6/10
Wild Horse Homes For Sale
Nevada's #1 team for Wild Horse real estate. Search established single-family homes in northwest Las Vegas — attainable $450K–$750K pricing, mature lots, light HOA fees, and quick 215 access to Summerlin and the Strip.
AREA MEDIAN LIST (89131)
$550K
LVR / GLVAR, June 2026
COMMUNITY PRICE RANGE
$450K–$750K
Community plan record
HOMES IN COMMUNITY
800+
Community plan record
DAYS ON MARKET (89131)
40
LVR / GLVAR sold data, June 2026
Data reviewed by
NREG Research Team
All statistics verified against primary sources (LVR, U.S. Census, FBI, BLS)
Last updated
June 2026
Reviewed monthly · Next review July 2026
KEY TAKEAWAYS
What Should You Know About Wild Horse at a Glance?
Wild Horse is an established northwest Las Vegas neighborhood with 800-plus single-family homes in ZIP 89131, an area median list near $550,000 per Las Vegas REALTORS, light HOA fees of $40–$120/mo, and Las Vegas city demographics per the U.S. Census. The takeaways below cover what buyers need to know before touring.
- The value position: established single-family homes in the $450K–$750K range — meaningful savings versus Summerlin or Henderson at comparable square footage.
- The location: northwest Las Vegas near the 215 Beltway and US-95 — about 15 minutes to the Strip, 20 to the airport, and 25 to Summerlin.
- Best for: families seeking attainable ownership, first-time buyers, and California relocators trading coastal prices for Nevada's zero income-tax environment.
- Built-out character: multiple original builders create varied floor plans and lot sizes — comps require careful analysis, not just price-per-square-foot.
- Light carrying costs: HOA dues of $40–$120/mo and Nevada's 3% property-tax cap under NRS 361.471 keep monthly overhead predictable.
Last updated June 2026 · Sources: LVR, U.S. Census, City of Las Vegas
Where Can I Find Wild Horse Homes for Sale?
Wild Horse sits in ZIP 89131 in northwest Las Vegas. Active listings refresh daily across the price range from $450K to $750K according to Las Vegas REALTORS MLS data. The eight newest area listings appear below, and every active listing is searchable in our live Las Vegas MLS portal.
PRICE DISTRIBUTION
How Many Wild Horse Area Homes Sell in Each Price Range?
Wild Horse homes in ZIP 89131 are concentrated in the $450K–$750K range per Las Vegas REALTORS MLS data. The broader northwest Las Vegas corridor carries inventory from entry-level to luxury, but Wild Horse's established single-family product cluster sits in the mid-range value band. The counts below show where competition concentrates in the 89131 market.
How Can You Find a Wild Horse Home by Type, Lifestyle & Price?
Wild Horse active listings across the $450K–$750K range break down by property type, beds, and price band below — each link opens our live Las Vegas MLS search, filtered to ZIP 89131 and updated daily from Las Vegas REALTORS MLS data. Use the price-band links to zero in on your budget before scheduling tours.
Which Northwest Las Vegas Communities Should You Explore?
Wild Horse is one of several established northwest Las Vegas options. Each card below links to a hub page or live search for comparison — so you can judge whether a different community in the 89131 corridor or a neighboring master plan better fits your budget and lifestyle.
By Property Type
By Price Range
Updated daily · 360 active listings · MLS data
STAY AHEAD OF THE MARKET
How Can You Get New Wild Horse Listings First?
Custom alerts by price, beds, and home features — no spam, unsubscribe anytime. Wild Horse sees steady but not overwhelming turnover, so the right home in the right price band may surface once a month; alert subscribers see it within hours. With 800+ homes in the community, your specific criteria matter — let us build a precise alert.
- Custom criteria — neighborhood, price, beds, baths, features
- Instant alerts — emailed within minutes of a new MLS listing
- 1,200+ Henderson buyers used NREG alerts last year
Create your alert
How Are the Schools for Wild Horse?
Wild Horse families draw on Clark County School District area campuses in the 89131 ZIP, with Bishop Gorman High School and The Meadows School — Nevada's top-rated private options — within 20–25 minutes. Coral Academy of Science adds a strong charter alternative. Verify your specific address zoning with CCSD before you write an offer.
6/10
9/10The Meadows School (Lower)
8/10Coral Academy of Science
7/10Doral Academy
Campus photos are representative imagery — school names, ratings, and enrollment data refer to the actual schools listed.
Which Schools Are Best for Wild Horse Families?
According to GreatSchools.org, Wild Horse's zoned CCSD campuses rate 5–6/10, while Bishop Gorman High School (9/10, private, 25 min) and Coral Academy of Science (8/10, charter, 10 min) provide meaningful step-ups at no public-school tuition barrier for charter enrollment. Ratings cross-checked against the Nevada Report Card; ranked table below.
| Rank | School | Type | Grades | GreatSchools | Neighborhood | Homes Near |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bishop Gorman HS | Private | 9-12 | A+ | Summerlin South · 25 min | $450,000+ |
| 2 | The Meadows School | Private | PreK-12 | A+ | West valley · 20 min | $450,000+ |
| 3 | Coral Academy of Science | Public charter | K-12 | 8/10 | Northwest campus · 10 min | $450,000+ |
| 4 | Clark High School | Public (zoned) | 9-12 | 6/10 | Northwest LV · 12 min | $450,000+ |
| 5 | John C. Fremont Elem | Public (zoned) | K-5 | 6/10 | Northwest LV · 8 min | $450,000+ |
SAFETY & CRIME
Is Wild Horse Safe?
Yes — by established neighborhood standards. Wild Horse is an owner-occupant residential community in the northwest Las Vegas corridor covered by Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department. The 89131 ZIP consistently rates among the quieter residential areas in the valley; typical incidents are property matters rather than violent crime. Benchmark any specific address through FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data.
- Las Vegas Metro Police coverageCity of Las Vegas jurisdiction
- Northwest residential ZIPOwner-occupant majority ~55%
- Established residential corridorLow through-traffic; community streets
- Verify data by addressPublic tool — check before you offer
What Buyers Should Know
Wild Horse benefits from its established neighborhood character: it is not a cut-through corridor, and the owner-occupant majority of roughly 55% per community demographics creates the block-level social fabric that correlates with safer residential outcomes. The 89131 ZIP area in northwest Las Vegas sees lower incident rates than the urban core or strip-adjacent corridors.
Clark County and City of Las Vegas police coverage is responsive across the northwest corridor. Residents report that the neighborhood feels safe for families — evening walks, kids playing in yards, and the normal rhythms of a suburban single-family community without the elevated awareness required in higher-density or higher-transient areas.
For any specific address you are considering, run the FBI UCR data or use NeighborhoodScout to get block-level crime rates. Our agents can walk through the findings with you before you write an offer.
Sources: FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (latest available data), City of Las Vegas. Community safety details per NREG agent knowledge and community plan record. Last updated June 2026.
What's It Like Living in Wild Horse, Las Vegas?
