What Is My Home Worth in Prosper, TX?

Kaitlin Lovern, North Dallas Realtor

Prosper Seller Guide

What Is My Home Worth in Prosper, TX?

Prosper is the one core North Dallas city where the biggest competition for your resale is not another resale. It is a builder down the street, cutting price and buying down the rate. Here is how Prosper homes are actually valued in 2026, and how to get a real number for yours.

By Kaitlin Lovern· July 2026· 16 min read· Updated for 2026
Kaitlin Lovern, founder and lead REALTOR of the Kaitlin Lovern Real Estate Team in Prosper, TX
$255M+
Career Volume
400+
Families Served
D Magazine Best Realtor
Top 1%
REALTORS® Nationwide

In Prosper, an online estimate is not just a rough guess, it is missing the single biggest force acting on your home’s value right now: new construction. The honest answer to “what is my home worth” is the same one we give in every North Dallas city, no single number is your value, a true number comes from a local comparative market analysis, measured against homes that have actually sold near you and adjusted for condition, upgrades, and current demand.

But in Prosper specifically, that analysis has to account for something an algorithm cannot see at all. Builders across Prosper and neighboring Celina are cutting prices and buying down mortgage rates to move standing inventory, with base rates advertised as low as 3.99% on a 30-year loan before a temporary buydown drops the first-year payment even further (D.R. Horton, 2026). If your resale is priced as though that buyer is not choosing between your house and a brand-new one two miles away, you are pricing against a market that no longer exists. Your number lives inside that reality, not on a slider.

Why the online estimate is only a starting point

An automated estimate, the kind you see on the big portals, is an algorithm running on public records and a handful of nearby sales. It does not know that you replaced the roof, refinished the floors, or that the comparable two streets over backs to a busy road while yours backs to a greenbelt. It is a guess built from the outside of your house. That is fine as a conversation starter. It is not a price.

In Prosper, that gap between a guess and a price is wider than in most North Dallas cities, because the market itself has softened. The 75078 ZIP’s median sale price sat at roughly $804,761 in May 2026, down about 1.9% year over year (Redfin, 2026), while the median list price ran closer to $879,000 (Redfin, 2026, cited via The Cliff Freeman Group, February 2026). Homes in 75078 have been taking a median of around 49.5 to 74 days to sell depending on the reporting window, up from about 36 days a year earlier (Orchard, 2026; Redfin, 2026).

Across Collin County more broadly, active listings were up more than 8% year over year and nearly 88% over three years, with 74.3% of sales closing under list price (Collin County market data, February 2026). An algorithm trained on last year’s pace will overstate your home’s value in a market that has genuinely cooled and gotten more competitive for sellers.

Greatness is demonstrated, not declared. The same is true of price. You prove a number with the right comparable sales, not by guessing.

Being hyperlocal matters most in a market like this. North of 635 is a different world from Dallas proper, and Prosper in 2026 is its own story inside that world, a fast-growing town where new construction is not a footnote in your valuation, it is often the headline. Two homes with identical square footage, one resale in an established Prosper neighborhood and one three streets over in a builder’s active community, can carry very different timelines and very different pricing logic for reasons an algorithm flattens into noise entirely.

The honest version: an estimate tells you the neighborhood. A comparative market analysis tells you the house, and in Prosper, it tells you what the builder down the street is doing to your buyer pool. Only one of those is the number you can actually list, market, and sell on.

Your Client Experience

Want a real number, not a guess?

To get an accurate, no-pressure valuation of your Prosper home, call the Kaitlin Lovern Team at 214.429.4907, or request your home value online.

How are builders affecting home values in Prosper?

