Golf at the front door, Frisco's newest chapter all around
Fields is the part of Frisco that's still being drawn. The master plan wraps around the PGA of America's new headquarters on the city's north side, and the whole area carries that early-chapter energy: fresh streets, model homes with the tags still on, and neighbors who all arrived within a year or two of each other. If you want a North Texas address where everything is new — including the friendships — this is it.
Day to day, that means golf on the horizon, trail connections threading between new sections, and a short run down the tollway when you need the rest of the metroplex. Legacy West in Plano sits about 10 minutes away; DFW Airport is about 26. Kids fold into Frisco ISD, and the grocery-and-coffee layer is filling in fast around the community's edges — a little more of it every season.
Early phases usually price below later ones, but you'll live with construction traffic longer and wait on amenities. Later phases cost more and deliver a more finished feel. Decide which trade you prefer before you fall for a floor plan.
Golf-adjacent, greenbelt, and corner homesites carry lot premiums that aren't always in the advertised base price. Ask for the lot-premium sheet up front, and remember model homes show upgraded everything — get the included-features list in writing before you budget.
Master-planned communities fund amenities through HOA dues, and new ones often layer in additional assessments. Ask exactly what the monthly obligation covers, what's built versus promised, and when planned amenities are scheduled to deliver — then keep those answers with your contract.