Front porches. Walkable Main Street. Jack Nicklaus golf. White Tank Mountain wilderness at your back door. Verrado isn't just a neighborhood — it's a nationally recognized way of life.
Verrado is a nationally award-winning New Urbanist master-planned community located in Buckeye, Arizona — ZIP code 85396 — situated roughly 30 miles west of downtown Phoenix in the West Valley. Developed by DMB Associates, the same visionary firm behind Scottsdale's prestigious DC Ranch, Verrado opened in 2004 and has since won dozens of national urban planning, architecture, and community design awards.
The community is built on principles that run counter to the typical Arizona suburb: walkable streets instead of cul-de-sacs, front porches instead of walled-in back patios, a genuine Main Street town center instead of a strip mall, and parks guaranteed within one-third of a mile of every home. These design standards have created one of the most livable, tightly knit communities in the entire Phoenix metropolitan area.
At buildout, Verrado will contain approximately 7,000+ homes across multiple distinct sub-areas, housing a population of over 25,000 residents. The community features 36 holes of Jack Nicklaus-designed golf, miles of interconnected trails, multiple community pools, a dedicated 55+ active adult village (Victory at Verrado), and direct access to White Tank Mountain Regional Park — 29,000 acres of protected Sonoran Desert wilderness.
If you are considering a move to the West Valley, Verrado deserves serious attention. This page covers everything you need to know: the five distinct sub-areas, golf, schools, pricing, commute times, Arizona-specific legal disclosures, and how to evaluate Verrado as an investment.
Verrado was designed around a deceptively simple idea: neighborhoods should be places people want to walk through, not just drive past.
Every home in Verrado is required to have a covered front porch visible from the street. This is a design mandate, not a trend — it transforms how neighbors interact. Instead of passing isolated garage doors, residents walk past occupied porches where conversations happen naturally. It is the physical infrastructure of community.
In many Verrado sections, garages are accessed from rear alleys rather than the front of the home. The result: no garage doors dominating street facades, wider sidewalks, mature street trees planted closer to the home, and a pedestrian-friendly scale that is simply not achievable in conventional subdivision design.
Unlike the typical Arizona suburb's maze of cul-de-sacs that force every trip into a car, Verrado uses a modified grid street pattern. You can walk from one end of the community to the other via multiple connected routes. The grid also reduces traffic congestion because vehicles have multiple path options instead of being funneled through a few collector roads.
Verrado's master plan guarantees that every home is within one-third of a mile of a park. This is not just a marketing promise — it is embedded in the plat design. The result is a network of neighborhood pocket parks, tot lots, picnic areas, and open turf spaces that give even the smallest homes access to outdoor amenity without driving. More than 30 individual parks are distributed throughout the community.
The heart of Verrado is a genuine, walkable Main Street featuring restaurants, coffee, retail, fitness studios, a spa, and professional services. Mangos Bar & Grill has become a community landmark. A seasonal farmers market brings fresh produce and local vendors. Holiday events, 4th of July parades, and harvest festivals draw the entire community together in ways that strip malls simply cannot replicate.
Verrado has received recognition from the Urban Land Institute (ULI), the Congress for the New Urbanism (CNU), and numerous national homebuilder associations. These aren't vanity awards — they reflect the documented positive outcomes in Verrado: lower crime rates than comparable Phoenix suburbs, higher community engagement, faster post-recession home price recovery, and measurably higher resident satisfaction.
Each district within Verrado has its own character, price point, and appeal. Knowing which one fits your lifestyle is the key to making the right purchase.
The Heritage District is Verrado's original phase and remains the community's most coveted address. Built first, Heritage has the tallest, most mature trees in the community — a meaningful amenity in the Arizona sun. Original character homes from the mid-2000s feature generous covered front porches, alley-loaded garages, and established desert and citrus landscaping that newer phases are still years from achieving.
Heritage commands a persistent premium on the resale market — typically 8-15% above comparable square footage in newer phases — because this maturity cannot be recreated. The proximity to Main Street is also greatest from Heritage, making it the most walkable of all Verrado sections. If you want the quintessential Verrado experience with full community character, Heritage District is where to start your search.
Price range: $520,000–$780,000 depending on size and upgrades. Home sizes: Typically 1,600–3,200 sq ft. Architecture: Front-porch craftsman, colonial revival, and mission-style designs from multiple builders.