Here is what most Prosper sellers do not see until they are already sitting on the market. Builders across Prosper and Celina are not quietly holding the line on price. They are actively cutting it, and pairing those cuts with mortgage rate buydowns aggressive enough to change a buyer’s monthly payment math entirely. D.R. Horton has advertised a 30-year FHA base rate of 3.99%, dropped further by a 2/1 buydown structure to roughly 1.99% in year one and 2.99% in year two (D.R. Horton, 2026). M/I Homes in Celina has offered a similar 2/1 buydown structure with a first-year rate below 3% on a 30-year FHA loan, though the exact terms shift with each incentive cycle (M/I Homes, 2026).

Across Collin County, roughly 70% of new-home sales now include a rate buydown or another structured incentive, pushing the effective rate a buyer experiences closer to 5.5% instead of the prevailing market rate (Collin County new-construction market data, 2026), and builders are layering on closing cost assistance of $10,000 to $25,000, design center credits of $15,000 to $30,000, and lot premium waivers on top of that (Collin County new-construction market data, 2026).

That is not a marginal advantage. A buyer choosing between your resale at market rate and a brand-new home three streets over with a builder-bought rate down in the 3s or 4s is doing real math, and the new-construction option often wins it on monthly payment alone, even at a similar or higher sticker price. This is our most repeated hyperlocal read on this market: resale sellers who price and present as though that competition does not exist are the ones who sit. The ones who win price correctly against it and target the buyer who needs a home now, not the buyer willing to wait the four to seven months a typical production build in Prosper’s growth corridors takes.

What this means for your resale listing

Two things follow directly from this. First, your home has to show like a model home from day one: a fresh stain on the front door, no finger traffic on the light switches, nothing that reminds a buyer they are choosing “used” over “new” for the same or more money. Second, your price has to be set with the builder’s incentive already priced in, not discovered by a buyer’s lender three weeks into a listing. A resale priced $20,000 too high because it ignores a builder’s rate buydown down the street is not overpriced by $20,000, it is overpriced by the entire monthly-payment gap that buydown creates.

Prosper Sellers

See your home through a buyer’s eyes

We will walk your home, price it against the real competition, including new construction, and show you the number plus the plan to reach it. No obligation, no pressure.

How does new construction compare to resale by price tier?

Prosper is not one market any more than Frisco or McKinney is, and here that is not primarily a resale-versus-resale story, it is a new-construction-versus-resale story. Instead of a single citywide median hiding the real pace, the more useful lens in Prosper right now is how differently your home moves depending on where its price sits against active new-construction competition and against the luxury tier, where builder incentives matter far less.

Price tierWhat’s happeningMedian days on market
Entry-level, ~$595KHeaviest builder-incentive competition; strong absorption from move-up and relocating buyers*Fastest-moving tier of the three
Citywide, ~$805K median sale / ~$879K median listBroad resale + new-construction competition; 38% of active listings carrying a price reduction**~49.5–74 days
Luxury, ~$1.35M+Smaller buyer pool less swayed by builder rate buydowns; presentation and story matter most~42 days

* The entry tier is where builders concentrate their steepest rate buydowns and closing-cost incentives, which is also where resale sellers feel the most direct pricing pressure (Redfin, 2026; The Cliff Freeman Group, February 2026). ** Median sale price $804,761, down 1.9% year over year; roughly 38% of active 75078 listings had a price reduction as of the most recent snapshot (Redfin, 2026; The Cliff Freeman Group, February 2026).

Read that table and the counterintuitive part jumps out. The luxury tier, at roughly 42 days, is moving faster than the broad middle of the market. That is not because $1.35 million homes are easy sells, it is because luxury buyers are a smaller, more decision-ready pool who are far less swayed by a builder’s rate buydown than an entry-level buyer stretching for a payment. Meanwhile the entry tier, where builder competition is fiercest, still shows strong absorption because there is genuine demand from buyers who need a home now, they are simply choosing between your resale and a builder’s incentive package every time they look. If you are pricing in the middle of the market, your real competition is not just the house down the block that sold last month. It is whichever builder community is actively running incentives this quarter.

What are the 5 things that actually move a Prosper home’s value?

