Aspen, Sedona, Santa Fe, Napa, Nantucket, Palm Beach.....and other places only rich people live in (condos, neighborhood)
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Pinehurst is surrounded by a lot of typical rural southern country, and itself, like most "top end" communities in the Carolinas, is just middle- to upper middle class, and I don't see any million+ homes currently on the market there, and its Cadillac dealership is shared with Chevy. Even Hilton Head, while more upscale, has more six figure than seven figure homes on the market (especially away from the immediate oceanfront), and I don't consider sub-million homes to be upper class/rich. The Carolinas aren't really known for true upper class areas on a national average and the luxury tends to be isolated to tiny areas, sometimes just a single home itself. I do agree that Greenwich does attract the super-rich, including some billionaires and celebrities.
For those who said Scottsdale, remember its a large place, and there's middle-class neighborhoods/pockets mixed in, even in that section near the 5th Avenue Shops & Boutiques.
I think Telluride takes the cake here, at least as a key example of what you are asking. Because of the geography and topography, there is no room to build, service industry workers have to drive in across mountains to get to work, and tiny condos are in the seven figure range. It's also so tiny, it's definitely the kind of place where at dinner the table next to yours may be billionaires and CEOs of major corporations and that's just the norm.
Santa Fe does have a high concentration of wealth but it's certainly not exclusively wealthy by any stretch of the imagination. There are definitely middle class and lower income areas as well.
For any of these locales, there are some service industry folks that definitely aren't rich. Anyway I'd say that most all Colorado mountain towns fit the bill- the most notable being Aspen, Steamboat Springs, Crested Butte, and Telluride. They're awesome little places with very little affordable housing inventory. Anyway, it's all relative- most all of the places on the list look exclusive- but after living in the Roaring Fork Valley of CO, some of the places like Santa Fe and even Palm Beach actually look somewhat affordable to me, which I never would have imagined. Yes, there are plenty of very wealthy people in those cities, but there is a much bigger population (possible job opportunities) and a higher amount of housing available.
That should read “Colorado RESORT towns”. There are mountain towns that aren’t resorts. I am not going to name any of them, because the state doesn’t need more towns consisting mainly of second or third or fourth or fifth McMansions.
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