Search live NTREIS new-construction listings across North Texas, then browse the master-planned communities taking contracts right now. Filtered to new builds only.
33 communities taking contracts across North Texas. Filter by county, then step into the community report. From-prices and builder counts are editorial — verify current numbers with the sales office.
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.
Buying a new home works differently than buying resale. The sticker price is a starting point, the fine print carries real recurring costs, and the details vary by builder and by lot. Here is what North Texas buyers check before they sign.
A brand-new home means current codes, a fresh mechanical system, and finishes you help choose. It can also mean a construction timeline, an unfinished street, and landscaping you install yourself. Resale gets you mature trees and a settled neighborhood, often at a lower price per square foot. Neither is better in the abstract; it depends on how much you value new versus established.
The advertised 'from' price is usually a base plan on a standard lot. Structural options, a premium or larger lot, design-center selections, and upgrades can move the final number well above base. Ask for a realistic all-in estimate for the plan and lot you actually want before you compare communities on price alone.
Inventory or 'quick move-in' homes are already under construction or finished, so you trade some choice for a known price and a near-term close. Building to order lets you pick the plan, lot, and finishes, but the timeline and final cost are less certain. Decide which matters more to you, then ask what each community actually has available.
Builders sometimes offer rate buydowns, closing-cost help, or design credits, often tied to using their preferred lender or title company. These change frequently and vary by home. Get any current offer in writing, and compare the preferred-lender rate and fees against an outside lender so you know the true cost of the incentive.
Many master-planned communities sit in a MUD or PID that repays infrastructure through your tax bill or a separate assessment, on top of HOA dues. These are real recurring costs. Ask for the district disclosures, the current HOA dues and what they cover, and the full estimated tax rate for the specific address, not a metro average.
You can and generally should hire your own independent inspector on a new home, including before drywall and at final walkthrough, separate from the municipal inspections. Read the builder's warranty to see what is covered and for how long, how claims are handled, and whether disputes go to arbitration. New does not mean flawless.
Early phases often border future sections, so the quiet lot you tour today may face active construction, and planned amenities or schools may not be built yet. Ask which phase a lot is in, what is platted next to it, and which amenities are actually finished versus still on the site plan.
A community can span more than one attendance zone, and district boundaries shift as new schools open. Do not rely on a brochure or a nearby home. Confirm the elementary, middle, and high school for the exact lot or address directly with the school district before you rely on it.
This is general information for North Texas new-construction buyers, not legal, tax, or financial advice, and not a statement about any specific community, builder, incentive, phase, or school assignment. Confirm current terms and figures with the builder, the district, and the governing city or county before you rely on them.
We’ll help you compare builder offers, available inventory, and the questions worth asking before you visit the models.