Live Plano listings updated daily from the MLS — plus what local buyers should know before making a move.
Single-family homes are Plano’s deepest market, and the range is wider than the town’s size suggests: 19th-century homes near the Amtrak station, 1950s–70s ranches, the big 2000s subdivision wave, 2020–2023 near-new construction, and acre-lot customs — all inside one zip code, most between $250K and $450K. Whatever your budget does elsewhere in Kendall County, it does more of it here in detached form.
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.
Active listings pulled directly from the MLS.
Expect everything from 1,000-square-foot in-town cottages to 3,000+ square-foot subdivision plans and 4,700-square-foot acreage customs. The volume centers on 3- and 4-bed homes from Lakewood Springs (2004–2009), Churchill Farms (mid-2000s), and Lakewood Springs Club (2020–2023), typically $300K–$420K. Below $300K, in-town homes and Woodwind ranches carry the flag; above $450K, it’s acreage in Schaefer Woods, Sugar Brook, and Deer Ridge.
Each pocket has a distinct personality: the in-town grid trades on walkability and character, the 2000s subdivisions on space and amenities, the Club on newness, and the acreage communities on land. School district varies by pocket too — most feed Plano CUSD 88, but Schaefer Woods (Yorkville 115) and Deer Ridge/Sugar Brook (Sandwich 430) differ. We match the pocket to your priorities before we ever tour.
Financing is straightforward across the board — FHA and IHDA at the entry, conventional above. The diligence list changes by era: service lines and mechanicals on pre-1970 homes, roof and HVAC cycles on 2000s stock, warranty transfer on near-new, wells and septic on acreage. Our inspection guidance flexes to match the house.
Detached homes are what everyone moving to Plano comes for, so this segment sets the town’s pace: about three weeks median on market, faster under $350K. Sellers benefit from subdivision-level comps rather than town averages — a Lakewood Springs Club home prices very differently than a same-size 2005 build two streets over.
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.