Reynoldsburg is an eastern suburb of Columbus, Ohio, and the directory's 1,266 listings here are spread across 6 ZIP codes. The mix reads like a residential-suburb services economy with the kind of healthcare and dental concentration that fits an older, settled population base.
Restaurants lead at 113 listings, the standard top-category opener for suburban Ohio. Salons at 71 sit in the second tier. Churches at 52 are in line for a suburban Midwestern city this size. The category that stands out is home healthcare at 35 listings, which is elevated for a city of Reynoldsburg's population, and reflects both the demographic skew of the area and the broader expansion of in-home care across central Ohio over the past decade. Dentists at 26 also runs high for the city size, and the dental practices concentrate near the major medical corridors that connect Reynoldsburg to the Mt. Carmel East and Mt. Carmel Diley Ridge networks.
Real estate at 30 and insurance agencies at 25 fill out the standard professional middle tier. The 37 landmark listings include the city's parks, historic sites, and the Tomato Festival venue that anchors local civic identity each summer.
The residential trade work in Reynoldsburg often involves homes built between the 1950s and the 1980s, the bulk of the city's housing stock. That generates a steady flow of HVAC replacements, panel upgrades, kitchen and bath remodels, and roofing work tied to the typical lifecycle of suburban housing of that era. Pricing for these trades typically runs slightly below the central Columbus average and well below the New Albany or Bexley premium markets.
Home healthcare operators in central Ohio fall under several layers of licensing and certification, including state Medicaid certification for agencies serving that population and separate certification for non-medical home care. Verify status at the Ohio Department of Health and the Ohio Department of Medicaid before contracting with an agency for elder or post-surgical care.
Ohio trade licensing for contractors runs through the state's industrial compliance board for several specialty trades, with general contracting handled at the city or county level. Verify the relevant license before signing on any major work, and confirm that the operator carries the liability and workers' compensation coverage that local code requires.