Homeownership is reachable..

Casa Grande's Most Affordable New Homes

Feeling priced out? Casa Grande tells a different story. I toured the lowest-priced new build from three different builders — from a no-HOA option to a community with its own water park — so you can see how much home your money actually buys just south of Maricopa.

Century Complete — the no-HOA option

In southern Casa Grande, Century Complete's entry home was the Emerald: 3 bed / 2 bath, 1,656 sq ft, two-car garage, starting around $264,000 (it varies). The headline is no HOA — unusual for a newer community. Upside: no dues, no restrictions. Downside: no shared amenities and a less cohesive, less master-planned feel. It sits near the lovely Casa Grande Mountain Park, with a nice mountain view. A couple of honest notes: it has granite counters (thin but fine for most), one walk-in closet (in the primary), and it wasn't even plumbed for a water softener — worth knowing, since our water is hard.

KB Home at Royal Vista — simple & open

Up north, KB Home builds at Royal Vista. Their cheapest was the aptly named Plan 1330 (yep, 1,330 sq ft), 3 bed / 2 bath, two-car garage, around $316,000. HOA is about $98/month (parks, walking/biking paths, basketball court). An open floor plan ties the kitchen, living, and entry together; there's a pantry, a good island, new appliances (no fridge, as usual), and — a nice surprise — a water softener was in. No walk-in closet in the primary at this price point, and the counters aren't stone, but for the money it's hard to beat. (Their reps mentioned another KB community closing out with a handful of homes under $300K — those go fast.)

Meritage at The Enclave (Mission Royale) — the amenity play

Back south, Meritage's most affordable home sits in The Enclave at Mission Royale — their newer section inside the established Mission Royale community. The Maxwell: 3 bed / 2 bath, two-car garage, about $330,000. The HOA is higher (~$142/month), but you get a water park with a large beach-entry pool and slide, sand volleyball, BBQ ramadas, and walking paths. Inside, I liked the finishes best of the three — stone countertops, a gas range, a pantry, a tankless water heater (and plumbed for soft water), a good-sized primary with a real walk-in closet. As always, the backyard comes as dirt.

The takeaway

There's a lot of anxiety out there that a home is simply out of reach. Casa Grande pushes back on that — genuinely attainable new builds (and plenty of similarly-priced resale homes) that most people don't realize exist. If you're weighing Casa Grande against Maricopa, compare with the Maricopa most-affordable new homes tour, and see the cost-of-living guide for the bigger budget picture. Whether it's a starter or your next step up, let's figure out what's actually within reach for you.

Casa Grande new homes, answered

How much do new homes cost in Casa Grande, AZ?

When I filmed, the entry-level new builds ran roughly $264,000 to $330,000 across three builders - Century Complete (the Emerald, ~$264K), KB Home at Royal Vista (Plan 1330, ~$316K), and Meritage at The Enclave at Mission Royale (the Maxwell, ~$330K). Prices vary by lot and move with the market, and resale homes are often similar or lower - ask me for current numbers.

Are there new-build communities without an HOA in Casa Grande?

Yes - Century Complete's community had no HOA, which is unusual for newer construction. The upside is no HOA dues or restrictions; the trade-off is no shared amenities (parks, pools) and a less cohesive, less master-planned feel. It sits near the beautiful Casa Grande Mountain Park, though.

What do the HOAs include at these communities?

KB Home's Royal Vista ran about $98/month for park maintenance, walking and biking paths, and a basketball court. Meritage's Enclave at Mission Royale was higher at about $142/month - but you get a water park with a large beach-entry pool and water slide, sand volleyball, BBQ ramadas, and walking paths woven through the community.

Do these new homes come with a water softener?

It varies, and it matters because the water here is hard. Meritage's home had a tankless water heater and was plumbed for a softener; KB's had one installed; Century Complete's wasn't even pre-plumbed for it. Always confirm per home - a softener is an easy add if the plumbing is roughed in, and pricier if it isn't.

Is Casa Grande cheaper than Maricopa or Phoenix?

Casa Grande is one of the more affordable options in the region - broadly comparable to Maricopa on an entry-level new build, and well below the Phoenix metro. If you're weighing the two, see my Maricopa new-homes comparison; either way, there are genuinely attainable options here.

Curious what's within reach?

Tell me your budget and I'll show you what an attainable new (or resale) home looks like in Casa Grande or Maricopa — no pressure, no sugarcoating. Free Zoom.

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