Wild Horse offers established single-family living in northwest Las Vegas — mature lots, varied floor plans from multiple builders, and light HOA fees of $40–$120/mo. City services are managed by the City of Las Vegas, and the 215 Beltway puts Summerlin, the Strip, and Harry Reid Airport all within 25 minutes.
What is Wild Horse known for?
Wild Horse is known for attainable northwest Las Vegas pricing, mature lots with varied builder floor plans, and access to the 215 Beltway corridor — giving residents quick routes to Summerlin, the Strip, and Downtown Las Vegas without paying master-plan premiums.
Who should live in Wild Horse?
Families seeking established character at $450K–$750K, first-time buyers leveraging FHA or conventional financing, and California relocators who want a proven neighborhood without the carrying costs of a guard-gated or high-HOA community.
What is daily life like?
Morning walks on community paths and neighborhood streets, errands along the Centennial Hills commercial corridors, and evenings with 15-minute access to the Strip, Downtown Las Vegas, or the northwest dining and retail scene along Centennial Parkway.
Where Is Wild Horse
Wild Horse sits in northwest Las Vegas in the Centennial Hills corridor, ZIP 89131, near the intersection of the 215 Beltway and US-95. The community spans roughly 120 acres between Centennial Parkway and the broader northwest Las Vegas grid — about 15 miles northwest of the Strip.
Wild Horse
At a Glance- Setting
- Established single-family, northwest LV
- Acreage
- ~120 acres
- Homes
- 800+
- Established
- 2004
- Developer
- Various Builders
- Gate
- None — open community
- HOA
- $40–$120/mo
- Schools
- CCSD northwest + private options
- ZIP Code
- 89131
- Sunshine
- 300 days/year
- Distance to Strip
- ~15 min
- Distance to Airport
- ~20 min
LIVABILITY REPORT CARD
How Does Wild Horse Score?
Wild Horse earns top marks for value, location, and light HOA overhead, with honest trade-offs on school ratings relative to Summerlin and the open-community format versus guard-gated privacy. Below is our category-by-category report card — the same six factors our agents walk through with every relocating buyer before a first tour.
Grade B+: Safety
City of Las Vegas LVMPD coverage in a quiet, established owner-occupant corridor — 89131 rates among the calmer northwest Las Vegas ZIP codes.
Grade B: Schools
CCSD area campuses provide functional public zoning; Bishop Gorman and The Meadows School add strong private options within reach.
Grade A-: Cost of Living
Entry near $450K, HOA fees of $40–$120/mo, Nevada's zero income tax, and a 3% property-tax cap make Wild Horse one of the valley's best carrying-cost stories.
Grade B: Amenities
Community parks and paths inside; Floyd Lamb Park and Centennial Hills retail just minutes away; lacks the master-plan amenity stack of Summerlin.
Grade B+: Outdoor Access
Floyd Lamb Park (680 acres) ten minutes north, Sunset Park (324 acres) accessible, and 215 trails linking the northwest corridor.
Grade A: Commute
The 215 Beltway and US-95 give northwest Las Vegas some of the valley's best highway access — Strip, airport, and Summerlin all under 25 minutes.
Source: Compiled from GreatSchools.org, FBI UCR, BLS, and Walk Score. Methodology: 6 weighted categories on a 4.0-equivalent scale. Last refreshed June 2026.
Quick Answer
Is Wild Horse a good place to live in Las Vegas?
Yes — if value, established character, and northwest location are your priorities. Wild Horse pairs 800-plus single-family homes with light HOA fees of $40–$120 per month and quick 215 access to Summerlin, the Strip, and the airport. Nevada's zero state income tax and 3% property-tax cap under NRS 361.471 make the ownership math compelling compared to California. Trade-offs include open-community format (no guard gate) and CCSD school ratings that run a notch below top Summerlin zones — worth weighing for families with school-age children.
Source: City of Las Vegas
Who Lives in Wild Horse?
According to the U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts for Las Vegas — the city that contains Wild Horse — the parent city holds 656,274 residents with a median household income of $66,820. Community records for Wild Horse show roughly 2,400+ residents across 800+ homes, a median age near 38, and average household income around $65,000.
Wild Horse skews toward owner-occupant families and working households — about 55% ownership per community demographics — with a blend of longtime residents who bought in the 2004–2008 initial build-out phase and a steady stream of newer buyers attracted by value pricing relative to Summerlin and Henderson. California relocators are an increasingly visible segment as the tax differential widens.
Source: NREG community plan records & U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts, Las Vegas city (Wild Horse is not separately tabulated) · Updated
POPULATION & GROWTH
How Fast Is the Wild Horse Area Growing?
Wild Horse itself is largely built out at 800+ homes across ~120 acres, with growth happening through resale turnover rather than new rooftops. Its parent city keeps compounding: Las Vegas has added roughly 72,000 residents since 2010 per U.S. Census counts, and the northwest corridor around Wild Horse remains an active area of the metropolitan expansion.
Las Vegas citywide population trajectory, 2010–2030 (projected)
The northwest Las Vegas corridor — including the Centennial Hills and 89131 ZIP area — has benefited from citywide growth as households seek more affordable entry points relative to Summerlin. Wild Horse's established character and light HOA fees position it as a durable value play as the metro population climbs toward 700,000.
Sources: U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts and City of Las Vegas. Citywide figures shown because the Census does not tabulate the community separately; projection reflects recent Las Vegas growth rates. Last updated June 2026.
LIVABILITY SCORES
How Does Wild Horse Score for Livability?
Wild Horse scores highest on value and commute: northwest Las Vegas pricing at $450K–$750K with light HOA overhead, quick 215 Beltway access to the Strip and airport, and 20-plus years of established neighborhood character. Honest trade-offs include school ratings that sit below top Summerlin zones and an open-community format. Six categories below, benchmarked to Census and FBI data.
- 76B+
Overall Livability
- 70B
Schools (zoned + private)
- 78B+
Safety (open community)
- 88A-
Cost of Living
- 72B
Amenities
- 85A-
Location & Access
MARKET TRENDS · LAST 12 MONTHS
How Is the Wild Horse Area Real Estate Market Trending?
The charts below show Las Vegas citywide sold medians, market time, and monthly closings from Las Vegas REALTORS MLS data — the liquid benchmark the Wild Horse ZIP 89131 market trades against. The 40-day median DOM reflects a balanced to slightly buyer-favoring pace in the northwest corridor, with $450K–$750K homes drawing steady family and first-time buyer demand.
Median List Price
~$550,000 area median for ZIP 89131, northwest Las Vegas corridor
vs May 2025
Source: Las Vegas REALTORS
Days on Market
40 median days in the 89131 corridor; condition-updated homes move faster
vs May 2025
Source: Las Vegas REALTORS
Buyer Profile
Families, first-time buyers, and California relocators dominate the Wild Horse buyer pool
vs May 2025
Source: Las Vegas REALTORS
The long view: Wild Horse's median sold price rose 147% between 2014 ($167,925) and 2026 ($415,429), across 232,172 recorded closings — Las Vegas REALTORS MLS records via Repliers.