When we prepare a valuation, these are the levers that decide whether your home lands at the top of its range or the bottom, and in a market shaped this heavily by new construction, they carry more weight than usual.

1. Condition and first impression

Buyers decide how they feel about a home in the first thirty seconds, and in Prosper they are often walking in straight from a builder’s model home. We coach our sellers to present like one: a fresh stain on the front door, no finger traffic on the light switches, light pouring into clean rooms. Condition is the fastest way to move your number up or down, and it is almost entirely in your control before you list.

2. New-construction competition

New-construction competition is the single biggest lever in Prosper right now. Builders are cutting price and buying down rates aggressively, with base rates advertised down in the 3s and effective incentive rates across Collin County closer to 5.5% once buydowns are factored in (D.R. Horton, 2026; Collin County new-construction market data, 2026). A buyer can get into a brand-new home with a builder-bought interest rate that beats what your resale buyer will qualify for at market rate. If your home is priced as if that competition does not exist, it sits. Pricing correctly against it, and targeting the buyer who needs a home now rather than waiting the four to seven months a typical production build takes, is how resale wins in this market.

3. Location and school zone

Inside Prosper, your specific neighborhood and attendance zone are part of your value. Lot size, whether you back to a greenbelt or a neighbor’s fence, and proximity to the amenities people actually use all factor in. Relocating buyers, in particular, are often surprised by Texas lot sizes and by realistic commute times, so the right buyer for your street is not always the obvious one.

4. Buyer demand and timing

Demand sets the ceiling, and it has cooled from where it was at the peak. With the 30-year fixed mortgage rate at 6.49% (Freddie Mac PMMS, June 2026) and Collin County active listings up more than 8% year over year (Collin County market data, February 2026), buyers have real choice, both among resales and against active builder incentives. Prosper homes were taking a median of roughly 49.5 to 74 days to sell in 2026 (Orchard, 2026; Redfin, 2026), a market that rewards correct pricing against both kinds of competition and punishes wishful pricing against either.

5. Marketing and presentation

We look at each property as a piece of art in our portfolio. The value a great listing agent adds is in selling a feeling through the storytelling of the property, then putting it in front of the right buyer network. This is not transactional for us. The first impression, the photography, the way the home is positioned, all of it protects your number once you are live, and it matters even more when the buyer touring your resale toured a builder’s model home the same weekend.

North Dallas Sellers

Price against the real competition

We will show you exactly what the builders near you are offering, and price your home to win against it, not ignore it.

What it costs to own in Prosper, and why that shapes your price

Value is not only what your home is worth on paper. It is also what a buyer can afford to pay each month, and in Texas, property taxes are a big part of that math, especially in Prosper, where the combined rate is the highest of the core North Dallas cities we cover. Buyers, especially the California and Canadian relocating families we work with, are often surprised by how Texas structures property taxes, and a builder’s rate buydown does not change what the buyer owes the taxing authorities every year.

Taxing entity (Collin County / Prosper ISD)FY2025-26 rate per $100
Town of Prosper0.505000
Collin County0.149343
Collin College0.081220
Prosper ISD1.214100
Combined (before homestead exemption)≈ 1.949663 (~1.95%)

All figures are the published rates for fiscal year 2025-26 (Town of Prosper adopted budget; Prosper ISD; Collin County). A homestead exemption lowers what an owner-occupant actually pays. At roughly 1.95% combined, Prosper carries the highest property tax rate of the core North Dallas cities we track, noticeably above Frisco’s roughly 1.68% and McKinney’s roughly 1.75%, driven mainly by Prosper ISD’s higher rate as the district builds out schools for a fast-growing town.

That difference is real money in a buyer’s monthly payment, and it is exactly the kind of cost a builder’s advertised rate buydown can obscure if a buyer is not modeling taxes and insurance alongside the mortgage. The point for a seller is simple: a buyer’s true monthly cost, taxes plus insurance plus whatever rate they actually qualify for, sets the ceiling on what they will offer, whether they are buying your resale or a builder’s spec home down the road. Pricing without accounting for it is how a home ends up reduced twice.