Parkside offers the most accessible entry point into Verrado's lifestyle. Homes here are generally smaller in square footage but built to the same New Urbanist standards — front porches, tree-lined streets, park access. The community character is strong: Parkside tends to attract younger families and first-time buyers who want the Verrado experience at a more attainable price.
Parkside sits in the central-northern portion of the master plan, close enough to Main Street for regular walking trips but slightly further than Heritage. The tradeoff in lower price is offset by the same master-plan amenities, the same school system, and the same quality-of-life indicators that define all of Verrado.
Price range: $420,000–$570,000. Home sizes: 1,400–2,600 sq ft. Best for: First-time buyers, young families, buyers prioritizing community over square footage.
Verano is Verrado's mid-range, family-oriented section featuring newer construction than Heritage and Parkside, with slightly larger floor plans suited to growing families. Schools are the primary draw here — Verrado Middle School and Verrado High School are easily accessible, and the newer construction means more modern features like open-concept layouts, energy-efficient systems, and larger primary suite bathrooms.
Verano buyers tend to be move-up purchasers trading in a smaller first home for more space. The architectural variety remains high, with multiple builders having contributed different styles over successive building phases. Community pools and parks are distributed throughout Verano at the required one-third mile standard.
Price range: $500,000–$710,000. Home sizes: 2,000–3,500 sq ft. Best for: Move-up families, buyers wanting newer construction at mid-range price points.
The Reserves is Verrado's custom and semi-custom home section, offering the community's largest lots — many backing directly to the protected buffer zone adjacent to Estrella Mountain Regional Park and the White Tank Mountain preserve. Semi-estate lot sizes allow for larger setbacks, private pools, and secondary structures like casitas or detached garages.
The Reserves attracts buyers who want Verrado's community infrastructure and design ethos but require the space and privacy of a premium estate lot. Some parcels in The Reserves come with panoramic mountain views to the west and south, with limited neighboring development to block sight lines.
Price range: $680,000–$2,500,000+. Home sizes: 3,500–7,000+ sq ft. Lot sizes: 12,000 sq ft–1+ acre. Best for: Luxury buyers, custom home builders, buyers wanting maximum privacy within a master plan.
Victory at Verrado is the community's age-restricted (55+) village, developed by William Lyon Homes and governed by its own separate homeowners association. Victory qualifies under the federal Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA), requiring that at least 80% of occupied units include at least one resident age 55 or older. Children may visit but cannot permanently reside.
Victory sits in the southern portion of Verrado and features its own dedicated amenity center with resort-style pools, fitness center, tennis and pickleball courts, billiards room, and an active events calendar. Victory residents also enjoy preferred access to the Verrado Golf Club's two Jack Nicklaus-designed courses. Floor plans are predominantly single-story or primary-suite-on-main designs for accessibility.
Arizona's Senior Valuation Protection (ARS §42-17302) can freeze the assessed value of Victory homes for qualifying residents age 65+ who have owned for three or more years — a significant and often overlooked property tax benefit. Arizona also exempts Social Security income and military pensions from state income tax, making Victory particularly attractive for retirees on fixed incomes.
Price range: $450,000–$750,000 resale. Home sizes: 1,400–3,200 sq ft (predominantly single-story). Best for: Active adults 55+, golf-focused retirees, buyers wanting community programming and social activities.
Current market data by sub-area. Prices reflect active resale market; new construction in Reserves and newer phases may differ.