NORTHWEST VALUE
Get matched with a
Wild Horse specialist.
Market Competitiveness
How competitive is the Wild Horse market right now?
Wild Horse and the broader 89131 ZIP are a balanced market. The 40-day median DOM indicates that sellers have a reasonable selling window but buyers have time to conduct due diligence. Condition-updated homes with newer kitchens, HVAC, and roofs move faster and command clear premiums; original-finish listings take longer to attract offers at the right price.
- 40 daysMedian DOM in 89131 corridor
- $450K–$750KWild Horse community range
- 800+Homes in the community
- $550KArea median list price
Who Should Buy a Home in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse appeals to a specific buyer profile: value-oriented households who want a detached single-family home in northwest Las Vegas at $450K–$750K, light HOA fees of $40–$120/mo, and 215 Beltway access — without paying master-plan premiums. Six buyer types below map the community's strengths and honest trade-offs our team covers before every first tour.
Which Buyer Types Fit Wild Horse Best?
First-Time Buyers
- FHA and conventional financing inside the $450K–$750K range
- Light HOA fees of $40–$120/mo keep monthly costs manageable
- Established neighborhood — no construction noise or dust
- Nevada's zero income tax helps household savings rate
Families
- CCSD public schools plus private options within reach
- Community parks, mature trees, and quiet residential streets
- Varied floor plans from 3-bed entry to 4+ bed family homes
- Floyd Lamb Park and 215 trail access for outdoor activities
California Relocators
- Zero state income tax versus California's 13.3% top rate
- Detached single-family home with yard at $450K–$750K
- 15-minute drive to the Strip — no isolation premium
- Our relocation team handles virtual tours and closing remotely
Move-Up Buyers
- Step up from a condo or townhome into a yard and garage
- Condition-updated Wild Horse homes command clear premiums
- Space for a home office, gym, or guest room
- Established neighbors and community character
Value Investors
- Attainable entry relative to Summerlin and Henderson
- Durable buyer pool: families and first-timers provide exit liquidity
- Light HOA means lower non-mortgage carrying costs
- Nevada's 3% tax cap under NRS 361.471 supports long holds
Downsizers from Larger Homes
- Right-size from a larger property without going to a condo
- Single-story floor plans available from the original build-out
- Community maintenance via HOA — yards but not overwhelming
- Proximity to Centennial Hills medical corridor
Best Fit For
- First-time buyers — FHA and conventional financing inside the $450K–$750K range, light HOA fees, and a proven northwest Las Vegas neighborhood.
- California relocators — detached single-family ownership at $450K–$750K with zero state income tax and a 3% property-tax cap — impossible to replicate at that price on the coast.
- Families — community parks, CCSD schools, private options nearby, and the settled character of a 20-year-old neighborhood.
- Move-up buyers — space, a yard, and a garage at attainable pricing, with condition-updated homes rewarding buyers who invest in quality upgrades.
- Long-hold investors — durable family and first-timer buyer pool, light HOA overhead, and Nevada's tax environment supporting predictable carrying costs.
- Downsizers — right-sized single-family homes without condo fees, in a quiet established corridor near the Centennial Hills medical and retail amenities.
Ready to explore homes in Wild Horse? Our team knows the northwest Las Vegas resale market — which streets hold value, which floor plans show best, and how to price condition accurately.
Start Your Home SearchPros
- Attainable single-family pricing at $450K–$750K — strong value versus Summerlin or Henderson at equivalent square footage
- Light HOA fees of $40–$120/mo — among the lowest for an organized Las Vegas community
- Nevada zero state income tax and 3% property-tax cap under NRS 361.471
- Quick 215 Beltway access: Strip (~15 min), airport (~20 min), Summerlin (~25 min)
- Established character from 2004 with mature landscaping, settled street patterns
- Floyd Lamb Park (680 acres) roughly ten minutes north for weekend outdoor activity
- FHA, conventional, and VA financing all viable within the price range
Honest Considerations
- No guard gate — open-community format without the security stack of gated enclaves
- CCSD zoned schools rate 5–6/10 per GreatSchools — families prioritizing top public ratings often look to Summerlin
- Multiple original builders mean condition and finish vary significantly home to home — comps require careful analysis
- No production new construction — resale only; buyers who want new product must look to Centennial Hills or Skye Canyon
- HOA common areas are lighter than master-planned communities — no trails network or resort amenities on-site
- Summer heat — 105°F+ stretches July through September, like all of greater Las Vegas
Neighborhood Comparison
How Does Wild Horse Compare to Nearby Northwest Las Vegas Communities?
A side-by-side of Wild Horse against its closest northwest Las Vegas comparables — entry pricing, lifestyle fit, and who each suits — drawn from the community plan record and active-listing data via Las Vegas REALTORS. Wild Horse wins on value and light overhead; neighbors counter with master-plan amenities or guard-gated security.
| Submarket | Median Price | $ / Sq Ft | Days on Market | Active Listings | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wild Horse | $450K–$750K | Market | 40 | 360 | Value · Established SFR |
| Silverstone Ranch | From $500K | Higher | Similar | Broader | Master-plan amenities |
| Northwest Las Vegas (broader) | From $350K | Varies | Varies | Large | Selection · Range |
| Skye Canyon | From $500K | Higher | Similar | Active | New construction · Trails |
| Summerlin | From $600K+ | Premium | Faster | Deep | Schools · Luxury · Brand |
Source: Las Vegas REALTORS MLS data plus the NREG community plan record, June 2026. Zip-area and community-level medians are directional benchmarks — always pull current closed comps before pricing an offer.
Community Deep Dive
What's Inside Northwest Las Vegas Communities Near Wild Horse?
Submarket 1
Wild Horse
The community itself — 800+ established single-family homes with light HOA fees and 215 access. The value anchor of the northwest corridor at this price point.
Browse Wild Horse homes →Submarket 2
Silverstone Ranch
A larger northwest Las Vegas master plan with guard-gated sections, community pools, and a more robust HOA amenity stack — carries higher dues than Wild Horse.
Browse Silverstone Ranch homes →Submarket 3
Northwest Las Vegas (broader)
The broader northwest corridor carries inventory from entry-level condos to mid-range SFRs — more options, less neighborhood cohesion than a defined community like Wild Horse.
Browse Northwest Las Vegas (broader) homes →Submarket 4
Skye Canyon
A newer northwest Las Vegas master plan with active builders, an extensive trail network, and HOA amenities — pays for master-plan infrastructure in higher HOA dues and purchase prices.
Browse Skye Canyon homes →Submarket 5
Summerlin
Howard Hughes Corporation's premier master plan — top CCSD school zones, Downtown Summerlin, an extensive trail system, and the strongest brand premium in the valley. Entry starts meaningfully above Wild Horse.
Browse Summerlin homes →Submarket 6
Wild Horse — The Value Play in Northwest Las Vegas
Eight hundred-plus established single-family homes with light HOA fees of $40–$120/mo and 215 access to the whole metro. For buyers who want a detached yard-and-garage home in a proven northwest Las Vegas neighborhood at attainable pricing, Wild Horse is the starting point.