How to get a real number for your home

Buying or selling a house is a lot like eating an elephant. You do it one step at a time. In a market where your real competition is a builder’s incentive package as much as another resale, the order below matters even more.

Step 1: Get a local CMA, not just an estimate

Start with a comparative market analysis from an agent who actually sells in Prosper and tracks what builders in your specific area are offering this month. This is the difference between a guess and a price.

Step 2: Walk the home with that agent

The valuation gets sharper the moment someone stands in your kitchen. Condition, light, layout, and the small things buyers notice, especially buyers who just walked through a model home, all adjust the number up or down.

Step 3: Price against the real competition, including new construction

Your home is not competing only with other resales. It is competing with the builder down the road and their rate buydown. A correct price accounts for both, not just the comps that closed last quarter.

Step 4: Build a marketing plan that protects the number

The right list price only matters if the presentation supports it. Photography, staging guidance, and positioning protect your value from the first day on market, when buyer attention, and buyer comparison to new construction, is highest.

Greatness is demonstrated, not declared

Get your Prosper home’s real value

If you are thinking about selling in Prosper, Celina, Frisco, McKinney, Plano, or Allen, the Kaitlin Lovern Team will give you a real, data-backed number and the plan to net the most for your home, even with builders down the street cutting price.

Frequently asked questions

How accurate are online home value estimates in Prosper?

Online estimates are a rough starting point and can be off by tens of thousands of dollars, and Prosper is a harder city than most for an algorithm to get right because it cannot see the builder incentives actively competing against your resale. Estimates run on public records and nearby sales, so they cannot account for your home’s condition, upgrades, or the rate buydown a builder down the street is offering this month. For an accurate number, use a local comparative market analysis instead of a portal estimate.

What is the difference between a Zestimate, an appraisal, and a CMA?

A portal estimate is an automated guess from an algorithm. An appraisal is a licensed appraiser’s opinion of value, usually ordered by a lender after a home is under contract. A comparative market analysis, or CMA, is a real estate agent’s pricing analysis of your specific home against recent comparable sales and current competition, including new construction, adjusted for condition and demand. The CMA is what you price and list on.

Why are builders cutting prices in Prosper and Celina right now?

Builders across Prosper and Celina are competing hard for buyers by cutting prices and offering mortgage rate buydowns, with advertised base rates as low as 3.99% before temporary buydowns push the first-year rate even lower (D.R. Horton, 2026; M/I Homes, 2026). Across Collin County, roughly 70% of new-home sales now include a rate buydown or similar incentive (Collin County new-construction market data, 2026). This directly pressures resale pricing, since a buyer can often get a lower monthly payment on a brand-new home than on a comparably priced resale.

Should I price my Prosper home against new construction?

Yes, and it may be the single most important pricing decision you make. Builders in Prosper and Celina are offering price cuts and rate buydowns steep enough to change a buyer’s monthly payment math, which competes directly with your resale even at a similar sticker price. Pricing as if that competition does not exist is the most common reason a Prosper resale sits. The right strategy prices in the builder’s incentive and targets buyers who need a home now rather than waiting to build.

How much are property taxes on a Prosper home?

For a Prosper home in Collin County and Prosper ISD, the combined fiscal year 2025-26 property tax rate is about 1.949663 per $100 of value, roughly 1.95% before any homestead exemption (Town of Prosper adopted budget; Prosper ISD; Collin County). That is the highest combined rate among the core North Dallas cities we track, above Frisco’s roughly 1.68% and McKinney’s roughly 1.75%, and it is a real cost buyers often underestimate when they are focused only on a builder’s advertised rate.

Is now a good time to sell a house in Prosper?