| Sub-Area | Home Size Range | Price Range | HOA/Month | Typical Lot | Key Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Heritage District | 1,600–3,200 sq ft | $520K–$780K | $155–$200/mo | 5,500–8,000 sq ft | Mature trees, highest walkability, original character |
| Parkside | 1,400–2,600 sq ft | $420K–$570K | $115–$160/mo | 4,500–7,000 sq ft | Best entry price, strong community, family-friendly |
| Verano | 2,000–3,500 sq ft | $500K–$710K | $145–$185/mo | 6,000–9,000 sq ft | Newer construction, close to schools, open-concept plans |
| The Reserves | 3,500–7,000+ sq ft | $680K–$2.5M+ | $175–$210/mo | 12,000 sq ft–1+ acre | Custom homes, estate lots, mountain/preserve views |
| Victory at Verrado (55+) | 1,400–3,200 sq ft | $450K–$750K | $160–$200/mo | 5,000–8,500 sq ft | HOPA 55+, single-story options, own amenity center |
| Community | City | Price Range | Master Plan Type | Golf | Lakes | 55+ Village |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Verrado | Buckeye | $420K–$2.5M+ | New Urbanist / Award-winning | ✅ 36 holes (Nicklaus) | ❌ | ✅ Victory (HOPA) |
| Estrella Mountain Ranch | Goodyear | $300K–$1.5M+ | Natural Lakes / Preserve | ✅ 18 holes | ✅ 91 acres | Partial |
| Marley Park | Surprise | $380K–$800K | New Urbanist-inspired | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ |
| PebbleCreek | Goodyear | $350K–$1.1M | Resort-Style 55+ | ✅ 36 holes | ❌ | ✅ HOPA |
| DC Ranch | Scottsdale | $800K–$10M+ | Luxury New Urbanist | ✅ Country club | ❌ | ❌ |
* Arizona is a non-disclosure state — sale prices are not public record. Data based on MLS analytics. CFD assessments (where applicable) are separate from HOA dues and may add $500–$3,000+/year to ownership costs. Contact Ryan for current comparable sales data.
One of the West Valley's premier golf destinations, Verrado Golf Club features two distinct 18-hole championship courses designed by Jack Nicklaus — a world-class amenity embedded within a residential community.
The original Jack Nicklaus-designed course at Verrado, the Heritage Course is a championship layout woven through the mature trees and established landscaping of Verrado's earliest phase. Fairway bunkers, strategic water features, and mountain views in every direction make this a true destination course. Verrado residents receive preferred tee times and reduced daily rates.
18 holes · Championship layout · Preferred resident tee times
The Victory Course is a Jack Nicklaus signature design tailored for the active adult residents of Victory at Verrado but open to all Verrado Golf Club members. The layout is slightly more forgiving than the Heritage Course while maintaining championship challenge — a common Nicklaus design philosophy. The Victory Course adjoins the Victory at Verrado amenity campus, creating a seamless golf-lifestyle connection for 55+ residents.
18 holes · Nicklaus signature · Semi-private access
The Verrado Golf Club operates as a semi-private club, meaning Verrado residents receive membership preference and preferential rates while the club also serves outside guests and visitors. For serious golfers, the ability to walk or drive a golf cart from your home to a 36-hole Jack Nicklaus complex is an extraordinary amenity that a fraction of Phoenix metro communities can offer.
Verrado's Main Street is one of the most distinctive features of the community — a genuine, walkable town center that functions as the social and commercial hub for thousands of residents. Unlike the typical Arizona "amenity center" tucked behind a gate, Main Street is integrated into the street grid where both residents and visitors can access it easily.
The anchor restaurants and businesses include Mangos Bar & Grill, which has become a true community landmark after years of hosting celebrations, casual family dinners, and post-round golfer gatherings. Coffee shops, a full-service salon and spa, fitness studios, and professional services (dentist, insurance, real estate) round out the offerings.
Beyond the day-to-day retail mix, Main Street hosts a regular seasonal farmers market bringing local produce, artisan goods, and food vendors to the community. The 4th of July parade down Main Street is perhaps Verrado's most beloved annual tradition — a genuine small-town experience that is rare in any large metropolitan area. Holiday markets, harvest festivals, movie nights, and live music events fill out the community calendar throughout the year.
Verrado's western border approaches White Tank Mountain Regional Park — at 29,000 acres, the largest park by area in Maricopa County's remarkable regional park system. The park's eastern trailheads are accessible within minutes of Verrado's western sections, giving residents what amounts to tens of thousands of acres of protected Sonoran Desert wilderness as a permanent backyard.
The White Tank Mountains themselves are a dramatic volcanic range rising abruptly from the desert floor. The range hosts some of the best petroglyphs in the Phoenix area — ancient rock art panels along the Waterfall Trail and the Petroglyph Plaza that document thousands of years of indigenous presence in this landscape. The waterfalls (Waterfall Trail, 2.2 miles round trip) are a genuine seasonal phenomenon after monsoon rains and winter storms, drawing hikers from across the metro.
Wildlife in White Tank is abundant and visible — particularly at dawn and dusk when coyotes, javelina (collared peccaries), mule deer, and Harris's hawks are most active near the park boundary. Gila woodpeckers drum on saguaro cacti. Western screech owls occupy hollow saguaros. In spring, wildflower blooms following wet winters can be spectacular across the lower bajada slopes.