Browse Wild Horse — The Value Play in Northwest Las Vegas homes →STILL DECIDING?
Not sure Wild Horse
fits your needs?
BY ZIP CODE
How Does the Wild Horse ZIP Code (89131) Break Down?
Wild Horse occupies ZIP code 89131 in northwest Las Vegas, sharing the ZIP with other established Centennial Hills-corridor communities. The table below maps the key price corridors within 89131, from entry-level inventory to the upper end of the Wild Horse range.
| ZIP | Primary Area | Median Price | $ / Sq Ft | Days on Market | Active | YoY |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 89131 | Wild Horse — established single-family (core community) | $450K–$750K | Market | 40 (area) | 360 (community est.) | n/a* |
| 89131 | Centennial Hills corridor — entry single-family | From $350K | Lower | 40 (area) | — | n/a* |
| 89131 | Centennial Hills corridor — mid-range SFR | $400K–$600K | Market | 40 (area) | — | n/a* |
| 89131 | Full 89131 area benchmark | ~$550,000 list | — | 40 | Active | n/a* |
Source: Las Vegas REALTORS MLS plus NREG corridor analysis. *Year-over-year $/SF is intentionally omitted: community-scale samples are too small to be statistically meaningful; we publish plan ranges and ZIP-area benchmarks instead. Boundaries per Clark County GIS.
BY THE NUMBERS
Which Statistics Define Wild Horse Real Estate?
Eight verifiable numbers — sourced to Las Vegas REALTORS, the U.S. Census Bureau, the Clark County Assessor, and the community plan record — capture Wild Horse faster than any brochure: 800+ homes, a $550K area median, 40 median days on market, and entry pricing near $450,000 for an established single-family home.
$550K
Approximate median list price in the Wild Horse / 89131 area, northwest Las Vegas, June 2026.
Las Vegas REALTORS
$450K–$750K
Wild Horse community price range — the honest window buyers should underwrite across established resale inventory.
Community plan record
800+
Established single-family homes across roughly 120 acres — the permanent community footprint.
Community plan record
40
Median days from list to accepted offer in the 89131 corridor — balanced market, buyers have due-diligence time.
LVR / GLVAR, June 2026
$40–$120
Monthly HOA dues — among the lowest for an organized Las Vegas residential community.
Community plan record
2004
Year Wild Horse was established — 20-plus years of mature landscaping and proven neighborhood character.
Community plan record
0%
Nevada state income tax. On a $200K household income, that saves roughly $15,000–$20,000 annually versus California.
Nevada Department of Taxation
15 min
Drive to the Las Vegas Strip — quick northwest access without Strip-corridor pricing.
Community plan record drive times
WHY WILD HORSE
Why Does Wild Horse Stand Apart From Its Northwest Las Vegas Peers?
Wild Horse holds a distinct value niche in northwest Las Vegas: $450K–$750K established single-family homes, HOA fees of $40–$120/mo, and 215 Beltway access that comparable-price communities nearby can't match. Each advantage below is sourced to the Nevada Revised Statutes, Clark County Assessor, Census, or the community plan record.
- LVR / GLVAR market data, June 2026
Value pricing in an established northwest corridor
$450K–$750K for a detached single-family home with mature landscaping and varied floor plans — well below what comparable Summerlin square footage runs.
- Community plan record
Light HOA overhead
$40–$120/mo in dues — among the lowest in the Las Vegas Valley for an organized residential community. Keeps monthly carrying costs predictable.
- Nevada Department of Taxation
Nevada's zero state income tax
Nevada levies no personal income tax. At a $200K household income, that is roughly $15,000–$20,000 per year back in your pocket versus California.
- Nevada Revised Statutes 361.471
3% property-tax cap on primary residences
Annual increases are capped by statute at 3%, making long-run ownership costs predictable for Wild Horse homeowners.
- Community plan record drive times
215 Beltway access to the full metro
Strip, airport, Summerlin, and Downtown Las Vegas all reachable in 15–25 minutes — northwest location without northwest isolation.
WHY BUY IN WILD HORSE
What Are the Top 10 Reasons to Buy a Home in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse's case rests on value and livability: established single-family homes at $450K–$750K, light HOA fees, property taxes capped at 3% annual growth under Nevada Revised Statutes 361.471, zero state income tax, and quick 215 access to the whole metro. Ten sourced reasons follow.
Attainable single-family pricing
$450K–$750K for a detached home with a yard — meaningful value versus comparable Summerlin or Henderson addresses.
LVR MLS data
Zero state income tax
Nevada levies no personal income tax — five-figure annual savings for California relocators.
Nevada Department of Taxation
3% property-tax cap
Annual increases on a primary residence are capped at 3% by statute — predictable long-run ownership.
NRS 361.471
Light HOA fees
$40–$120 per month — among the lowest for an organized Las Vegas community.
Community plan record
Established character from 2004
Mature trees, settled street patterns, and 20-plus years of proven neighborhood life.
Community plan record
Multiple builder floor plans
800+ homes from various builders means genuine variety in layout, lot size, and elevation — buyers are not locked into one product type.
Community plan record
Private school access nearby
Bishop Gorman HS and The Meadows School — two of Nevada's top private campuses — within 20–25 minutes.
GreatSchools
Floyd Lamb Park proximity
Roughly 680 acres of ponds, trails, picnic areas, and wildlife habitat about ten minutes north.
City of Las Vegas parks record
215 Beltway access
Strip, airport, Summerlin, and Downtown Las Vegas all reachable in 15–25 minutes from the community.
Community plan record drive times
FHA and conventional financing eligible
Prices in the $450K–$750K range sit inside 2026 conforming limits — buyers can leverage FHA (3.5% down), conventional (5%+), or VA (0%) financing.
HUD / FHFA 2026 loan limits
New Construction
Who Builds New Homes In and Around Wild Horse?
Wild Horse is fully built out — no production builder operates inside the plan. New-construction buyers in the northwest Las Vegas corridor look north to Centennial Hills, west to Skye Canyon, or into Summerlin West, where Lennar, Richmond American, and Tri Pointe Homes are actively selling. Incentives shift monthly — verify offers before you write.
Family & Move-Up
Lennar
Broadest new-build selection in the northwest corridor
Luxury & Move-Up
Toll Brothers
Luxury production profile for buyers upgrading from Wild Horse
Family
Richmond American
Value-oriented new builds closest to the Wild Horse price band
55+ Active Adult
Pulte / Del Webb
Active-adult option for downsizers comparing Wild Horse resale
Design-Forward Move-Up
Tri Pointe Homes
Contemporary architecture alternative to established Wild Horse resale
Outdoor Recreation
What Outdoor Amenities Does Wild Horse Offer?
Community parks inside the neighborhood, major regional parks minutes away, and 215 trail access throughout the northwest corridor — Wild Horse buyers enjoy genuine outdoor access without master-plan premium fees. The City of Las Vegas maintains the park and trail network, accessible through roughly 300 days of annual sunshine.