Now can be a good time to sell in Prosper, with correct pricing that accounts for new-construction competition. Prosper homes were selling in a median of roughly 49.5 to 74 days in 2026, with about 38% of active listings carrying a price reduction (Orchard, 2026; Redfin, 2026; The Cliff Freeman Group, February 2026), and mortgage rates near 6.49% (Freddie Mac PMMS, June 2026). The luxury tier is actually moving faster than the broad middle of the market, since those buyers are less swayed by builder incentives. The honest answer depends on your home, your price tier, and your timeline, which is exactly what a valuation conversation is for.

How do I get a free home valuation from the Kaitlin Lovern Team?

You can request a free, no-obligation valuation at kaitlinlovern.com/sell/, call the Kaitlin Lovern Team at 214.429.4907, or book a 30-minute call. We will walk your home, price it against the real competition, including what builders near you are currently offering, and give you a real number with a plan to reach it.

Kaitlin Lovern, Founder of the Kaitlin Lovern Real Estate Team

About the author

Kaitlin Lovern

Founder & Lead Realtor · Real Brokerage LLC

Kaitlin Lovern founded the Kaitlin Lovern Real Estate Team, where she prices and prepares valuations on real comparable sales, not automated guesses, across Prosper, Celina, Frisco, McKinney, Plano, and Allen. She is ranked in the top 1% of REALTORS® nationwide and is RealTrends Verified (Texas license #0634293). Learn more at kaitlinlovern.com/about, or get your home’s value at kaitlinlovern.com/sell/ or 214.429.4907.

Sources: Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (June 2026); Town of Prosper adopted budget, FY2025-26 tax rate; Prosper ISD adopted tax rate (FY2025-26); Collin County adopted tax rate (FY2025-26); Redfin ZIP 75078 housing market data (2026); Orchard 75078 market report (2026); The Cliff Freeman Group Prosper market update (February 2026); D.R. Horton and M/I Homes builder incentive data (2026); Collin County new-construction market data (2026); related: What Is My Home Worth in Frisco, TX?, Can I Sell My House As-Is in Prosper, TX?

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Tara Goodman

Tara Goodman is a real estate professional that specializes in the booming North Texas towns of Prosper, Celina, McKinney and Frisco. Having bought, sold and rented her own properties for over 25 years – in Tennessee, Virginia and Texas – Tara is a real estate enthusiast with a passion for helping others leverage their real estate dreams and goals to create a life they love.
She believes that integrity, attention to detail, and commitment to a shared vision are essential in helping her clients with some of the largest investments of their lives.

Prior to real estate, Tara has led several non-profit organizations to accomplish their goals in serving the local community. Having earned a bachelor’s degree in Communication Studies and a master’s degree in Leadership, Tara specializes in guiding people, teams, and communities through transitional and pivotal moments. 
 
Tara’s passion for helping others thrive in life extends beyond her own family and career. She is a devoted supporter of several local and global organizations committed to the care and support of under served children. 
 
She has been married to her best friend, Travis for over 25 years and is the proud mama of three fabulous children. She enjoys quiet mornings with her coffee, has a shockingly eclectic love of music, is an avid non-fiction reader, and enjoys life and laughter with her family & friends more than anything else.

Kaitlin Lovern

Kaitlin Lovern, founder of the Kaitlin Lovern Real Estate Team with Real Brokerage LLC, has established herself as a multi–million-dollar producer and a trusted leader in the North Dallas market. Ranked among the top 1% of REALTORS® nationwide, Kaitlin has represented more than 400 families and achieved over $255 million in career sales volume. 

Her dedication to excellence has earned her D Magazine’s Best Realtor® award for 8 consecutive years, along with 128+ 5-star reviews across platforms, reinforcing her reputation for trust, expertise, and results.