Families choosing Verrado are choosing one of the West Valley's strongest school ecosystems. The community is served by two districts — Litchfield Elementary School District for grades K-8 and Agua Fria Union High School District for grades 9-12 — both of which maintain strong academic performance metrics and community investment.
Verrado Heritage Elementary School serves the Heritage District and surrounding sections. As one of the district's newer elementary schools, it features modern facilities, strong parent involvement, and curriculum aligned with the community's emphasis on active citizenship and personal responsibility.
Verrado Middle School provides grades 6-8 with a comprehensive academic program including electives, athletics, and performing arts. The school's physical proximity to Verrado High School creates a natural pipeline and student familiarity with the high school campus and staff.
Verrado High School is the crown jewel of the district's academic offerings. The school consistently ranks among the top high schools in Buckeye and the broader West Valley, with strong Advanced Placement (AP) course offerings, dual enrollment partnerships with Estrella Mountain Community College, competitive athletics programs (particularly baseball, soccer, and cross-country), and a campus culture that reflects the broader community's emphasis on pride of place.
Liberty High School also serves some Verrado-area addresses and is another well-regarded Agua Fria Union option. Families should confirm their specific home address's school zone assignment before purchasing, as boundaries can shift in this rapidly growing area.
Estrella Mountain Community College (EMCC) is located approximately 15 minutes from Verrado and offers affordable associate's degrees, vocational certifications, and a strong transfer pipeline to Arizona State University, Grand Canyon University, and other four-year Arizona institutions. EMCC is a practical option for Verrado students who want to complete lower-division coursework at significant savings before transferring.
For families considering private alternatives, there are multiple options within a 20-30 minute drive: BASIS West (Peoria campus), several Catholic academies, and a growing number of non-denominational Christian schools in Goodyear and Buckeye. Verrado's central West Valley location makes most of these accessible without an extended daily commute.
Verrado sits at the intersection of I-10 and Verrado Way, roughly 30 miles west of downtown Phoenix. These are typical off-peak drive times; peak-hour I-10 westbound commutes can add 10-20 minutes.
Verrado is particularly popular with remote and hybrid workers. The community's walkability and amenities make working from home genuinely enjoyable — residents regularly cite this as a primary reason for choosing Verrado over other West Valley options. Luke AFB proximity makes Verrado one of the most popular communities for military officers and warrant officers.
Verrado maintains multiple community pools distributed throughout the master plan so no resident faces a long drive to reach the water. Pools range from resort-style recreational facilities with waterslides to lap-swim pools for fitness-focused residents. Victory at Verrado maintains its own separate pool complex exclusively for 55+ residents.
An interconnected trail system links every neighborhood within Verrado and connects seamlessly to White Tank Mountain Regional Park's trailhead system at the community's western edge. Residents can walk or bike from home through neighborhoods, past parks, along the Main Street corridor, and directly into wilderness trails — without crossing a major arterial road.
Verrado's extensive park network includes multiple dedicated dog parks where off-leash exercise is permitted. The community is notably dog-friendly in its design and culture — wide sidewalks, shade trees, water stations on trails, and a community culture where morning dog walks are a primary form of neighbor interaction.
The Verrado community association maintains an active events calendar that rivals what you might find in a much larger town: seasonal farmers markets, holiday tree-lighting ceremonies, Halloween in the District, spring festival events, 4th of July parades, movie nights in the park, food truck festivals, and monthly community gatherings on Main Street.
Multiple fitness studios operate within the Main Street corridor and within community amenity centers. Cross-training gyms, yoga studios, and personal training facilities give residents professional fitness options without leaving the master plan. The outdoor trail system and sports courts add to a fitness culture that contributes to Verrado's above-average health outcomes vs. comparable Phoenix suburbs.
Verrado's western orientation — facing the White Tank Mountains and the open desert horizon — positions it perfectly for some of the most spectacular sunsets in the Phoenix metro. The combination of mountain silhouettes, Sonoran Desert sky, and minimal light pollution to the west creates evening light shows that become part of daily Verrado life. This western outlook is particularly prized in The Reserves section.
Verrado's master plan structure, Arizona's unique real estate laws, and West Valley-specific factors create disclosures that every buyer must understand before signing a purchase contract.
