Sehome, Bellingham WA — Neighborhood Guide & Homes for Sale (2026)

Mount Baker on the horizon — the local backdrop.

BELLINGHAM · NEIGHBORHOOD GUIDE

Sehome.

By Genaro Shaffer, Bellwether Real Estate — Updated May 2026

Sehome is the rare Bellingham neighborhood that gives you walkability + WWU adjacency + downtown access + actual yards — all at mid-tier pricing. If Fairhaven is the premium walkable district and Edgemoor is the establishment residential, Sehome is the working-professional + WWU-adjacent + bike-to-downtown sweet spot.

After 11 years of showings, this is the honest guide.

The 60-second answer

Sehome sits on the hillside between downtown Bellingham and WWU — walkable to both, with mid-tier pricing ($600K–$900K median), real yards on most lots, mature trees, and Sehome Hill Arboretum trails out the back door for several streets. Best for working professionals + WWU faculty/staff + first-home buyers + bike-to-downtown commuters. Worst for buyers needing big yards (lots are urban-sized), suburban-level neighbor density, or new construction.

If that fits — let’s look. The deeper guide is below.

What Sehome actually feels like

lib-trail
Forested trails are minutes from the neighborhood.

Sehome is a hillside neighborhood layered between Bellingham’s downtown core and the WWU campus. The streets climb in tiers — flat sections then a hill, flat then hill — with views opening up on the upper streets toward Bellingham Bay. The architectural mix is dense: Craftsman bungalows, mid-century ranches, post-1980 infill, the occasional newer modern build.

The defining feature is dual walkability — most Sehome residents can walk to downtown (10-25 min depending on home) AND walk to WWU campus (15-25 min). That’s rare. Most Bellingham neighborhoods give you one or the other; Sehome gives you both, plus bike access to Galbraith Mountain trails via the south side.

The buyer mix is correspondingly diverse: WWU faculty + grad students, younger professionals, first-home buyers stepping up from Roosevelt or Happy Valley, downsizers from Edgemoor wanting walkability without the Fairhaven premium.

The market in 2026

lib-leafy-street
Tree-lined residential streets define the area.
  • Median home price: $600K–$900K
  • Entry: starter homes around $550K
  • Upper tier: view homes + larger Craftsmans reach $1.1M
  • Lot sizes: typically 4,000-7,500 sq ft urban
  • Days on market: shorter than Bellingham average — Sehome moves fast
  • Sale-to-list: 100-105% in competitive markets
  • Inventory pattern: tighter than Birchwood or Cordata; consistent demand

For point-in-time medians: market report.

Who I’d send to Sehome

fairhaven-bayview
Bellingham Bay and the islands are close by.

Buyers who fit:

  • WWU faculty / staff / grad students wanting walking distance to campus
  • Working professionals who walk or bike to downtown
  • First-home buyers stepping up to ownership with a real yard
  • Downsizers wanting walkability without Fairhaven pricing
  • Investors targeting WWU-adjacent rental income
  • Mixed-life buyers (some daily walking, some weekend driving)

Who I’d send elsewhere:

  • Big-yard families → Sunnyland, Birchwood, Cordata, Barkley
  • Walkable luxury → Fairhaven
  • View + quiet + large lot priorities → Edgemoor, South Hill
  • New construction → Cordata, Barkley
  • Strictly suburban + family-density → Cordata, Barkley

The lifestyle in detail

lib-garden
Mature gardens and established greenery.

Walkability

Within 10 min walk for upper Sehome:

  • WWU campus (depending on home location)
  • Sehome Hill Arboretum trails (180+ acres of in-city woods)
  • Whatcom Community College extension classes

Within 15-25 min walk:

  • Downtown Bellingham
  • Boulevard Park (bay access)
  • Maritime Heritage Park
  • Most downtown coffee + restaurants

Within 10 min drive:

  • Fairhaven
  • WWU
  • Boundary Bay Brewery + beer garden
  • Whatcom Falls Park

Local businesses nearby

Within or immediately adjacent:

  • Camber Coffee (Cornwall Ave — Genaro’s regular)
  • Old Town Café — long-standing downtown breakfast
  • Mount Bakery Café — downtown sweet spot
  • Black Sheep Bakery — bakery
  • The Local Public House — neighborhood pub
  • Boundary Bay Brewery — main location with beer garden
  • Aslan Brewing — popular brewery
  • Bay Café — downtown breakfast classic

WWU has its own café + dining scene that Sehome residents access easily.

