Peachtree Heights provides nature and quiet streets, right among the attractions of the city.
Peachtree Heights is a little more than a mile from the Buckhead office towers.
The Swan House is a 1920s mansion at the Atlanta History Center in Peachtree Heights.
Watch out for ducks throughout the Peachtree Heights East area.
Several Peachtree Heights neighborhood streets border the Duck Pond and Parkside Drive parks.

Area Guide

Peachtree Heights Atlanta, GA

A luxurious lifestyle in Metro Atlanta amidst big-city amenities

Historic Park Urban

Peachtree Heights sits in Atlanta's Buckhead district, tucked between Peachtree Road and Peachtree Creek, where wide curving streets lined with mature oaks and magnolias make the neighborhood feel genuinely removed from the city's bustle. Daily life here moves at a comfortable pace. Groceries are within easy walking distance, Buckhead Village's restaurants and shops are just minutes away by car or on foot, and the broader Buckhead corridor connects residents to Midtown and downtown Atlanta with ease. The neighborhood earns a walk score of 70, meaning most everyday errands are manageable without a car. Rentals in Peachtree Heights include mid-rise apartment communities, garden-style apartment communities, and a smaller number of townhome-style units. Landscaped grounds and tree-lined streets give most properties here a quieter, more residential feel than you'd find closer to the Buckhead high-rise corridor. Atlanta holds the distinction of having the densest urban tree canopy of any major city in the United States, something you notice right away in this part of Buckhead.

Explore the Neighborhood

The Swan House is a 1920s mansion at the Atlanta History Center in Peachtree Heights.

Watch out for ducks throughout the Peachtree Heights East area.

Several Peachtree Heights neighborhood streets border the Duck Pond and Parkside Drive parks.

Duck Pond Park and adjoining Parkside Drive Park offer walking paths in nature.

Peachtree Battle shopping center offers a range of shopping for Peachtree Heights residents.

Ducks and geese are a common sight at the aptly named Duck Pond Park.

Rent Trends

As of June 2026, the average apartment rent in Peachtree Heights is $1,049 for a studio, $1,634 for one bedroom, $2,031 for two bedrooms, and $2,388 for three bedrooms. Apartment rent in Peachtree Heights has decreased by -15.1% in the past year.

  • Studio

  • 500 sq ft

    Average Sq Ft

  • $1,049/month

    Average Rent

  • 1 BR

  • 803 sq ft

    Average Sq Ft

  • $1,634/month

    Average Rent

  • 2 BR

  • 1,164 sq ft

    Average Sq Ft

  • $2,031/month

    Average Rent

  • 3 BR

  • 1,453 sq ft

    Average Sq Ft

  • $2,388/month

    Average Rent

Getting Around

Moderately Walkable

Walkability

70 / 100

Limited Public Transit

Transit

30 / 100

Exceptionally Drivable

Drivability

100 / 100

Fairly Bikeable

Bikeability

40 / 100

Daily Essentials

Supermarket Within a 10 Minute Walk

Groceries

80 / 100

Good Restaurant Variety Nearby

Restaurants

60 / 100

Fair Café Variety Nearby

Cafes

40 / 100

Great Variety of Shops Nearby

Shopping

80 / 100

Recreation

Large Amount of Park Space Nearby

Parks

60 / 100

Fair Wellness Amenity Variety Nearby

Wellness

50 / 100

Local Vibe

Vibrant Atmosphere at Times

Vibrancy

40 / 100

Fair Nightlife Variety Nearby

Nightlife

40 / 100

Moderately Noisy

Quiet Score

40 / 100

Points of Interest

Parks and Recreation

  • Atlanta History Center
  • Atlanta Audubon Society
  • Blue Heron Nature Preserve
  • Atlanta Botanical Garden
  • Chastain Park

Commuter Rail

Airports

  • Hartsfield - Jackson Atlanta International

Top Apartments in Peachtree Heights

Houses for Rent in Peachtree Heights

Living in Peachtree Heights

History

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The core of Peachtree Heights, known today as Peachtree Heights West, was developed beginning around 1910 on land purchased from the Wesley Gray Collier estate. The street layout was designed by the New York City-based firm Carrere and Hastings, known for its work on the New York Public Library, and the curvilinear plan was specifically shaped to follow the natural terrain. Peachtree Battle Avenue, the neighborhood's main street, was built with a landscaped median park running down its center, and natural stream corridors were preserved as green spaces throughout. The Peachtree Heights Park Historic District was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. Architecture is one of the neighborhood's most noticeable features. The houses here were built in a range of styles, including English Tudor, Georgian, Norman, Italian, and Regency, and many were designed by prominent Atlanta architectural firms such as Hentz, Reid and Adler and Hentz, Reid, Adler and Shutze. The Atlanta History Center's Swan House, a 1928 estate designed by Philip T. Shutze with extensive grounds open to the public, stands as one of the most recognizable landmarks in Buckhead. The Buckhead Heritage Society hosts an annual preservation awards program recognizing ongoing stewardship of historic properties throughout the area.