This is the single most important disclosure most buyers overlook in Verrado. CFDs (sometimes called Special Improvement Districts or SIDs) are a financing mechanism that allows developers to issue municipal bonds to pay for community infrastructure — roads, utilities, parks, drainage. That debt is then repaid by homeowners through annual assessments that appear on your property tax bill as a separate line item.
CFD assessments in Verrado can range from $500 to $3,000 or more per year per parcel. This is money that appears on top of your HOA dues, not included within them. Some CFD districts are well into their amortization period and winding down; others have 20-30 year terms remaining. Arizona requires disclosure on the Seller Property Disclosure Statement (SPDS, governed by ARS §33-422), but the SPDS disclosure is often vague. Ryan Moxley always pulls the actual Maricopa County tax bill for any home under consideration so clients see the exact CFD line item before making an offer.
Verrado has a layered HOA structure: a master HOA that governs the entire community (dues support common area maintenance, Master amenities, and community events), plus sub-HOAs for specific villages (Heritage, Parkside, Verano, The Reserves, Victory). Under ARS §33-1806, sellers must provide HOA documents to buyers within 10 days of contract execution. Buyers have a right to review all HOA documents — CC&Rs, bylaws, rules and regulations, financial statements, and budget — and may cancel the contract within the review period if they find unacceptable terms.
The vast majority of Verrado homes are built on post-tension concrete slabs — a construction technique where high-strength steel cables are tensioned after the concrete pours to control cracking. Post-tension slabs are excellent structural systems, but they create one critical rule that every buyer must understand: NEVER cut a post-tension slab. NEVER drill into a post-tension slab without engineer approval. Severing a post-tension cable causes catastrophic and extremely expensive structural damage. Any planned renovations that involve concrete cutting (drain relocation, installing a floor safe, adding radon mitigation) require a structural engineer's review of the cable layout. Ryan always includes a post-tension slab addendum in buyer education materials.
Arizona requires that new subdivisions within Active Management Areas (AMAs) demonstrate a 100-year assured water supply before lots can be sold (ARS §45-576). The Phoenix AMA includes Buckeye. Verrado is served by the Buckeye Water District. Buyers should verify the water supply source and confirm whether the home's water service is municipal (most Verrado homes) or private well. In Verrado proper, municipal water service is standard.
Arizona does not publicly disclose residential sale prices. Unlike California or Texas where any buyer can look up recent sale prices on public record websites, Arizona sale prices are reported only to the MLS by the agents involved. This means that home price comparison tools like Zillow's "Zestimate" are particularly unreliable in Arizona — they rely on limited data and can be meaningfully wrong. Ryan Moxley's access to MLS comparable sale data is genuinely valuable in an Arizona context and not just a standard agent pitch.
Arizona buyers have a standard 10-day inspection period from contract execution (the "due diligence" period). The Buyer's Inspection Notice and Seller's Response (BINSR) is submitted at the end of the inspection period, listing any items the buyer wants repaired or credited. The seller then has 5 days to respond. Key Verrado-specific inspection items: post-tension slab integrity, stucco water intrusion at window and pipe penetrations (particularly on west-facing elevations receiving intense afternoon sun), HVAC adequacy for the specific home's heat load, caliche (hardpan calcium carbonate layer that affects any future excavation), and roof condition on homes approaching 10-15 years in age.
The 2026 conforming loan limit for Maricopa County is $806,500 — meaning most Verrado homes (Heritage, Parkside, Verano, Victory) qualify for conventional financing rather than jumbo loans. VA loans are significant in Verrado given the Luke AFB proximity; VA buyers have no down payment requirement, no PMI, and competitive interest rates (funding fee of 2.15-3.3% applies unless waived for disability). ADOH HOME Plus offers 3-5% down payment assistance as a forgivable grant for qualified buyers (640+ credit score, $122,100 income limit) — useful for entry-level Verrado buyers in Parkside. Down payment assistance does not apply to VA loans, which require zero down.
Verrado is a nationally award-winning New Urbanist master-planned community developed by DMB Associates — the same firm behind Scottsdale's prestigious DC Ranch. Unlike conventional Arizona suburbs built around cul-de-sacs and strip malls, Verrado was designed from the ground up around walkability, community connection, and integration with the natural desert environment.
