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.
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.
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.)
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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