Schools serving Sehome

Bellingham Public Schools:

  • Lowell Elementary OR Carl Cozier Elementary OR Roosevelt Elementary (varies by exact address)
  • Whatcom Middle School OR Fairhaven Middle (varies)
  • Sehome High School (most Sehome addresses)

Sehome High School is named after the neighborhood and is one of Bellingham’s two most-requested high schools (Bellingham High is the other).

Always verify school assignment for the specific address.

Outdoor recreation

  • Sehome Hill Arboretum — 180+ acres of forest with extensive trail system, accessible from upper Sehome streets
  • WWU campus + grounds — public access; significant green space
  • Whatcom Falls Park — 10 min drive, waterfalls + trails
  • Boulevard Park — 15-25 min walk, bay access
  • Galbraith Mountain — 15-20 min drive, world-class MTB

Common Sehome listing notes

  • Lot grade variation. Hillside lots vary widely — some are level, some are stepped, some have view, some don’t. Visit before deciding.
  • Older home age. Many Sehome homes are 1920s-1960s Craftsman/mid-century. Original mechanical systems may need updating.
  • Knob-and-tube wiring in some 1920s-1930s homes.
  • Single-pane windows common in unrenovated homes.
  • Drainage on sloped lots.
  • Parking realities. Some streets have on-street-only parking, especially near WWU.
  • WWU game-day + move-in traffic. A few weekends per year have notable disruption.

What locals say about Sehome

(Real solicited resident testimony to be added before launch. Paraphrased patterns:)

“We walk to downtown most weekends, walk to coffee most weekdays. WWU is right there. I haven’t started my car in 4 days.” — Resident

“First home. Could afford Sehome; couldn’t afford Fairhaven. So glad it worked out — Sehome is its own thing, not a ‘discount Fairhaven.'” — First-home buyer

“WWU adjacency is real but not overwhelming. We rarely notice the campus in daily life unless we’re using its trails.” — Family, 5 years

Real solicited testimony coming in next phase.

Frequently asked

Is Sehome safe? Yes. Generally below Bellingham averages for crime; college-adjacent areas see typical urban patterns (occasional theft from cars). Sehome is one of the safer Bellingham neighborhoods.

What’s the median home price in Sehome? $600K–$900K, with entry around $550K and upper tier reaching $1.1M.

Is Sehome walkable? Yes — one of the few Bellingham neighborhoods walkable to both downtown AND WWU. Walk Score consistently 60-75 depending on specific block.

Can I walk to WWU from Sehome? Yes — most Sehome addresses are 10-25 min walk to campus.

Can I walk to downtown from Sehome? Yes — 10-30 min walk depending on block. The 15-25 min range is typical.

Is Sehome a good neighborhood for families? Yes for families who value walkability + school options + bike-to-school. Less good for families wanting suburban yard density. Lots are urban-sized.

Is Sehome a good investment property neighborhood? Yes — WWU adjacency creates consistent rental demand. Single-family rentals + house-shares are common. Verify zoning + rental permitting for any specific home.

What schools serve Sehome? Varies by exact address. Most Sehome addresses feed Sehome High School. Elementary varies between Lowell, Carl Cozier, Roosevelt. Always verify.

Is Sehome quieter than Columbia or Lettered Streets? Yes — Sehome is residential hillside; Columbia + Lettered Streets are more mixed-use street-level urban.

Is Sehome adjacent to Galbraith Mountain? Indirectly — Galbraith trailhead access is 15-20 min drive from most Sehome addresses. Some south-Sehome streets are closer to trail access points.

Sibling neighborhoods to also consider

Talk to Genaro about Sehome

Sehome inventory moves fast for the right homes. Ready buyers win in this market.

📞 (360) 389-6616 — call or text ✉️ genaro@bellwetherrealestate.com — email 📩 Contact form — send a note

For broader overview: Bellingham Neighborhoods Guide.

Don’t go generic. Go with Genaro.

Genaro Shaffer · Licensed WA Real Estate Broker #27119 · Bellwether Real Estate · 11+ years in Sehome and across Whatcom County · 67+ closed transactions · 5.0 stars on Zillow 📞 (360) 389-6616 · ✉️ genaro@bellwetherrealestate.com Powered by Bellwether Real Estate · Member NWMLS · Equal Housing Opportunity