They are separated by two bridges and about three minutes of driving. They are not the same market. Here is the honest comparison.
Almost every buyer who visits the Crystal Coast for the first time asks this question, usually after spending an afternoon in Beaufort and then driving across the bridges to run an errand in Morehead City. The two towns feel completely different despite their proximity. Understanding why that is — and which one you belong in — is the most important decision in the Crystal Coast buyer journey.
The honest version of this comparison: most buyers who visit both towns want Beaufort. Most buyers who buy end up in Morehead City. The gap between what buyers want and where they buy is almost entirely explained by inventory and budget, not preference.
| Factor | Beaufort | Morehead City |
|---|---|---|
| Active listings $600K+ | 38 at $600K+ | 17 at $700K+ |
| Price per square foot | Higher; historic premium | Lower; more practical pricing |
| Historic character | Exceptional; 300+ year old grid | Limited; working waterfront character |
| Walkability | High within historic district | Car-dependent for most errands |
| Grocery access | None in town; drive to Morehead | Full commercial corridor |
| Boating access | Taylor's Creek, Beaufort Inlet | Direct Beaufort Inlet, Bogue Sound |
| New construction | Minimal | More available in upper-middle range |
| Flood zone exposure | Significant; property-specific | Real; Newport River and sound exposure |
| Sportfishing culture | Present but secondary | Primary identity; top-5 US port |
| Primary buyer profile | Retirees, remote workers, lifestyle buyers | Practical waterfront buyers, sportfishers |
You belong in Beaufort if the historic character, the walkable waterfront town, the Rachel Carson Reserve views, and the community identity are things you are buying specifically rather than incidentally. If you drive down Front Street and feel like this is where you want to spend the next 20 years, that feeling is the answer. Beaufort rewards buyers who chose it intentionally. The thin inventory, the maintenance demands of historic homes, the lack of a grocery store in town — none of those things bother buyers who genuinely want to be there.
You belong in Morehead City if commercial convenience matters more than historic character, if your primary waterfront motivation is sportfishing rather than coastal town living, or if your budget and the Beaufort inventory picture have not aligned after a genuine search. Morehead City is a legitimate and appealing waterfront community. The buyers who are happiest there chose it affirmatively rather than settling for it after failing to find what they wanted in Beaufort.
Beaufort and Morehead City are connected by two bridges. Residents of both towns routinely cross between them for daily life. Most Beaufort residents do their weekly grocery shopping in Morehead City. Most Morehead City residents enjoy Beaufort's restaurants and waterfront on weekends. The practical distance between the two towns in daily life is smaller than the emotional distance between them feels when you are making a buying decision.
This means a buyer who purchases in Morehead City for commercial convenience and uses Beaufort as their waterfront destination several times a week is not giving up the Beaufort experience entirely — they are just not paying the Beaufort premium to live in it full time.
Still trying to decide between Beaufort and Morehead City for your situation?
A private inquiry gets you a direct, honest answer within two business days. 412-225-0598 · petertumbas@bhhsne.com
Related: Beaufort Market Briefing · Beaufort Neighborhoods · Beaufort Cost of Ownership · Morehead City · Eastern NC Hub
Not legal, tax, or financial advice. June 2026.