Incorporated by the Maryland General Assembly in March 1904, Myersville sits on a ridge in the foothills of South Mountain in Frederick County, roughly equidistant between Hagerstown and Frederick — about 12 miles from each. That geography alone tells you something important: this is a town that offers genuine separation from the suburban sprawl of both cities while keeping them fully within reach via Interstate 70, which runs directly through the area and connects commuters eastward toward Baltimore and the broader Washington metro region.
What sets Myersville apart from neighboring towns like Middletown or Boonsboro is its combination of small scale and strong economic profile. With just 1,748 residents spread across 1.12 square miles, the town retains a distinctly rural character — the Middletown Valley farmland and the ridgelines of the Catoctin Mountains form the visual backdrop — yet the median household income here stands at $125,625, and an impressive 86% of housing units are owner-occupied. The Peter of P. Grossnickel Farm, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, anchors the town's deep agricultural heritage dating to German settlers who arrived in the early 18th century.
Students attend schools in the Frederick County Public Schools system, one of Maryland's well-regarded county districts. For buyers seeking a grounded, historically rooted community with real financial stability and easy corridor access, Myersville represents exactly the kind of long-term investment that only gets harder to find.