord Elementary, South View Middle, and Edina High School all carry strong ratings — and for the walkability. It’s the kind of place where kids bike to the park and parents actually run into neighbors at the coffee shop, not just wave from the driveway. Homes here move fast, often in just over three weeks, which tells you something about demand in this corner of the Edina real estate market.
The Rest of the Map: Parkwood Knolls, Indian Hills, Highlands & More
Country Club and Morningside tend to get the headlines, but they’re far from the whole story. Edina is home to more than a dozen distinct pockets, and each one solves a slightly different problem for buyers:
- Parkwood Knolls — newer construction, larger lots, and a more spacious, landscaped feel for buyers who want room to spread out without leaving Edina.
- Arden Park — tucked along Minnehaha Creek, ideal for buyers who want parks and trails practically in the backyard.
- Indian Hills — quiet, established, and known for some of the most exclusive homes in the city.
- Highlands — a popular family pick with strong school access and a more classic suburban layout.
- White Oaks — walkable to the Edina Country Club and 50th & France, with a mix of established and new builds on larger lots.
The throughline across nearly all of these Edina neighborhoods is school access — Edina Public Schools consistently earn top marks, and that reputation shapes demand block by block, sometimes even street by street.
How to Actually Choose Between Edina Neighborhoods
Here’s the thing nobody tells you when you start researching Edina neighborhoods online: the listing photos all start to look the same after a while, and the descriptions blur together. What actually separates Country Club from Morningside from Parkwood Knolls isn’t just price — it’s daily life. Do you want to walk to dinner, or do you want a three-car garage and a half-acre of yard? Are you drawn to historic character, or would you rather not deal with a certificate-of-appropriateness process before swapping out your front door?
According to market data from Redfin, pricing and pace can swing meaningfully even between neighborhoods that sit half a mile apart, which is exactly why a one-size-fits-all approach to house hunting in Edina rarely works.
This is exactly the kind of decision where a local agent earns their keep — someone who knows not just the listing prices, but which streets in Country Club rarely turn over, or which pocket of Morningside is about to see a wave of new listings. MinnMatch can match you with an Edina-area agent who already knows these neighborhoods block by block, so you’re not starting from scratch. Curious how the matching process works? Here’s how it works — and it’s free for buyers and sellers.