Every home has a required covered front porch visible from the street — a design mandate that transforms how neighbors interact. Many sections feature back-loaded alley garages so cars never dominate the streetscape. The grid street pattern makes walking natural. The community's Main Street serves as a genuine town center with restaurants, coffee, retail, fitness, and year-round events like farmers markets and holiday festivals — all within walking distance of Heritage District and Parkside homes. Parks are guaranteed within one-third of a mile of every residence by design. Jack Nicklaus designed both 18-hole golf courses. And Verrado's western edge touches White Tank Mountain Regional Park, giving residents access to 29,000 acres of Sonoran Desert wilderness without leaving their home community.
Victory at Verrado is an age-restricted (55+) community within the larger Verrado master plan, built by William Lyon Homes and subject to its own separate HOA. Victory qualifies under the federal Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA), requiring that at least 80% of occupied units include at least one resident age 55 or older.
Victory residents have access to a dedicated amenity center with resort-style and lap pools, full fitness center, tennis courts, pickleball courts, billiards room, and an active programming calendar. Victory residents also enjoy preferred access to the Verrado Golf Club's two Jack Nicklaus-designed courses. Victory homes are typically single-story or primary-suite-on-main designs ranging from 1,400 to 3,200 square feet, priced from approximately $450,000 to $750,000 on the resale market. Arizona's Senior Valuation Protection (ARS §42-17302) can freeze the assessed value for qualifying residents age 65+ who have owned for three or more years — a significant property tax benefit for retirees on fixed incomes.
Community Facilities Districts (CFDs) are a common financing mechanism in large Arizona master-planned communities, used to fund infrastructure like roads, utilities, and parks. Verrado has active CFD assessments on many parcels, and these are NOT included in HOA dues — they appear as a separate line item on your annual property tax bill.
CFD assessments in Verrado typically run from $500 to $3,000 or more per year. The exact amount depends on which parcel you purchase and the specific CFD district applied to that lot. Arizona requires sellers to disclose CFDs on the Seller Property Disclosure Statement (SPDS, ARS §33-422), but the disclosure is often vague. Ryan Moxley always pulls the actual Maricopa County property tax bill for any home under consideration so clients see the exact CFD assessment before making an offer. This is a critical budget item that many buyers discover after closing without proper guidance.
Verrado's schools are among the strongest in Buckeye and the broader West Valley. The community is served by Litchfield Elementary School District (K-8) and Agua Fria Union High School District (9-12). Verrado Heritage Elementary and Verrado Middle School maintain strong academic performance and high parent involvement metrics. Verrado High School stands out for its AP course offerings, dual enrollment with Estrella Mountain Community College, strong athletics programs, and consistently above-average graduation and college placement rates. Liberty High School also serves some Verrado addresses and is another highly regarded Agua Fria Union option.
Estrella Mountain Community College is approximately 15 minutes from Verrado and offers affordable associate's degrees and transfer pathways to Arizona State University and other four-year institutions. The school quality is a primary driver of Verrado's sustained demand and above-average appreciation relative to other West Valley communities.
Verrado has consistently demonstrated above-average appreciation compared to the broader West Valley because of its supply constraints and community design quality. DMB Associates built in density controls and open space requirements that limit how many homes can be added over time. The Heritage District — with its mature trees, established landscaping, and original New Urbanist character — commands a persistent premium over comparable square footage in non-master-planned Buckeye. Factors supporting long-term investment value: (1) Remote work trends favor well-designed communities where people actually want to spend time at home; (2) The Verrado Golf Club's two Jack Nicklaus courses create an irreplaceable amenity that cannot be duplicated; (3) White Tank Mountain Regional Park access provides permanent protected open space; (4) The award-winning design attracts national attention and drives repeat buyer demand from buyers who specifically seek master-planned communities.
Buyers should factor in all carrying costs when evaluating Verrado: HOA dues ($115–$210/month), CFD assessments (vary by parcel), and standard Arizona property taxes. Ryan provides full cost-of-ownership comparisons for every Verrado client to ensure an informed decision.
Ryan Moxley is a top-1% REALTOR® at My Home Group with deep expertise in Verrado, Buckeye, and all West Valley master-planned communities. Whether you are buying your first home in Parkside, upgrading to The Reserves, or exploring Victory at Verrado for the next chapter of your life, Ryan provides access to the full MLS, off-market inventory, and CFD/HOA data that makes the difference between a confident purchase and an expensive surprise.
Arizona is a non-disclosure state — published data is incomplete. Ryan's MLS access gives you accurate comparable sales, real CFD assessments, and honest neighborhood analysis before you make your largest financial decision.