The Ultimate Moving to Quincy WA Guide
The Moving to Quincy WA Guide | Housing, Schools, Churches & Local Life
A local’s honest, practical guide to housing, schools, churches, and day-to-day life
If you’re thinking about moving to Quincy, you’re not alone.
People find Quincy for a lot of reasons: work, family, a slower pace, a place to raise kids, or simply the feeling that life should be a little more grounded than it’s been. My wife and I have lived here for more than 18 years, raised our kids here, and stayed active in the community through arts, church, youth activities, and homeschool groups.
This guide is meant to do one thing well: tell you what moving to Quincy is really like—the good, the challenging, and the things nobody thinks to mention until after they unpack.
The Quick Reality Check
Quincy is a small town with a strong sense of community and a growing footprint. It can be a great place to build a life—but it helps to come in with clear expectations.
Here’s the honest version:
Housing is tighter than people expect, and prices have risen. (More on that below.)
The town is family-centered—schools, church life, youth sports, and community events shape the calendar.
The region offers big outdoor recreation without big-city congestion—desert hikes, river days, state parks, and wide-open spaces.
Being Bi-Lingual is beneficial. Spanish is spoken almost as much as English here.
Quincy is still Quincy: practical, steady, and relationship-driven.
If that sounds like your kind of place, keep going.
Housing in Quincy: Prices, Pace, and the Real Shortage
Let’s talk about the piece that surprises most people.
Home prices have risen
Depending on the source and timeframe, Quincy’s typical home values and recent median sale prices have been sitting roughly in the upper $300Ks to mid $400Ks, with year-over-year movement that can vary month to month.
That doesn’t mean you can’t find something affordable—but it does mean you should plan for:
More competition than you might assume for a small town
Fewer “starter home” options than most families want
A market that can feel inconsistent (inventory swings, days-on-market shifts)
The housing shortage is real
This isn’t just a Quincy problem—it’s a broader issue across many communities, including Washington. Even nationally, housing supply and affordability have been persistent challenges.
At the county planning level, Grant County documents discuss long-range housing need projections tied to population growth (i.e., additional homes required over time).
Local takeaway: if you’re moving to Quincy, start your housing plan early.
Practical advice (local-style, not realtor-speak)
If you’re renting, expect limited availability at times (and moves happen fast).
If you’re buying, be ready to act when the right fit shows up. It is a ridiculously competitive market.
If you’re building, understand that timelines and costs can shift fast
Schools & Education: What to Know Before You Move
Schools matter—especially if you’re moving with kids.
Quincy’s public schools are part of the Quincy School District. You’ll find families who love the community support and involvement, and you’ll also find the normal range of opinions you’d expect anywhere—because the truth is, every child’s fit is different. Quincy has a strong FFH program since we are a high agricultural community.
If you’re researching, you’ll see public school profiles and ratings on major sites like GreatSchools and Niche.
We have have:
5 - K through 5th Elementary Schools
1 Middle School 6th - 8th
1 High School 9-12th
1 Alternative School 6th -12th (Quincy Innovations Academy for a less traditional School Experience)
A local lens that matters more than ratings
In towns like Quincy:
School events are community events
Sports and activities are a major connector
Teachers often know families beyond the classroom
What I’d suggest you do
Tour schools if possible
Ask about programs that fit your child (sports, music, trades, college prep, support services)
Pay attention to culture and communication—those matter as much as test scores
Houses of Worship: Finding Your People
One of the ways Quincy becomes home is through relationships—and for many families, that starts with a church community.
There are numerous churches in and around Quincy, including congregations that reflect the diversity of the community (most denominations, languages, and worship styles) ANything you don’t find here in town you will find within 35 miles.
If you’re new:
Visit a few
Talk to people
Ask about youth programs, small groups, and community outreach
In a small town, a good church community can become your support system fast.
What There Is To Do in Quincy
People sometimes assume “small town” equals “nothing to do.”
That’s not Quincy.
The town’s social life tends to revolve around:
Schools and sports
Community groups and programs
Arts and performances
Seasonal events and local traditions
And if you’ve got kids, your calendar will fill itself.
One of Quincy’s strengths is that community activities feel accessible—like you can actually participate, not just spectate.
Outdoor Life: Quincy’s Secret Weapon
This is where Quincy quietly beats a lot of places.
You’re sitting near a whole menu of outdoors:
Hiking & desert landscapes
Ancient Lakes is a standout—well-known, family-friendly, and a “how is this real?” kind of scenery for first-timers.
Columbia River days
Crescent Bar Recreation Area is a major local destination: river access, marina, and even golf—right near Quincy.
State parks and water recreation
Want camping, boating, fishing, and family weekends? Potholes State Park and Sun Lakes–Dry Falls are the kind of places people drive hours for—while you’re living close enough to make it a day trip (or a regular habit).
