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Master-planned communities taking contracts right now — filter by county, then step into the community report. Prices & builder counts are editorial — verify with sales offices.
Front-porch streets, a coworking barn, and a packed events lawn.
Resort pool, fishing lakes, and an on-site elementary.
Hilltop amenity village with a 35-acre central park off 380.
The farm-themed plan — community garden, farmstand, and all.
Fiber-first master plan on 7,200 west-side acres.
Lakes, a sailing center, and River Legacy trail links.
Rolling-hill value southwest of the 820 loop.
Northwest ISD value at the 287/114 junction.
New rooftops a mile from the pink courthouse.
Wrapped around the new PGA of America headquarters.
Trail-laced plan with its own on-site elementary.
The crystal lagoon that started the amenity arms race.
Riverside trails and pocket parks up US-75.
Lagoon living at Collin County’s entry price.
New streets a minute off the PGBT.
Townhomes in the new town-center district.
Deep value and stacked amenities east on US-80.
Fairways and a lagoon above Ray Hubbard.
New-urbanist blocks near Heritage High.
Entry-level pricing on the metro's quiet northeast edge.
One of the northeast corridor's biggest master plans, priced to move.
Mesquite's big master plan — east-side scale at close-in prices.
Princeton's 380-corridor grower with starter-friendly pricing.
A patchwork of plans and price points in fast-growing Celina.
Park-laced streets in the middle of the Celina boom.
A rare big new plan inside Denton proper.
Forney's next wave — mid-priced and moving quickly.
Anna's parkside starter play along the 75 corridor.
Compact plans and first-home pricing in booming Anna.
A quieter, pricier corner of the Celina boom.
Far-north Fort Worth volume building at entry prices.
Ellis County elbow room straight down I-35E.
A builder-rich ranch plan on Fort Worth's fast-growing rim.
“We walk the blocks, drive the commutes, and read the tax rates so your shortlist is actually short.”
The metroplex adds a small city's worth of people every year, and every one of them asks the same question: where, exactly? Discover DFW is the answer machine — 90 city reports behind one map, written like a local explains it over coffee, with the numbers to back it up.