Specializing in luxury homes, relocations, first-time buyers, move-up sellers, and downsizing clients, Kaitlin believes luxury isn’t defined by a price tag but by the quality of service and experience each client receives. She proudly serves clients across Frisco, Celina, McKinney, Prosper, Plano, Allen, and the surrounding North Dallas suburbs, combining innovative marketing strategies with deep local knowledge to deliver superior outcomes.

Since forming her team, Kaitlin has cultivated a culture of professionalism, collaboration, and continual growth. Guided by her core values—remarkable service, presentation with style, authentic partnerships, and a true team mindset—she ensures every client benefits from a seamless and personalized real estate journey. Whether buying a first home or selling a luxury estate, Kaitlin Lovern is known for delivering results with passion, professionalism, and integrity.

Renee Runyon

Renee is a life-long resident of the Dallas-Fort Worth area. She earned a business degree from the University of Texas at Dallas and began her successful real estate career in 2002 while her two daughters were in high school. Renee’s extensive expertise includes real estate sales, management, training, and transaction coordination. She has literally been exposed to hundreds of real estate transactions over the course of her career. Education and constant growth, along with commitment to excellence in customer service have perpetuated her continued success.

Renee understands what it is like to stand in her clients’ shoes. Relocating several times and selling houses on her own has afforded Renee a sensitivity towards her clients’ journey. She navigated her two children through Plano ISD, serving on several administrative committees, and chairing extra-curricular organizations. Renee has gained a full understanding of the diverse needs of families in the community.
In the past twenty-two years, Renee has become an esteemed Realtor, highly regarded by her clients and professionals in the field.

10 fun facts:
1. I have 3 fabulous grandchildren, one girl and two boys, ages 8, 6 & 9 months. I feel so lucky that they live close by so I can see them often.
2. I enjoy cooking and giving dinner parties for our friends. Decorating the table is the most fun!
3. Gardening is a passion of mine. When I’m gardening, I forget about everything else and I love creating something beautiful.
4. I make my own ice cream. My specialties include Bourbon Vanilla, Butter Pecan, Chunky Monkey as well as good ole Vanilla & Chocolate.
5. Definitely a beach over mountains! We try to get to the beach a couple of times a year. It helps that our daughter lives in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico. It was a favorite destination of ours even before she moved there.
6. I love Cocker Spaniels and have had a spaniel in my life since I was 20! Jaxx, my newest fur baby to love, is #6.
7. One of my distant relatives was an Alamo hero! Ever heard of Ben Milam?
8. Pilates is my exercise of choice, but I’ve vowed to master Pickleball this year! Seems like everybody is doing it these days!
9. Last year, we checked off a bucket list item – a 14 day Mediterranean cruise. Now I’ve got the cruise bug big time! Can’t wait for the next one!
10. My middle name is None. My parents decided not to give me a middle name so my mom wrote “none” in the middle name space and it stuck.

Jennifer Ahart

Jen was raised in Dallas and after living in various states across the U.S., her heart is undeniably tied to Texas. Jen moved to Houston with their spouse and children 11 years ago, and later relocated to DFW in 2023, she cherishes the warmth of Texan people, a distinctive quality that sets the state apart. Jen has been working in real estate for five years after realizing that helping others find their perfect home .  She revels in hearing people’s life stories, delving deep into their aspirations for the future, and dedicating herself to ensuring that each client discovers a home that aligns perfectly with their future goals.