Local truth: Outdoor life here isn’t a once-a-year thing. It becomes part of your normal rhythm.
Work, Commuting, and Regional Access
Quincy is small, but it’s not disconnected.
People commute to:
Nearby towns in Grant County
Wenatchee area
Moses Lake and surrounding communities
And Quincy’s growth and planning conversations show up regularly in local reporting and regional development discussions.
Quincy is a primarily agricultural community and has been for most of it’s history. In the last 2 decades there has been a Data Center boom bringing a lot of construction, trades jobs and technology work.
A Simple “Before You Move” Checklist
If I could sit across a table with you and give you the practical rundown, it would sound like this:
Housing: Start early. Expect tighter inventory than you think.
Schools: Tour, ask questions, and focus on fit.
Community: Plug in quickly—church, arts, sports, homeschool groups, or volunteering.
Outdoors: Plan for it. You’ll actually use it here.
Seasons: Winter fog and summer heat are part of the deal—learn the rhythm.
The Question that is Weighing on Your Mind
Cost of Living in Quincy
What’s affordable, what’s rising, and what catches people off guard
Cost of living is one of the first questions people ask when they consider moving to Quincy—and the answer is nuanced.
Quincy is still more affordable than some parts of Washington, but it is not the low-cost secret it once was. Some expenses stay reasonable. Others have climbed faster than people expect.
Housing Is the Biggest Factor
Housing drives the conversation here.
· Home prices have increased severely over the last several years (like many other areas)
· Inventory remains tight, which keeps pressure on prices
· Rentals can be limited and competitive
Even when prices cool temporarily, availability is often the bigger challenge than sticker price. This is the number one area where newcomers feel surprised.
Utilities & Monthly Basics
Utilities in Quincy tend to be manageable, but seasonal swings matter.
· We have some of the cheapest electricity rates in the country which helps manage the seasonal cost shift. Power is cheap here.
· Heating costs rise in winter (especially during foggy, colder stretches)
· Summer cooling costs increase during extended heat
· Water costs are generally reasonable compared to metro areas
If you’re coming from western Washington or a major city, utilities often feel slightly better. If you’re coming from a lower-cost rural area, expect some adjustment.
Groceries & Daily Spending
Groceries and everyday essentials sit in a higher range.
· Local options are solid but not endless
· You will make full use of Wenatchee and Moses Lake for shopping or your dollar won’t go as far.
· Specialty items require trips to Wenatchee or Moses Lake
· Fuel costs matter if you commute or travel regionally
Many families balance local shopping with planned regional trips.
Transportation & Commuting Costs
Transportation costs depend heavily on where you work.
· Many residents commute to nearby towns
· Gas is a real line item, not an afterthought. You will drive if you live here.
· Fewer public transportation options mean vehicle costs matter
The trade-off is shorter commute stress compared to large urban areas. You can commute 45 minutes and you will be in one of our surrounding towns over 30 miles away. Unlike some cities where a 45 minute commute is only about 10 miles.
Taxes & Washington Reality
Washington has no state income tax, which is a meaningful advantage for many families. HOWEVER, the state is looking at voting in a state income tax in the coming year.
That said:
Sales tax is at about 9%
Property taxes vary by county
The State Gas tax is one of the highest in the country
There is a state Capital Gains Tax
For some households, this is a net positive. For others, it’s simply a shift in where the costs show up.
The Local Cost-of-Living Reality Check
Here’s the honest version most people only learn after they move:
· Quincy is more affordable than big cities, but not immune to growth pressures
· Housing requires planning and patience
· Daily life costs are steady and predictable once you settle in
· The biggest savings often come from pace of life, not line items
People who thrive here tend to value:
· Stability over excess
· Community over convenience
· Planning over impulse
Who Quincy’s Cost of Living Works Best For
Quincy tends to work well financially for:
Families planning long-term
People with stable employment or remote work
Those comfortable trading variety for consistency
It can be more challenging for:
Short-term movers
Those needing high rental flexibility
Anyone expecting rapid housing turnover
Bottom Line
Quincy isn’t “cheap”—but it can be livable, stable, and sustainable if you understand where the real costs are.
The key isn’t chasing the lowest number.
It’s knowing what kind of life you’re building—and whether Quincy fits that vision.
Final Word: Who Quincy Is a Great Fit For
Quincy is a great fit for people who want:
A community where relationships matter
A family-centered pace of life
Easy access to the outdoors
A place that feels steady and real
It can be a tougher fit if you’re expecting:
Big-city amenities without driving
Endless housing inventory at bargain prices (that era is gone)
But if you want a place where you can build a life—and actually be part of the story—Quincy is worth serious consideration.
Welcome to Quincy.





