Old Town La Quinta
Walkable, mixed-use, the closest thing La Quinta has to a downtown.
What Old Town La Quinta actually is.
Old Town is a pedestrianized few blocks of restaurants, galleries, and small retail along Calle Estado, with residential mixed in around the edges. Homes here are a mix of historic 1930s–1950s adobe-style, mid-century, and infill new construction. Most of the pre-Eisenhower-Era homes in La Quinta are within a half-mile of here.
Residential blocks immediately surrounding the Old Town pedestrian core. Some condo product (Embassy Suites adjacent) and townhomes on the periphery.
What you pay every month.
HOA dues here typically run $$0–$$420/mo. Most properties have no HOA. Townhome and condo product carries fees in the $200–$420 range. No clubs.
A normal day in Old Town La Quinta.
Walk to the Saturday farmer's market. Walk to dinner. Walk to live music at Stuft Pizza or Solano's. The most genuinely walkable address in La Quinta, and the only one where most residents do without a daily car trip.
What we tell our buyers.
Inventory is thin and idiosyncratic — every home is different. The historic adobe stock commands a strong premium when properly restored. New-construction infill trades at standard La Quinta $/sqft.
If you're shopping Old Town La Quinta from out of state, ask us for the current sub-area breakdown — pricing within the community varies more than the headline median suggests.