
An Anderson Township estate perched over the Ohio River quietly changed hands in June for just under $4.6 million, snagging the title of Greater Cincinnati's most expensive residential closing for the month. The Riverview Estates property helped push all ten of June’s top home sales past the $2 million mark and nudged the region’s average sale price higher than a year earlier, underscoring steady demand at the top of the local market.
The property
The brick-and-stone home at 7951 Ayers Road comes in at roughly 12,784 square feet on about 4.54 acres, with formal entertaining spaces, an elevator, geothermal HVAC and a gunite pool. It offers five bedrooms and more than a dozen bathrooms, along with panoramic views of the Ohio River and Kentucky hillsides, according to Coldwell Banker. The listing places the property inside the Riverview Estates subdivision at Coldstream Country Club.
Sale details
Public records show the estate closed at $4,578,000 on June 15 following a spring listing, with Realtor.com reporting the sale and prior sale price. Redfin’s price history indicates the property was brought to market in late April with an asking price near $4.95 million. The listing identifies Patrick Lach of Sibcy Cline as the seller’s agent and Vinni Brown of eXp Realty as the buyer’s agent, per Realtor.com.
Market context
This Anderson Township transaction topped Greater Cincinnati’s luxury lineup for June, a month in which all ten of the highest-priced home closings exceeded $2 million and the average sale price climbed more than 12.5% from the same month last year, according to the Cincinnati Business Courier. That resilience at the top end contrasts with more uneven national signals in June, as some nationwide reports showed list prices easing and demand reshuffling by price tier. High-dollar deals clustered in suburbs such as Anderson Township and Indian Hill continue to prop up the luxury segment across the region.
What it means
For sellers holding high-end riverfront properties, June’s result suggests there is still a pool of buyers willing to pay a premium for acreage and big views. National June housing data showed overall list prices cooling while select corners of the luxury market stayed busy, according to Realtor.com. Local brokers say lean inventory at the ultra-pricey tier can help individual trophy listings command outsized prices when they do hit the market.









