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Ankeny vs. Johnston, Iowa — Which Suburb Is the Right Fit for You?

May 26, 2026 · Jackson Krile

This is one of the most common questions I get from buyers searching the Des Moines metro: "Should we be looking in Ankeny or Johnston?"

Both are top-tier suburbs. Both have excellent school districts. Both attract families and professionals priced out of the urban core. But they're meaningfully different communities — and the right answer depends on what you actually need, not which one ranks higher on a generic "best places to live" list. I work both markets regularly. Here's the honest breakdown.

The Numbers — Where Things Stand in 2026

Ankeny's median sale price came in around $351,000 in March, with median days-on-market around 102 days. Johnston came in around $383,000 with DOM dropping dramatically — from 126 days a year ago to just 29 in March.

The price gap has narrowed considerably. Johnston used to feel like a $50,000+ premium over comparable Ankeny homes; that premium is now closer to $30,000 on similar properties. If you've been watching Johnston from the sidelines waiting for it to get more accessible, this is the closest it's been in two years.

School Districts — Both Excellent, Different Character

Ankeny Community School District and Johnston Community School District both consistently rank among the top in Iowa. The difference isn't really quality. It's character.

Johnston has slightly more diverse programming, larger class sizes, and a more suburban-metro feel — partly because the district has been more established for longer. Ankeny has seen rapid growth and significant investment, with newer facilities in many cases and a younger overall demographic.

For most families either district is a win. The distinction matters more if you have specific programs or extracurriculars in mind — performing arts, specific sports, advanced STEM tracks. Do your homework on those specifics rather than relying on a generic ranking number.

Location and Commute Patterns

This is where the choice often gets made — and it's worth thinking through honestly.

Ankeny sits north of Des Moines along I-35, making it the stronger choice if you commute downtown, work in the medical corridor, or head north toward Ames. The Prairie Trail area has the best interstate access.

Johnston sits northwest of Des Moines with direct access to I-35/80 and the entire western metro employment corridor. If you work in West Des Moines, Waukee, Grimes, or the western office parks, Johnston wins on commute time decisively — often 15–20 minutes per direction.

Drive both commutes during your actual rush hour windows before deciding. Google Maps optimistic estimates lie.

Community Feel

Ankeny feels like a city building quickly. Newer developments, a commercial strip on the north end, more chain retail, restaurants opening regularly, and a lot of families who moved there within the last five years. That's not a criticism — it means amenities have kept pace with population growth.

Johnston feels more established. The tree canopy is older, lots tend to be larger in the established neighborhoods, and there's more separation between residential and commercial areas. It has the feel of a suburb that's been there longer, because it has.

Neither vibe is better. Some buyers love the energy of a growing community; others want the established feel. Know which you are before you tour.

Housing Stock and Inventory

Ankeny has meaningfully more new construction inventory, especially in subdivisions like Otter Creek, parts of Prairie Trail, and the northern developments. If you're open to new builds in the $325K–$425K range, Ankeny has more options.

Johnston has more established mid-century and 1990s–2000s housing stock. New construction exists but in smaller pockets. If you want a home with a mature yard and an established neighborhood, Johnston usually delivers that better.

Bottom Line — Three Questions That Decide It

If you can answer these honestly, the right choice usually becomes obvious:

1. Where do you actually commute, in your actual rush hour?
2. Do you prefer a growing, newer community or an established, settled one?
3. Are you targeting new construction or established housing stock?

Ankeny wins on price, new inventory, and growth energy. Johnston wins on commute (if you're west-metro), established feel, and tree canopy. Both win on schools.

Want me to walk specific neighborhoods in either market with you? That's where the real differences show up — and it's the conversation I have with every buyer choosing between these two before they commit to a search area.


Jackson Krile, REALTOR with the Flanders Team at RE/MAX Real Estate Center in Central Iowa
"My husband and I just bought our first house, and Jackson and his team were the absolute best to work with."
— First-time buyer client (via Instagram @househackjack_)
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Jackson Krile
Flanders Team at RE/MAX Real Estate Center · Central Iowa REALTOR®

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