Restaurants

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Peachtree Heights residents have quick access to one of Atlanta's most concentrated dining corridors. The Buckhead area surrounding the neighborhood offers a wide range of options, from classic American steakhouses and wood-fired Southern cooking to Italian trattorias, Japanese sushi bars, French bistros, and contemporary cuisine drawing on ingredients from across the American South. Peachtree Battle Avenue and the nearby Peachtree Road commercial stretch have several casual spots suited to weeknight dinners, while Buckhead Village and the Buckhead Atlanta mixed-use development provide a dense selection of sit-down restaurants within a short drive. Atlanta's broader dining scene, including nationally recognized restaurant clusters in Midtown and the Old Fourth Ward, is also easily reachable from this part of town.

Transportation

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Peachtree Heights connects to the rest of Atlanta primarily through Peachtree Road and Peachtree Battle Avenue, both of which feed into the wider Buckhead grid. I-85 and Georgia 400 are accessible within minutes, making commutes to Midtown, downtown, and the northern suburbs straightforward by car, though peak-hour traffic on the Peachtree Road corridor can slow travel times. MARTA's Buckhead and Lenox stations on the Red and Gold lines are close by, offering rail access to Midtown, downtown, and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport without touching the highway. The PATH400 multi-use trail, which runs along the Georgia 400 corridor through Buckhead, provides a dedicated off-road path for cycling and walking that connects to parks and other neighborhoods. The neighborhood earns a transit score of 30 and a bike score of 40, indicating that a car remains useful for many trips, though transit and active transportation options are within reach.

Parks

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Peachtree Creek forms the southern boundary of Peachtree Heights and provides a natural greenbelt that residents can enjoy along preserved streambed corridors built into the neighborhood's original design. Peachtree Battle Avenue's landscaped median park has long served as a green buffer running through the heart of the neighborhood. The Atlanta History Center grounds are open to the public and include the Goizueta Gardens, walking paths, and a formal landscape setting that offers a different kind of green space than a typical city park. Chastain Park, Atlanta's second-largest city park at 268 acres, is a short drive from Peachtree Heights and includes a three-mile trail, tennis courts, an outdoor pool, ball fields, a golf course, and the Chastain Park Amphitheater, which hosts concerts and community events throughout the warmer months.

Cost

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Average rent in Peachtree Heights ranges from around $1,290 per month for a studio to approximately $1,735 for a three-bedroom unit. Atlanta's economy is anchored by major employers including Delta Air Lines, Coca-Cola, UPS, and Home Depot, along with a growing technology sector and one of the nation's busiest airports, Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International, which supports tens of thousands of jobs. Atlanta is also a major filming destination and home to CNN, Cox Enterprises, and the Weather Channel, contributing to a broad job market. Atlanta's overall cost of living tends to run below that of other major metro areas on the East Coast, making it an accessible option for renters looking for a large city with a wide range of industries.

Shopping

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The Peachtree Heights area places residents within easy reach of Buckhead's well-known retail corridors. Lenox Square and Phipps Plaza, both located near the intersection of Peachtree and Lenox roads, together form one of the South's most significant retail concentrations, with a broad range of stores from national anchors to designer boutiques. Buckhead Atlanta, a mixed-use development that opened in 2014, added another layer of specialty retail, dining, and services to the immediate area. The Peachtree Battle commercial strip, just along the neighborhood's edge, offers a more neighborhood-scale set of services and shops. For market-goers, Atlanta's network of weekly farmers markets, including those operating seasonally in nearby Peachtree Hills and other Buckhead-adjacent neighborhoods, provides access to local produce and artisan goods on a regular basis.

Highlights

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Peachtree Heights is a National Register-listed historic neighborhood in Atlanta's Buckhead district, defined by its curvilinear street design, architecturally significant homes, the Swan House at the Atlanta History Center, and proximity to Lenox Square, MARTA rail, and Chastain Park.

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Methodology

† Our analysis of utilities, groceries, transportation, healthcare, home prices, and other goods and services is sourced from the Cost of Living Index, a respected benchmark published by the Council for Community and Economic Research (C2ER) that provides a thorough overview of living expenses across different regions.

Rent data is provided by CoStar Group’s Market Trend reports. As the industry leader in commercial real estate information, analytics, and news, CoStar conducts extensive research to produce and maintain a comprehensive database of commercial real estate information. We combine this data with public record to provide the most up-to-date rental information available.

Consumer goods, services, and home prices are sourced from the Cost of Living Index published by the Council for Community and Economic Research (C2ER). The data on this page is updated quarterly. It was last published in June 2026.

Demographic information comes from Neustar and combines detailed address data with U.S. Census and American Community Survey statistics to produce reliable local estimates.