An honest, on-the-ground relocation guide. Around 80% of the buyers I work with are moving here from out of state — here's the straight version of where Maricopa is, why people land here, and how to buy a home without flying out a half-dozen times.
The City of Maricopa sits in Pinal County, about 35 miles south of Phoenix. The main way in and out is State Route 347 (John Wayne Parkway), which connects north to Interstate 10 and the wider Phoenix metro. Quick myth-buster: the City of Maricopa is not in Maricopa County — that's the separate county where Phoenix is.
It comes down to getting more home for the money. Compared with central Phoenix you'll generally find newer, larger homes for less, master-planned neighborhoods with pools and parks, and a fast-growing but tight-knit community of around 76,000 residents (up from roughly 1,000 in the year 2000). The trade-off is the commute — which is exactly why so many families decide it's worth it.
This is most of what I do. The whole purchase can happen remotely: recorded and live video tours so you really see a home, electronic signing, and a mobile-notary or remote closing — with keys often waiting the week you arrive. You don't have to burn flights and PTO to buy the right house. For the questions buyers ask before they call, see the Maricopa buyer FAQ.
As of this writing, most homes in the City of Maricopa land roughly between $350,000 and $550,000, with real inventory both above and below that range.. so whatever your budget looks like, there's something worth seeing. Two things tend to surprise people: property taxes here run around 0.69% of value, which is low compared to much of the country, and with roughly 14 builders actively building right now, they're running aggressive incentives.. rate buy-downs, closing-cost credits, and design-center allowances.. that can make a new build's monthly payment land lower than you'd expect next to a resale. Prices move, so for today's real numbers in your price range, just reach out to Mike.. he'll pull current listings and what they're actually closing at.
Yes. Most of the buyers Mike works with relocate from out of state and purchase before they ever set foot in Arizona. The process uses recorded and live video tours, electronic document signing, and a mobile-notary or remote closing. Many get their keys the week they land.
Most home purchases close in about 30 to 45 days from accepted contract. Mike helps line that timing up with your lease end or the sale of your current home so you are not paying for two places at once.
The main route is State Route 347 (John Wayne Parkway) north to Interstate 10. It is the city's primary corridor and carries more than 30,000 vehicles a day in peak segments, so weekday rush hours are slow and off-peak driving is smooth. Most residents trade the commute for a newer, larger home.
No. The City of Maricopa is in Pinal County, about 35 miles south of Phoenix. Maricopa County is the separate, larger county where Phoenix sits, which trips up a lot of people relocating here.
Generally a newer and larger home for less. As of April 2026 the median new-construction price in Maricopa was about $382,000, and resale homes often run lower, which is a big part of why families relocate here from pricier metros.
Plenty, beyond the public district. Opinions on the public schools vary - some families love them, others don’t - so I always point people to greatschools.org to judge for themselves. Arizona is very charter-friendly (Heritage Academy and Legacy Traditional are popular), and there’s a growing wave of micro-schools: small, personalized settings of roughly 5 to 20 kids, often tuition-free thanks to Arizona’s education-savings funds. Some families even bus their kids to the highly rated Kyrene district to the north. If schooling is a deciding factor, tell me your situation and I’ll help you sort the options.
Join the local Facebook groups and read - you’ll pick up what people love and what they grumble about. One honest heads-up: don’t announce that you’re moving here. Those threads tend to attract a few folks who pile on (we’re full, the 347, and so on), and it isn’t representative - the community is genuinely friendly in person. Lurk, read, ask specific questions, and reach out to me for the straight version.
We'll hop on a free Zoom or meet in person here in town. Bring your timeline, your questions, and your maybes. No pressure, and no sugarcoating.
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