Apartments to rent in Tysons, Virginia

Tysons (formerly Tysons Corner) is Fairfax County’s largest employment and shopping center — home to two major malls, corporate campuses and four Metro Silver Line stations. The area is mid‑to‑high cost, in active urbanization with growing walkable districts (The Boro, Scotts Run) while still dealing with heavy commuter traffic.

Nearby Neighborhoods Comparison

NeighborhoodsCostSchoolsSafetyWalkability
Tysons High Excellent Safe Good
McLean High Excellent Safe Fair
Vienna Average Excellent Safe Good
Merrifield Average Good Safe Good
Dunn Loring Average Good Safe Fair
Excellent/Good
Average
Poor/Less Safe

Source: RentCafe (market analysis)

Tysons, Tysons Rental Prices

Studio
$1,900 – $2,600
1 bedroom
$2,200 – $3,200
2 bedroom
$2,800 – $4,200
3 bedroom
$4,200 – $6,500

Source: RentCafe (market analysis)

Rentals available in Tysons, Tysons

Tysons, Tysons Schools & Education

Top Public Schools

Spring Hill Elementary School

⭐ 9/10 National Blue Ribbon / FCPS
8201 Lewinsville Rd, McLean, VA 22102
🧭 In-neighborhood (serves much of Tysons ZIP 22102).

Cooper Middle School

8/10 Fairfax County Public Schools
977 Balls Hill Rd, McLean, VA
🧭 ~2.5 mi (short drive from central Tysons)

McLean High School

8/10 FCPS / US News
1633 Davidson Rd, McLean, VA 22101
🧭 ~2–4 mi depending on Tysons subarea

Top Private Schools

The Madeira School

Not rated School website
8328 Georgetown Pike, McLean, VA 22102
🧭 ~3–4 mi (private college-preparatory boarding/day school)

The Potomac School

Not rated School website
1301 Potomac School Rd (McLean area)
🧭 ~5–6 mi (serves many Northern VA families)

Source: Fairfax County Public Schools / National Blue Ribbon announcements

Tysons, Tysons Safety & Crime Overview

Safe

Tysons is a busy commercial district with lower violent‑crime rates than many large cities but higher property‑crime and retail theft incidents in high‑traffic areas (malls, transit hubs). Fairfax County and private mall/security teams actively patrol Tysons; expect concentrated property‑crime hotspots around Tysons Corner Center and garages and occasional high‑profile incidents reported by regional media.

Source: Fairfax County Police / local reporting

Tysons, Tysons Walkability, Transit & Bike Scores

Walk Score ~62
Somewhat Walkable / Good for short errands (many recent developments cluster around Metro stations).
Transit Score ~70
Good Transit — four Silver Line Metro stations in Tysons give frequent rail access to Arlington, DC and Reston/Ashburn.
Bike Score ~45
Somewhat Bikeable — limited protected bike lanes; busy arterials (Routes 7 and 123) make biking challenging in places.
30-45 min
Transit to Downtown DC (Metro Center / Metro core) typically runs ~30–45 minutes depending on transfers and time of day (Silver Line + transfer).

Source: WalkScore and WMATA / Fairfax County transportation pages

Tysons, Tysons Summary

Overview

Tysons is Northern Virginia’s prime edge‑city: an employment engine with high-rise office and residential development clustered around the Silver Line. It blends major retail (Tysons Corner Center, Tysons Galleria), corporate campuses, and rapidly growing mixed‑use districts such as The Boro and Scotts Run. Rents are among the highest in Fairfax County; transit access improved dramatically after the Silver Line, but congestion remains a top concern.

Key Features

  • Major commercial hub: Home to Tysons Corner Center, Tysons Galleria, and multiple corporate headquarters — strong daytime economy and retail draw.
  • Transit-connected: Four Silver Line stations make Tysons uniquely rail-connected for a suburban employment center.
  • Active redevelopment: Large-scale projects (The Boro, Scotts Run) are creating walkable, mixed-use neighborhoods with new housing and parks.
  • Higher cost of living: Rents and housing costs run well above national averages due to demand and proximity to DC.

Housing Snapshot

  • Predominantly high-density multifamily (mid/high-rise apartments and condos) with accelerating new development.
  • Rents above Fairfax County median — 1BR median typically in the low‑$2,000s to low‑$3,000s range (varies by building and subarea).
  • Strong demand from professionals working in nearby corporate campuses; limited workforce housing supply in core Tysons.

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