Before You Compromise on a Lot You Don’t Really Want — Look at This

If you’ve been looking for a one-acre lot in the McKinney area for a while, you already know how this usually goes.

Inventory is thin.

Most options come with compromises you don’t want to live with.

And at today’s interest rates, the monthly cost of just owning the lot is real — especially when you’re also planning to borrow half a million dollars or more to build.

That’s why a lot of people pause.

Not because they’re unsure — but because they’re unwilling to settle.

This is written for buyers who know what they want in a custom homesite and are prepared to wait until it actually shows up.

You’re not looking for a “deal.”

You’re looking for the right lot — in the right area — at a price that makes sense in today’s market.

And you don’t want to be pushed into something that isn’t it.

This is not for bargain hunters chasing something that doesn’t exist, or for people who are willing to compromise just to say they bought.

If you need to be talked into a lot, or you’re hoping price alone will make the decision for you, this won’t be a fit.

What I’m offering here is simply information for buyers who know what they want in a McKinney homesite.

It’s a straightforward look at a one-acre lot in Waterstone Estates, intended for a custom home — nothing dressed up, nothing hidden.

The neighborhood requires a minimum home size of 3,500 square feet, which tends to matter to people who care about long-term context and consistency.

One important piece of context worth knowing:

the neighboring lot closed very recently, at a higher price.
If you want to verify that, ask your agent.
If you don’t have an agent, ask me and I’ll send you the recent sales.

No pressure implied by that.
Just context — the kind serious buyers tend to care about.

And one final note for people who think the way you do:

Those who request this will also see new listings from me as they come available, evaluated and presented with the same straight talk.

I don’t send junk. And I don’t push people into decisions they’re not ready to make.

If you want to review the details and decide for yourself whether this is worth pursuing, you can do that here:

Take your time.
Look it over carefully.

If it’s what you’ve been waiting for, you’ll know.
If it isn’t, that’s fine too — this is about choosing, not being sold.

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