Meyerbrook is Plano’s big-lot sleeper — single-family homes from 1969–1991 on lots approaching an acre, west of Little Rock Road, with no HOA reported and recent sales from the mid $200s to the high $300s.
Meyerbrook predates Plano’s subdivision era — homes here went up between 1969 and 1991 west of Little Rock Road, south of Miller Road, on lots that run up to nearly nine-tenths of an acre. That combination — established construction, genuinely large lots, and no reported association — barely exists anymore in Kendall County at any price, let alone at Meyerbrook’s.
The homes are three- and four-bedroom singles from about 1,620 to 2,500 square feet: ranches, split-levels, and traditional two-stories from the era when builders poured deep footprints on wide lots. Condition varies home to home after five decades, which is exactly where the opportunity lives — updated Meyerbrook homes punch far above their price, and tired ones price honestly enough to fund the renovation.
Recent sales tell the range: from $235K for original-condition homes to $380K for updated ones, with an occasional outlier asking toward the high $400s on the strength of land and updates. For buyers whose checklist reads ‘yard, trees, no HOA, room for the shop,’ this is one of the first streetsets we drive. As with any home of this era, we scope the mechanical and service-line history early and price it into the offer.
Pricing reflects Meyerbrook sales and active listings as of mid-2026.
Era-original ranches, split-levels, and two-stories priced for their condition — the county’s rare chance at a near-acre lot below $300K. Renovation math here is honest: land value holds the floor.
See listings →Renovated Meyerbrook homes — new kitchens, mechanicals, and finishes on the same big lots — recently reaching $380K, with an occasional larger or exceptional listing asking more.
See listings →A dedicated Meyerbrook listings feed is coming soon. In the meantime, browse every active Plano listing — updated daily from the MLS — and tell us you’re watching Meyerbrook; we’ll alert you the moment anything lists here.
Lots up to about nine-tenths of an acre with five decades of tree growth — garden, shop, and play space the modern quarter-acre can’t fake.
No association dues or architectural committee reported — fence it, park the trailer, plant the orchard. We still verify parcel specifics as standard practice.
Minutes to US 34, downtown Plano, and the Amtrak station; Sandwich’s hospital and services are about ten minutes west.
Ranches, split-levels, and two-stories instead of repeated elevations — and single-level options that downsizers watch for.
Meyerbrook feeds Plano CUSD 88’s grade-band campuses. School names, grades, and locations are provided as facts only — verify current attendance boundaries with the district, as they can change.
The district’s early-childhood campus, where Plano students begin. Confirm current attendance boundaries with CUSD 88 for any specific address.
CUSD 88 is grade-banded: Centennial serves grades 2–3 and Emily G. Johns grades 4–6, both minutes away in town — Emily G. Johns sits adjacent to the Lakewood Springs community.
Students finish with Plano Middle School and Plano High School, home of the Reapers. Verify assignment per address with the district.
Downtown Plano’s Main Street and Amtrak station sit about five minutes east; US 34 errands, including the Walmart Supercenter, are minutes away.
US 34 runs east to Yorkville (~15 minutes) and west to Sandwich (~10); Route 47 north reaches I-88 at Sugar Grove in roughly 25 minutes from this side of town.
Drive 80–90 minutes via Route 47 and I-88, ride Amtrak from downtown Plano (about 65–75 minutes, twice daily), or drive ~30–35 minutes to Aurora for Metra BNSF service.
Our office is minutes from Meyerbrook, and we track every sale in the community. Get real answers about pricing, fees, and what’s coming to market.