IN-COMMUNITY
Wild Horse Community Park
The neighborhood's green anchor: playground equipment, walking paths, and picnic areas within the community boundary — daily use by families and dog walkers.
~10 MIN N
Floyd Lamb Park at Tule Springs
One of southern Nevada's great urban wilderness parks — ponds stocked with fish, shaded picnic areas, walking and equestrian trails, and abundant wildlife a short drive north.
~20 MIN SE
Sunset Park
The city's premier multi-use park: a stocked lake, soccer and baseball fields, disc golf course, walking trails, and a community pool operated by the City of Las Vegas.
~5 MIN
215 Beltway Trail Network
The paved multi-use trail alongside the 215 Beltway connects Wild Horse to northwest Las Vegas and Summerlin trail systems — popular for cyclists, runners, and skaters.
~5 MIN
Centennial Hills Blvd Retail Corridor
The northwest Las Vegas commercial hub — grocers, restaurants, urgent care, and the everyday services Wild Horse residents use without leaving the corridor.
~30 MIN W
Red Rock Canyon NCA
The Mojave's signature conservation area — the 13-mile scenic loop, world-class rock climbing, and dozens of hiking trails managed by the Bureau of Land Management.
The Wild Horse Lifestyle
What Does a Weekend in Wild Horse Look Like?
Morning walks on community paths, an afternoon at Floyd Lamb Park's ponds and trails ten minutes north, errands along Centennial Hills Boulevard, and evenings 15 minutes from the Strip or Downtown Las Vegas — or a 30-minute drive to Red Rock Canyon's roughly 195,000 conservation acres per the Bureau of Land Management when you want wide-open Mojave.
THIS WEEKEND'S OPEN HOUSES
Can You Tour Wild Horse Homes This Weekend?
Wild Horse is an open community — showings are straightforward without gate-clearance coordination. Open houses run on weekend afternoons in active resale periods; set up an instant alert to get notified the moment a Wild Horse home schedules one. Or browse every active listing now and let us arrange a private showing on your timeline.
Quick Answer
What are HOA fees in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse HOA dues run $40–$120 per month — among the lowest for an organized Las Vegas residential community. Fees cover common-area maintenance and neighborhood upkeep, with the exact amount varying by sub-association. Request the resale package during escrow: current dues, reserve study, and CC&Rs. Standard Nevada escrows run 30–45 days, so ordering HOA documents immediately after acceptance keeps the review well inside your contingency window.
Should I Move to Wild Horse?
Every month, households from Los Angeles and the Bay Area discover that single-family ownership priced far out of reach in Southern California is attainable in northwest Las Vegas for $450K–$750K. California's top state income-tax rate is 13.3% per the Franchise Tax Board; Nevada's is zero — and that single line item covers most moving budgets.
Why California Buyers Are Choosing Wild Horse
The tax math drives the decision: California's top marginal state income tax is 13.3% — Nevada's is zero. A household earning $200,000 saves roughly $15,000–$20,000 per year in state income taxes alone. Wild Horse adds what a coastal suburb cannot answer at the price: an established single-family neighborhood with mature lots, light HOA fees of $40–$120 per month, and a property-tax rate capped at 3% annual growth for primary residences under Nevada Revised Statutes 361.471 — in a ZIP code 15 minutes from the Strip.
At a $550,000 budget, Southern California buyers are looking at a small condo on a main road. That same budget in Wild Horse secures a detached single-family home with a rear yard, attached garage, and mature street trees — in a settled northwest Las Vegas neighborhood — 15 minutes from Downtown Las Vegas and 25 from Summerlin.
According to Las Vegas REALTORS, the median list price in the Wild Horse ZIP area (89131) is near $550,000, with established homes ranging $450K–$750K. Per the Clark County Assessor, the effective property-tax rate runs roughly 0.5–0.7% of assessed value — far below California rates. FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data lets you benchmark area safety for the 89131 ZIP, and Floyd Lamb Park's roughly 680 acres are ten minutes north via the City of Las Vegas park network.
Wild Horse residents commute into a diversified Las Vegas metro economy: the Centennial Hills medical and retail corridor is minutes away, the 215 Beltway feeds northwest employers and the Strip corridor alike, and Downtown Las Vegas is a short 15-minute drive. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Las Vegas metro unemployment rate remains historically low, providing buyers with confidence in the regional employment base.
Cost of Living Snapshot — Wild Horse vs. Los Angeles
Day-to-day costs run meaningfully lower than coastal California across nearly every category. Nevada has no state income tax and no personal property tax on vehicles beyond registration. The category that flips hardest is housing: a detached single-family home with a yard that costs $1M+ in suburban Los Angeles costs $450K–$750K in Wild Horse.
| Metric | Wild Horse, NV | Los Angeles, CA |
|---|---|---|
| State Income Tax | None | Up to 13.3% |
| Median Home Price | ~$550K | $900K+ (suburban SFR) |
| HOA Fees | $40–$120/mo | $200–$500/mo (comparable HOA communities) |
| Effective Property Tax Rate | ~0.5%–0.7% | ~1.1%+ (Prop 13 reset on sale) |
| Airport Commute | ~20 min (Harry Reid) | 45–90+ min (LAX) |
Figures are approximate, for illustration. Contact our team for current market data.
Wild Horse Rental Market — Rent vs. Own
Rental inventory in Wild Horse is limited by its owner-occupant majority — roughly 55% ownership per community demographics — but 89131 rentals do surface. Single-family homes in the area lease in the $2,200–$3,200/month range. Short-term rentals face City of Las Vegas regulations; always review CC&Rs and current city rules before underwriting vacation-rental income on a Wild Horse purchase. For long-hold buyers, the ownership math tilts toward buying over the medium term given Nevada's zero income tax and 3% property-tax cap.
Updated June 2026 · Source: Las Vegas REALTORS rental tracking & BLS Consumer Price Index
Already planning a move to Wild Horse? Our team specializes in out-of-state relocation — virtual home tours, neighborhood orientation drives, school district verification, and closing coordination without flying in repeatedly.
Start Your Relocation SearchRELOCATION TIMELINE
How to relocate to Wild Horse in 8 steps
From first research to keys-in-hand, here is the 8–10 week timeline most Wild Horse buyers follow. Two deadlines are statutory: Nevada requires a driver's license within 30 days of residency and vehicle registration within 60, per the Nevada DMV — miss them and registration penalties stack.
Research and set your budget
Wild Horse ranges $450K–$750K. Condition-updated homes command 5–10% premiums over original-finish listings; lot size and location within the community add another layer. Know your priority before touring.
Get pre-approved
FHA allows 3.5% down; conventional works at 5–10%; VA allows 0% for eligible veterans. The entire Wild Horse range sits inside 2026 conforming limits — no jumbo required. Have your letter before you tour.
Hire a northwest Las Vegas specialist
Wild Horse resale comps require care: multiple original builders, wide condition variation, and lot-size differences create gaps that price-per-square-foot misses. Work with an agent who tracks the 89131 corridor closely.
Tour in person or virtually
Wild Horse is an open community — no gate clearance needed. Schedule showings at different times of day to get a true sense of street noise and neighborhood rhythm. Virtual tours work well for out-of-state buyers.
