Living in Scottsdale, AZ on your mind and you’re thinking about making the move to Scottsdale? Here’s an honest, experienced look at what life actually looks like here โ€” the sunshine, the lifestyle, and the things nobody puts in the brochure.

Scottsdale, Arizona has a way of getting under your skin. Maybe you visited during a conference and couldn’t stop thinking about the mountains in the morning light. Maybe a friend relocated here and keeps sending you photos of their backyard pool in February. Maybe you’re just done with winter.

Whatever brought you here, this guide will give you a real picture of living in Scottsdale โ€” the kind of honest breakdown I give clients who are moving from out of state and want to know what they’re actually getting into. I’ve lived here my whole life and helped others do the same for over 21 years. I know this city deeply.

Let’s get into it.


Scottsdale Arizona desert landscape with saguaro cactus and mountain views
The iconic Sonoran Desert โ€” Scottsdale’s stunning backyard, full of saguaro cactus and mountain views.

The Sunny Side of Scottsdale

โ˜€๏ธ The Weather (Yes, It Really Is That Good)

Scottsdale averages over 300 days of sunshine per year. That’s not a tourism tagline โ€” it’s a lifestyle reality. From October through May, the weather is genuinely extraordinary. Cool mornings, warm afternoons, low humidity, and evenings that practically demand a patio. It’s the reason people come here for a visit and end up buying a house within six months.

Winters are mild โ€” think highs in the 65โ€“75ยฐF range from November through March. Spring arrives early and lingers. If you’re coming from the Midwest or Northeast, the first winter here will feel like a gift you didn’t know you needed.

โ›ณ๏ธ The Outdoor Lifestyle Is Genuinely World-Class

Scottsdale’s outdoor culture isn’t just a selling point โ€” it’s a daily way of life. Residents here hike before work, golf on weekdays, paddle board on the weekend, and barely notice that they’ve become outdoorsy people.

Desert hiking trail in Scottsdale Arizona with McDowell Mountains in the background
Scottsdale’s McDowell Sonoran Preserve offers 30,000+ acres of protected desert trails โ€” right in the city’s backyard.
  • McDowell Sonoran Preserve: Over 30,000 acres of protected desert with hundreds of miles of trails for hiking, mountain biking, and trail running. The Gateway Trailhead and Tom’s Thumb are local favorites.
  • Camelback Mountain: One of the most iconic hikes in Arizona โ€” challenging, stunning, and about 20 minutes from most of Scottsdale.
  • Golf: Scottsdale has more golf courses per capita than nearly anywhere in the country. Whether you’re a weekend hacker or a scratch player, you’ll be embarrassingly well-served.
  • Hot air ballooning, horseback riding, off-road Jeep tours: The Sonoran Desert is a genuine adventure playground, and outfitters make it accessible for all experience levels.
  • Indian Bend Wash Greenbelt: A 13-mile linear park running through the heart of Scottsdale โ€” perfect for cycling, walking, and picnicking.

๐Ÿฝ๏ธ The Food, Arts & Culture Scene

Scottsdale has quietly become one of the best dining cities in the Southwest. From James Beard-nominated chef-driven restaurants to beloved local taquerias, the food scene here is genuinely impressive. Old Town Scottsdale is the anchor โ€” a walkable district with restaurants, rooftop bars, art galleries, and nightlife that keeps pace with any major city.

Upscale restaurant dining in Scottsdale Arizona with warm lighting and elegant interior
Scottsdale’s dining scene has become one of the Southwest’s most celebrated.

For a full calendar of events, festivals, and things to do year-round, Experience Scottsdale is the go-to local resource.

  • Old Town Scottsdale ArtWalk: Every Thursday evening, galleries open their doors and the Arts District comes alive. It’s free, social, and a genuinely beloved local tradition.
  • Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art (SMoCA): A world-class contemporary art museum right in the heart of the city.
  • Scottsdale Fashion Square: One of the largest malls in the Southwest, anchored by luxury retailers and surrounded by great dining.
  • Talking Stick Resort & Casino: Entertainment, dining, and live events โ€” a major hub for both locals and visitors.
  • Spring Training: Scottsdale Stadium hosts the San Francisco Giants, and the surrounding Cactus League brings MLB teams across the Valley every February and March. It’s a rite of passage for new residents.

๐Ÿก The Neighborhoods Are Genuinely Exceptional

One of the things that makes Scottsdale special is the quality and variety of its neighborhoods. Whether you want a master-planned community with resort-style amenities, a custom-build on a large desert lot, or a walkable urban lifestyle in Old Town, Scottsdale has a version of it โ€” and most of them are exceptionally well-maintained.

