O'Neil Property Group
Plano Home Search

Plano Homes with Land

Live Plano listings updated daily from the MLS — plus what local buyers should know before making a move.

~$290K
Median Sale Price
12,700+
Population
~65 min
Amtrak to Chicago
5★
Google Rating

About Plano Homes with Land

Between the quarter-acre subdivision standard and full acreage estates sits a wide Plano middle: oversized lots. Woodwind’s third-acre yards, Meyerbrook’s near-acre spreads, in-town double lots, and the buildable vacant parcels that still list here regularly — from $60K lots to $850K land assemblies. If you want room for the garden, the shop, or a future build without estate pricing, Plano’s lot inventory is the county’s most varied.

Looking for help narrowing down your search? Call or text Kealan at 630-381-4995 for a personalized list of homes that match your budget and priorities.

Plano Homes with Land — Updated Daily

Active listings pulled directly from the MLS.

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What You Can Expect from Plano Homes with Land

Expect established homes on 0.3–0.9-acre lots mostly between $260K and $450K, plus a steady trickle of vacant land: in-town infill lots, developed subdivision lots (Lakewood Springs still holds vacant developed lots), and rural parcels. Mature trees come standard in the older neighborhoods — something the 2000s subdivisions are still growing into.

Plano Neighborhoods & Local Insight

Woodwind is the value anchor — single-family homes on lots around a third of an acre recently trading in the $260s–$280s. Meyerbrook steps up to nearly an acre without leaving town services behind. For land buyers, the interesting story is the vacant developed lots in and around Lakewood Springs: infrastructure in place, waiting on the next building cycle.

Buyer Tips & Financing

On oversized-lot homes, confirm where the lot lines actually run — surveys surprise people in the older neighborhoods. On vacant land, diligence is everything: utilities at the street, zoning, flood mapping near the river, and whether impact fees or SSA obligations attach. We’ve walked buyers through all of it and keep the county contacts current.

Good to Know Before You Buy

Oversized-lot homes photograph like ordinary listings and then show like something better — which is why they often outperform their list price once buyers stand in the yard. If you’re a land buyer, patience pays: parcels here can sit, and motivated sellers of long-held lots negotiate.

Frequently Asked Questions

What counts as an oversized lot in Plano?
Anything meaningfully past the quarter-acre subdivision standard — Woodwind’s third-acre lots, Meyerbrook’s near-acre spreads, and in-town double lots all qualify.
Can I still buy a buildable lot in Plano?
Yes — in-town infill lots, vacant developed subdivision lots, and rural parcels all list periodically, from roughly $60K upward depending on location and utilities.
What diligence applies to vacant land?
Utilities, zoning, flood mapping near the Fox River, survey, and any SSA or impact-fee obligations. We assemble the checklist parcel by parcel.
Which neighborhoods have the biggest yards?
Woodwind and Meyerbrook lead among in-town subdivisions; Sugar Brook, Schaefer Woods, and the rural fringe take over from there.
Do bigger lots add resale value in Plano?
Consistently — oversized lots are scarce across the county and buyers pay for usable outdoor space, mature trees, and room for outbuildings.

Ready to Find Your Plano Home?

Whether you are just starting your search or ready to schedule a showing, Kealan O’Neil is here to help you every step of the way.