Write and negotiate the offer
Financed offers with tier-vetted pre-approvals compete well in this market. Ask us where each seller actually stands on price before you write — most Wild Horse sellers have realistic expectations in a 40-day-DOM market.
Inspection and HOA document review
Order the HOA resale package immediately after acceptance. Review dues, reserves, CC&Rs, and any assessment history. Inspection should cover HVAC, roof, and pool equipment if present — condition variance is high across builders.
Clear conditions and fund
Nevada closes through escrow companies, not attorneys; expect 30–45 days from acceptance to funding. FHA appraisals can add a few days in active markets — your lender will track the timeline.
Close, move, and register
Transfer utilities (NV Energy, Southwest Gas, Las Vegas Valley Water District), update your address, then handle the Nevada DMV — driver's license within 30 days of residency, vehicle registration within 60.
ECONOMY & JOBS
What Drives the Wild Horse Economy?
Wild Horse residents commute into a diversified Las Vegas metro economy. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Las Vegas metro labor market remains historically strong, with the hospitality, healthcare, construction, and technology sectors all contributing meaningful employment for northwest Las Vegas residents.
Top Wild Horse Area Employers
- Centennial Hills HospitalFull-service hospital and medical office campus in the northwest Las Vegas corridor — major area employer
- Las Vegas Strip resort corridorHospitality, gaming, and entertainment employment core, roughly 15 minutes south via local roads
- Harry Reid International AirportAviation, logistics, TSA, and ground transportation employment roughly 20 minutes southeast
- Clark County School District (northwest region)Area campuses including Fremont Elementary, Fremont Middle, and Clark High School
- City of Las Vegas municipal servicesParks, utilities, planning, and public safety for the parent city
- Centennial Hills Blvd retail and medical corridorGrocers, urgent care, restaurants, and service businesses immediately adjacent to Wild Horse
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, City of Las Vegas. Last updated June 2026.
COMMUNITY COMPARISON
How Does Wild Horse Compare to Summerlin, Henderson & Las Vegas?
If you're weighing Wild Horse against the valley's other major residential markets, this side-by-side covers the metrics buyers ask about most, updated June 2026. Wild Horse wins on value and light overhead, Summerlin on schools and amenities, Henderson on safety rankings — sources are LVR, the U.S. Census, and FBI UCR.
| Metric | Wild Horse | Las Vegas | Summerlin | Henderson |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median List Price | ~$550K (89131 area) | $476K | $728K | $548K |
| Community Price Range | $450K–$750K | Wide range | $500K–$5M+ | $350K–$3M+ |
| HOA Fees | $40–$120/mo | Varies | $150–$300+/mo | $60–$250/mo |
| Days on Market | 40 (89131) | ~38 | ~21 | ~21 |
| Population | ~2,400 (community) | 656,274 | ~127,000 | 331,857 |
| State Income Tax | None | None | None | None |
| Guard-Gated | No | Select enclaves | Select (The Ridges) | Select (MacDonald Highlands) |
| New Construction | None — built out | Moderate | Very High (Summerlin West) | Very High (Cadence, Inspirada) |
| Best For | Value · Families · Relocators | Selection · Urban · Investors | Schools · Luxury · Outdoors | Families · Retirees · Safety |
Sources: Las Vegas REALTORS, U.S. Census QuickFacts. Wild Horse community figures are plan-record values; city demographics are Las Vegas citywide — the Census does not tabulate the community separately. Last updated June 2026.
What Will Wild Horse Cost You Each Month?
A $550,000 Wild Horse purchase runs about $3,800 monthly with 10% down at 7% per Freddie Mac's rate survey — including the light HOA dues and property taxes that keep this community's carrying costs among the most manageable in northwest Las Vegas. The tabs below model your payment, compare renting, and show the buy-vs-rent math over five years.
Estimate Your Wild Horse Payment
- Principal & Interest$3,293
- Property Tax$280
- Insurance$150
- HOA$200
- PMI$206
Estimated calculations only — consult a lender for exact figures. Rate benchmarks reflect the Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey.
BUY VS RENT
Should you buy or rent in Wild Horse right now?
Rental single-family homes in 89131 run $2,200–$3,200/month in the Wild Horse range. For 5+ year holds, the ownership math tilts toward buying as equity builds and the 3% tax cap keeps ownership costs stable while rents reset annually.
OWN (10% DOWN, 7%)
$3,960 / mo
- Principal & Interest
- $3,295
- Property Tax (~0.6%)
- $275
- Homeowners Insurance
- $110
- HOA (community)
- $80
- PMI (10% down)
- $200
5-year net cost:~$127,000
Equity built:~$157,000
RENT (MODELED SFR LEASE)
$2,600 / mo
- Single-Family Lease (modeled)
- $2,600
- Renters Insurance
- $25
- Equity Built / Month
- $0
- Tax Benefit
- $0
- Annual Increase Risk
- ~4%
5-year net cost:~$168,000
Equity built:$0
Avg annual rent increase: 4.0%
The 5-year breakeven
Owning a Wild Horse home for five years nets out comparably to renting once principal paydown and appreciation are counted — and the owner builds roughly $157,000 in equity (including the down payment) while the renter builds none. Nevada's zero income tax and 3% property-tax cap provide an additional ownership tailwind not captured in this model.
Model assumptions: 7.0% 30-yr fixed (Freddie Mac PMMS), 3% annual appreciation, 4% annual rent growth, 0.6% effective property tax, $80/mo blended HOA, modeled $2,600 SFR lease.
HOA Fees by Community
HOA Fees by Property Type
Wild Horse HOA dues are straightforward and light compared to master-planned neighbors. Request the resale package — dues, reserves, and CC&Rs — early in escrow to confirm your specific home's obligations.
Single-Family Homes
$40–$120 / mo
Wild Horse single-family homes
$40–$120
Includes:
Common-area maintenance, neighborhood upkeep, and community landscaping
Sub-association variance
Within $40–$120
Includes:
Exact dues vary by section — confirm in the resale package during escrow
Due-Diligence Checklist
Request in escrow
Resale package
Statutory right
Includes:
Current dues, reserve study, assessment history, CC&Rs, and community rules
Transfer fees
Varies
Includes:
One-time association charges at closing — price them into your offer math
COMMUTE & TRANSPORTATION
How Easy Is Getting Around From Wild Horse?
Wild Horse sits in the 215 Beltway corridor — one of the northwest Las Vegas valley's most connected locations. Mean Las Vegas commutes run about 25 minutes per U.S. Census ACS data — and most Wild Horse destinations beat that comfortably, especially to the Strip and Downtown Las Vegas.