10 fun facts:
1. I love to travel – I can pack a bag in under 30 minutes and be ready to go. I’m always up for an adventure and love to see new places and new things. I’ve traveled most of the US and am constantly looking for our next great adventure.
2. I’m a great baker and I love it. My grandma handed down her handmade cookbook of goodies and I’m carrying on the family tradition of candy making. She has an amazing caramel popcorn recipe that I make for my family and sell during the holiday times as presents.
3. I have two amazing kids and a husband that are the best part of my life. My kids are a sophomore and 8th grader and into dance, tennis and track. They keep us busy and bring us lots of fun times.
4. I hate gardening – mainly because of all the red ants here in Dallas! I love flowers, but had to get out in the garden and plant things. I want to have a beautiful botanical yard, but don’t want to put in the effort.
5. I’m addicted to tennis – in the free time I have you will probably find me on a tennis court in the neighborhood. I started playing 5 years ago and absolutely love the competition and the friends I have made.
6. I’m a beach person 100%, we love to visit all the places with white sand beaches, go snorkeling, paddle boarding, sand castle building and anything else you can do on the beach.
7. I’m a sports nut, we have a closet full of sports equipment just in case we decide to pick up a different sport on the weekend. I love tennis, but also water ski, snow ski, play pickleball (not well), and golf occasionally.
8. My favorite meal is a good steak, salad and a glass of red wine. I hate all shellfish foods.
9. I love NFL football – I’m a lifelong Cowboys fan, but also really like the Miami Dolphins and Denver Broncos
10. I hate country music, which is not a popular opinion living in Texas, so most of the time I have no idea who sings the latest country song.

Emily Drummond

Emily Drummond specializes in residential real estate across Frisco, Prosper, McKinney, Plano, and the surrounding North Dallas suburbs. Licensed since 2012, Emily combines more than a decade of experience with the strength of a top-producing team, recognized in the top 1 percent of agents nationwide. Together, they have guided over 400 families and achieved more than 250 million dollars in closed sales. 

Averaging 50 successful transactions annually, Emily has earned recognition as one of D Magazine’s Best Real Estate Agents for eight consecutive years and is trusted by her clients, with 128 verified five-star Google reviews.

Emily believes that luxury is not about price—it’s about the quality of the client experience. She delivers that same high standard to every client, whether they are relocating, buying their first home, moving up, downsizing, or investing. Backed by the Kaitlin Lovern Real Estate Team’s collaborative resources and guided by values of professionalism, creativity, partnership, and teamwork, Emily ensures her clients receive the highest level of service, clear communication, and a smooth path to their goals.

A Colorado native who has called North Dallas home for more than a decade, Emily loves connecting with people and building lasting relationships. She is proudest of her daughter, who recently completed her master’s degree, and she shares her home with three cats who keep life lively. Outside of real estate, Emily enjoys music, travel, sewing, and cheering on her favorite teams, the Denver Broncos and Alabama Crimson Tide. Whether at work or at play, her warmth and authenticity make her easy to connect with, and those qualities carry through in every client relationship she builds.

Theresa Husner

Born and raised in Southern California. I worked in Real Estate (Appraisal) from 1994 to 2009, then transitioned to Banking from 2009 to 2019. I moved to Frisco, Texas on September 9, 2019. That wasn’t intentional. Lol. My love for Real Estate called me back in 2020, but this time as a Realtor, helping families directly instead of being behind a desk. I’m so happy I did because it’s my passion and part of my superpower. Read on, and you’ll understand what I’m talking about.

I am happily married to the love of my life, and I am a girl mom! I have three daughters: Brittaney, 29, a hairstylist; Brianna, 27, a Sports and Fitness Coach; and Paula, 22, a college student working towards her bachelor’s degree in psychology. I think we kept Sephora and Ulta in business in the 2000s because the amount of teenage makeup in our home could fill buckets. Lol. Oh, and let’s not forget the nail salons.

I am also a Mimi (we don’t say the G-word because I don’t think I will ever be ready for it). Her name is Victoria, and she’s 4. Her mom is Brittaney, and they live in California. However, thank goodness for FaceTime and Amazon. We chat almost every day, and I can spoil her from 1,400 miles away.

My favorite accessory is my high heels. I LOVE THEM!! My mom put me in pumps at the age of 5, and I’ve never looked back! My feet actually feel uncomfortable in flats or tennis shoes. No likey. I’m also 5’1-ish, so it changes my world to be 4 inches taller. 😁

Favorite food – Seafood!! All of it! I can eat it three times a day, seven days a week. If I were ever to be stranded on an island, I wouldn’t mind. Seafood, beach, sunsets, warm weather, and hopefully a razor. I would be in heaven.