Luxury home with pool in Scottsdale Arizona desert neighborhood
Scottsdale’s neighborhoods offer resort-style living as a daily reality, not just a vacation experience.
  • McCormick Ranch: One of the first master-planned communities in the country, and still one of the best. Mature trees, lake paths, strong community feel, and exceptional value for the location. Median home prices hover around $1M+.
  • Gainey Ranch: A guard-gated enclave built around a championship golf course. Resort amenities, larger lots, and a lifestyle that genuinely feels like a permanent vacation.
  • Old Town / Downtown Scottsdale: For buyers who want walkability, nightlife, and urban energy. Condos and townhomes dominate, but the lifestyle is unmatched.
  • North Scottsdale (85255, 85262, 85266): Desert estates, gated communities, and luxury custom homes. This is where the wide-open lots and mountain views live. Pinnacle Peak, DC Ranch, Silverleaf โ€” these are household names in luxury real estate.
  • Arcadia-adjacent / South Scottsdale: More affordable entry points with strong appreciation, close to Phoenix’s Arcadia neighborhood. Popular with young professionals and families.

๐Ÿ’ผ The Economy & Job Market

Greater Scottsdale benefits from one of the most diverse and resilient economies in the Sun Belt. Major employers span healthcare (HonorHealth, Mayo Clinic), technology (GoDaddy, Voya Financial), finance, tourism, and professional services. Remote workers continue to choose Scottsdale at high rates โ€” the combination of lifestyle and connectivity is a powerful draw.

Arizona has no estate tax and relatively low income taxes compared to coastal states, making it a genuine consideration for high-net-worth individuals and business owners evaluating where to plant roots.


The Not-So-Sunny Side of Scottsdale

Every place has trade-offs. Here’s what I tell my out-of-state clients before they pack the moving truck.

Luxury home with pool and desert landscaping in Scottsdale Arizona neighborhood
Scottsdale’s residential neighborhoods offer resort-quality living as an everyday reality.
  • The Summer Heat Is Real: From June through September, temperatures regularly exceed 110ยฐF. This isn’t dramatic โ€” it’s just accurate. Most locals adapt by shifting to early morning outdoor activity, spending midday indoors, and heading out again after 7pm. Some people love it. Others take a summer trip. Very few regret moving here because of it.
  • The Cost of Living Is Higher Than Most of Arizona: Scottsdale’s cost of living runs about 15% above the national average, with housing as the biggest driver. The median home price sits around $870,000โ€“$1.1M depending on the zip code and data source. That said, when compared to comparable lifestyle markets in California, Colorado, or Florida, Scottsdale often still wins on value.
  • You Need a Car: Public transportation in Scottsdale is limited. This is a driving city. If you’re relocating from New York or Chicago expecting to walk or take the train to most things, recalibrate now. Most neighborhoods are designed around the car, and traffic on major corridors (Scottsdale Road, Pima, Frank Lloyd Wright) can be significant during peak hours.
  • Utility Bills in Summer: Air conditioning is non-negotiable, and it shows up on your APS bill. Budget $300โ€“$500+/month in peak summer for larger homes. Factor pool maintenance ($120โ€“160/month) and pest control ($50โ€“75/month) into your real cost of living calculation.
  • Water Scarcity is a Long-Term Conversation: Arizona is a desert state managing water carefully. The Colorado River allocation debates and groundwater challenges are real policy issues. That said, the Valley has invested heavily in water infrastructure for decades, and most experts view the near-term supply as stable โ€” but it’s worth understanding as a long-term homeowner. Conservation is key!
  • The Snowbird Effect: From November through April, Scottsdale’s population swells significantly with seasonal residents and visitors. Restaurants fill up faster, golf tee times disappear, and traffic gets noticeably heavier. Most full-time residents see this as a worthwhile trade-off โ€” a reminder of why they chose to live here year-round.

So โ€” Is Scottsdale Right for You?

Sunny Arizona sky and landscape representing Scottsdale summer heat
Summer in Scottsdale is intense โ€” but most longtime residents learn to work with it, not against it.

If you’re drawn to outdoor living, warm weather, a strong sense of community, world-class amenities, and a real estate market with long-term appreciation track record โ€” Scottsdale is worth taking seriously.

If you need the hustle of a dense urban core, rely on public transportation, or run cold and love sweater weather nine months a year โ€” there may be better fits.

What I’ve seen over 21+ years of helping people move here: most people who give Scottsdale a real chance end up staying. The lifestyle has a way of becoming your identity. The desert mountains start to feel like yours. The sunsets never get old.

“The best move I ever made was the one that got me to Scottsdale.” โ€” said by approximately every client who ever relocated here.

If you’re considering a move to Scottsdale and want an honest conversation about neighborhoods, price points, timing, and what life actually looks like here day-to-day โ€” I’d love to connect. This is what I do, and I genuinely love it and I grew up here.

โ†’ Schedule a no-pressure call with Kelli


Kelli Grant is the founder of the Kelli Grant Group at ReMax Fine Properties in Scottsdale, Arizona. She has represented buyers and sellers across the Valley for 21+ years, specializing in luxury residential real estate, relocation, and life-transition transactions.

Kelli Grant Group | ReMax Fine Properties | Scottsdale, AZ
(480) 779-9656 | Info@KelliGrantGroup.com | KelliGrantGroup.com