Drive Times from Wild Horse
- 5 minCentennial Hills Blvd (daily errands)Local roads north
- ~15 minLas Vegas StripLocal roads to I-215 or Decatur Blvd south
- ~15 minDowntown Las VegasLocal roads via US-95 east
- ~20 minHarry Reid International AirportI-215 south to I-15 south
- ~25 minSummerlin / Downtown SummerlinUS-95 west or Summerlin Pkwy
- ~10 minFloyd Lamb ParkDecatur Blvd north to Tule Springs Rd
- ~30 minRed Rock CanyonW Charleston Blvd west
- ~40 minHendersonI-215 east to I-515
Transportation Options
Drive times based on average non-rush-hour conditions. Sources: Google Maps traffic data, RTC of Southern Nevada.
Quick Answer
How long does it take to close on a Wild Horse home?
Most Wild Horse purchases close in 30–45 days through a Nevada escrow company. Cash offers can close in 10–14 days. FHA and VA loans sometimes need an extra week for appraisal scheduling in active market periods. Request HOA resale documents immediately after acceptance — even at $40–$120/mo, the review period eats into your contingency window if you wait.
Quick Answer
What down payment do you need to buy in Wild Horse?
Most Wild Horse buyers put down 3.5%–20%. FHA allows 3.5% down — on a $550,000 home that is roughly $19,250. Conventional financing at 5–10% down works for most of the range; VA loans allow 0% for eligible veterans. The entire Wild Horse price range sits inside the 2026 conforming loan limits, so jumbo financing is rarely needed here. Get pre-approved before your first tour — sellers in this market expect a letter.
Wild Horse FAQ — 18 Answers
What Do Wild Horse Buyers Most Frequently Ask?
Most AskedWhat is the median home price in Wild Horse Las Vegas?
Wild Horse homes in ZIP 89131 currently carry a median list near $675,000 per Las Vegas REALTORS MLS data — a value-oriented position for an established northwest Las Vegas neighborhood with mature lots and 215 Beltway access. Condition, upgrades, and lot size drive wide swings inside that range: updated kitchens and baths command clear premiums over original-finish listings.
Is Wild Horse a good neighborhood in Las Vegas?
Yes — Wild Horse earns its reputation on three pillars: a central northwest Las Vegas location with quick access to the 215 and US-95, light HOA fees of $40–$120 per month, and 20-plus years of proven neighborhood character. Mature street trees, varied single-family floor plans from multiple builders, and value pricing relative to Summerlin make it a consistent draw for families and first-time buyers.
What ZIP code is Wild Horse in?
Wild Horse is in ZIP code 89131, inside the City of Las Vegas in the Centennial Hills corridor. The 89131 ZIP places the community squarely in northwest Las Vegas, about 15 minutes from the Strip and Downtown Las Vegas via local roads and about 20 minutes from Harry Reid International Airport via I-215. Search by 89131 to catch new Wild Horse listings quickly.
What are HOA fees in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse HOA dues run $40–$120 per month — low by Las Vegas standards — covering common-area maintenance and neighborhood upkeep. The exact amount varies by sub-association; request the resale package during escrow to confirm current dues, reserve funding, and CC&R rules. Standard Nevada escrows run 30–45 days, so ordering HOA documents immediately after acceptance keeps the review well inside your contingency window.
How far is Wild Horse from the Las Vegas Strip?
Wild Horse is roughly 15 minutes from the Strip via local roads through the northwest Las Vegas corridor. Downtown Las Vegas runs about the same 15 minutes; Harry Reid International Airport is approximately 20 minutes via I-215 or I-15; and Summerlin is about 25 minutes via US-95 or the Summerlin Parkway. Drive your specific route at rush hour to confirm — morning traffic toward the 95 can add five to ten minutes.
What schools serve Wild Horse?
Wild Horse is served by Clark County School District; area campuses include John C. Fremont Elementary, Fremont Middle School, and Clark High School. Private options include Bishop Gorman High School and The Meadows School, both strong by Nevada standards. Coral Academy of Science and Nevada State High School round out the charter tier nearby. School zoning is strictly address-based — confirm assigned campuses with CCSD before committing to a specific home.
Is Wild Horse Las Vegas good for families?
Yes — Wild Horse appeals to families primarily through attainable pricing in the $450K–$750K range, light HOA fees, and established neighborhood character that newer communities cannot replicate. Community parks, manageable commute times, and CCSD school access pair well for households that want space without guard-gated premiums. Families prioritizing top school ratings specifically often cross-shop Summerlin, where GreatSchools scores run a notch higher.
What type of homes are in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse is a single-family community of 800-plus homes developed from 2004 across roughly 120 acres by multiple builders — giving buyers genuinely varied floor plans, lot sizes, and exterior elevations across the $450K–$750K range. Most homes are detached single-story and two-story residences with attached garages and rear-yard space. That builder diversity makes comps nuanced: similar square footages can differ materially on lot size and condition.
How does Wild Horse compare to Summerlin?
Wild Horse wins on price and light HOA fees: entry near $450K versus roughly $600K+ in outer Summerlin, with dues of $40–$120 per month versus Summerlin village fees that often run $150–$300+. Summerlin counters with Howard Hughes Corporation master-plan amenities — extensive trails, Downtown Summerlin, and top-rated schools — plus newer construction and the brand recognition that supports its resale premium. Buyers who want space and solid value often land in Wild Horse.
What are property taxes like in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse falls under City of Las Vegas and Clark County jurisdiction. Nevada's effective property-tax rate runs roughly 0.5–0.7% of assessed value per the Clark County Assessor, and Nevada Revised Statutes 361.471 caps annual increases on a primary residence at 3%. On a $550,000 Wild Horse home that is approximately $2,750–$3,850 per year — well below what a comparable home would carry in California or other high-rate states.
Is Wild Horse a safe community?
Wild Horse sits in the 89131 ZIP code in northwest Las Vegas — an established, owner-heavy residential corridor that runs meaningfully quieter than the urban core. The City of Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department covers the neighborhood. Benchmark safety for any specific address through FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data; the 89131 ZIP consistently rates among the calmer residential areas in the Las Vegas Valley.
How does Nevada's tax environment affect Wild Horse buyers?
Nevada levies zero state income tax versus California's top rate of 13.3% per the Franchise Tax Board — a five-figure annual savings for most relocating households. Clark County's effective property-tax rate of roughly 0.5–0.7% with a 3% statutory cap under Nevada Revised Statutes 361.471 adds another meaningful advantage. Together these two lines make Wild Horse ownership substantially cheaper on a carrying-cost basis than a comparable California address.
Are there new homes for sale in Wild Horse?
Wild Horse is a built-out established community — no production new construction operates inside the plan. Today's market is resale: 800-plus homes with condition and upgrade variation from multiple original builders. Buyers who want brand-new construction in the northwest corridor typically look north toward newer Centennial Hills developments or west toward Skye Canyon, where builders are actively selling. Our team can show both alongside Wild Horse resales in a single day of touring.
What amenities and parks are near Wild Horse?
Wild Horse residents have community parks within the neighborhood plus Floyd Lamb Park at Tule Springs — roughly 680 acres of ponds, picnic areas, walking trails, and wildlife habitat about ten minutes north — and Sunset Park, one of the city's largest parks with a lake, sports fields, and disc golf. The City of Las Vegas and the 215 trail network give the community solid outdoor access without the premium of a master-planned HOA.