I love to dance!! I was on Drill Team in High School. When I turned 18, I loved going to the dance clubs anytime I could. Fast forward to Covid. :( I never imagined a world without dance clubs. Lol. Now that I live in Texas, country line dancing is next on my list. My friend Kathy and I met and hung out with Kenny Chesney and Vince Vaughn after Kenny’s concert backstage at the Angels Stadium in California. A young man with a pass said he could take us back to meet him, but we had to turn our phones off, or else we couldn’t go backstage. I was ready to throw my phone in the trash!! My friend Kathy is the only proof I have that we hung out with Vince and Kenny.

My “superpower” is making friends and connecting with people. I love meeting people from ALL different walks of life. I love learning about them, their traditions, their background, their family, what they are passionate about. It makes for great conversations and forms great, long-lasting relationships. One of the many reasons why I love my career.


Favorite childhood movie, “The Goonies!” I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched the movie as a kid and as an adult with my kids. My husband took me to Astoria, Oregon, where they filmed the movie, and we visited all the buildings, including the house where the movie was shot. Pretty epic in my book.


I love ALL music genres. I looked it up, and there are 41 primary music genres with 331 subcategories. I don’t know about the subcategories, but when I hear music, I’m truly joyful. Strangely, even with Heavy Metal. Just watch the sound/volume, not too loud please. Lol. I love to dance, so if music is playing in any language, as long as there is a beat, I will dance to it.

Theresa Husner

Born and raised in Southern California. I worked in Real Estate (Appraisal) from 1994 to 2009, then transitioned to Banking from 2009 to 2019. I moved to Frisco, Texas on September 9, 2019. That wasn’t intentional. Lol. My love for Real Estate called me back in 2020, but this time as a Realtor, helping families directly instead of being behind a desk. I’m so happy I did because it’s my passion and part of my superpower. Read on, and you’ll understand what I’m talking about.

I am happily married to the love of my life, and I am a girl mom! I have three daughters: Brittaney, 29, a hairstylist; Brianna, 27, a Sports and Fitness Coach; and Paula, 22, a college student working towards her bachelor’s degree in psychology. I think we kept Sephora and Ulta in business in the 2000s because the amount of teenage makeup in our home could fill buckets. Lol. Oh, and let’s not forget the nail salons.

I am also a Mimi (we don’t say the G-word because I don’t think I will ever be ready for it). Her name is Victoria, and she’s 4. Her mom is Brittaney, and they live in California. However, thank goodness for FaceTime and Amazon. We chat almost every day, and I can spoil her from 1,400 miles away.

My favorite accessory is my high heels. I LOVE THEM!! My mom put me in pumps at the age of 5, and I’ve never looked back! My feet actually feel uncomfortable in flats or tennis shoes. No likey. I’m also 5’1-ish, so it changes my world to be 4 inches taller. 😁

Favorite food – Seafood!! All of it! I can eat it three times a day, seven days a week. If I were ever to be stranded on an island, I wouldn’t mind. Seafood, beach, sunsets, warm weather, and hopefully a razor. I would be in heaven.

I love to dance!! I was on Drill Team in High School. When I turned 18, I loved going to the dance clubs anytime I could. Fast forward to Covid. :( I never imagined a world without dance clubs. Lol. Now that I live in Texas, country line dancing is next on my list. My friend Kathy and I met and hung out with Kenny Chesney and Vince Vaughn after Kenny’s concert backstage at the Angels Stadium in California. A young man with a pass said he could take us back to meet him, but we had to turn our phones off, or else we couldn’t go backstage. I was ready to throw my phone in the trash!! My friend Kathy is the only proof I have that we hung out with Vince and Kenny.

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