Can Nevada Real Estate Group help me buy or sell in Wild Horse?
Absolutely — call (702) 637-1759 or start your search online. Nevada Real Estate Group is Nevada's #1 real estate team with 9,600+ closed transactions and $4.85B+ in total volume. Our agents know the Wild Horse resale market's nuances: builder variations, lot-size pricing gaps, and the condition factors that separate a strong value from an overpriced listing. We offer virtual tours, same-day showings, and out-of-state relocation support.
What down payment do you need to buy in Wild Horse?
Most Wild Horse buyers put down 3.5%–20%. FHA loans allow 3.5% down on homes up to the conforming limit — on a $550,000 purchase that is roughly $19,250. Conventional financing at 5–10% down works for most of the range; VA loans allow 0% for eligible veterans. At $450K–$750K, Wild Horse is well inside conforming loan limits for 2026, so jumbo financing is rarely needed here. Get pre-approved before touring — sellers in this range expect it.
How long does it take to close on a Wild Horse home?
Most Wild Horse purchases close in 30–45 days through a Nevada escrow company. Cash offers can close in 10–14 days. FHA and VA files sometimes need an extra week for appraisal scheduling in active markets. Request HOA resale documents immediately after acceptance — the $40–$120/mo dues are simple, but the review period still eats into your contingency clock. Our team coordinates every timeline milestone to keep you on track.
Is Wild Horse a good investment?
Wild Horse offers solid long-hold fundamentals: established northwest Las Vegas location with 215 access, attainable entry in the $450K–$750K range, and light HOA overhead at $40–$120/mo. Resale demand is driven by families and first-time buyers — a durable buyer pool. Nevada's zero income tax and 3% property-tax cap under NRS 361.471 keep carrying costs predictable over time. It is not a speculative play — it is steady residential real estate in a proven corridor.
Updated June 2026
STILL HAVE QUESTIONS?
Chris Nevada answers
personally.
PEOPLE ALSO ASK
What Else Do People Ask About Wild Horse Las Vegas?
These are the questions Wild Horse buyers actually type into Google and AI assistants — answered with specifics you can verify: market figures from Las Vegas REALTORS, tax law from the Nevada Revised Statutes, and community facts from the plan record.
Is Wild Horse in Centennial Hills Las Vegas?
Yes — Wild Horse is in the Centennial Hills corridor of northwest Las Vegas, ZIP 89131. Centennial Hills is the broader planning area; Wild Horse is a specific established community within it, developed from 2004 across roughly 120 acres with 800-plus single-family homes.
What is the HOA in Wild Horse Las Vegas?
Wild Horse HOA dues run $40–$120 per month, covering common-area maintenance and neighborhood upkeep. That is among the lowest for an organized Las Vegas community. Confirm your specific sub-association amount in the resale package during escrow.
How many homes are in Wild Horse Las Vegas?
Wild Horse contains 800-plus single-family homes across roughly 120 acres, per the community plan record. The community was developed by multiple builders starting in 2004 and is largely built out, so today's market is resale with wide floor-plan and condition variation.
Can I use FHA financing to buy in Wild Horse?
Yes — Wild Horse's $450K–$750K price range sits entirely inside the 2026 FHA conforming loan limits for Clark County. FHA requires 3.5% down; conventional works at 5%+; VA allows 0% for eligible veterans. Get pre-approved before touring — sellers expect a letter.
What are drive times from Wild Horse to the Strip?
About 15 minutes via local roads through northwest Las Vegas — no freeway required for the Strip run. Downtown Las Vegas is the same 15 minutes; Harry Reid Airport runs about 20 minutes via I-215; and Summerlin is 25 minutes via US-95. Drive your specific route at rush hour to confirm.
Is Wild Horse Las Vegas safe?
Wild Horse is in the 89131 ZIP — an established, owner-occupant northwest Las Vegas residential corridor that runs meaningfully quieter than the urban core. LVMPD covers the area. Benchmark any specific address through FBI Uniform Crime Reporting data before you offer.
Is Wild Horse good for first-time buyers?
Yes — Wild Horse is one of the stronger first-time buyer communities in northwest Las Vegas. The $450K–$750K range supports FHA (3.5% down) and conventional financing; the $40–$120 monthly HOA fees are manageable; and Nevada's zero income tax creates monthly budget room that does not exist in California.
How does Wild Horse compare to Silverstone Ranch?
Wild Horse's advantage is lighter HOA fees and established character in a slightly more central location. Silverstone Ranch counters with master-plan amenities, guard-gated sections, and generally higher perceived community prestige. Prices overlap in the mid range; your choice comes down to overhead comfort and lifestyle priorities.
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Direct market knowledge, the largest agent team in the Valley, and thousands of verified five-star reviews. Across 9,600+ closed transactions and $4.85B+ in volume since 2011, our agents have represented buyers and sellers across the northwest Las Vegas corridor — including established value communities like Wild Horse where condition and comp selection separate strong buys from overpriced ones.
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Want to Talk to a Wild Horse Real Estate Expert?
9,600+ transactions. $4.85B+ in total volume. Chris Nevada and the NREG team have closed thousands of Las Vegas transactions since 2011 — in an established resale market like Wild Horse, knowing the condition factors, builder variations, and accurate comp set is how buyers avoid overpaying and sellers price to sell. Tell us what you're looking for.
NEARBY COMMUNITIES
Which Communities Are Within 30 Minutes of Wild Horse?
Compare Wild Horse with neighboring northwest Las Vegas communities and nearby cities. Each card pairs the commute time with price positioning so you can judge whether a different address actually buys more home or a meaningfully different lifestyle for the money.
A–Z INDEX
Which Wild Horse and Northwest Las Vegas Areas Can You Explore A–Z?
Wild Horse is one of several established northwest Las Vegas communities in ZIP 89131, alongside Silverstone Ranch, Centennial Hills, and the broader northwest corridor. The entries below are alphabetically indexed for orientation; each links to the nearest available hub page or live community guide so you can compare pricing, lifestyle, and location side by side.
W
- Wild Horse
KEEP LEARNING
What Else Should You Read About Wild Horse and Northwest Las Vegas?
These guides cover the research most Wild Horse buyers do next — the citywide Las Vegas market, a side-by-side of northwest Las Vegas communities in the 89131 corridor, and the full buying process from pre-approval through closing. Each resource links directly to the relevant hub page or guide.
MARKET GUIDE
Las Vegas Housing Market 2026
The citywide playbook — pricing, inventory, rates, and where the valley's momentum actually is this year.
Read →COMMUNITY HUB
Las Vegas Community Hub
Citywide market data, every major Las Vegas community, and side-by-side comparisons in one place.
Read →BUYER GUIDE
Moving to Las Vegas Guide
Everything California and out-of-state relocators need to know — neighborhoods, taxes, schools, and the buying process.
Read →Sources & Methodology
Where Does This Wild Horse Data Come From?
Every statistic on this page is sourced from a primary or government dataset, refreshed monthly. Wild Horse is a community of 800+ homes within the 89131 ZIP code; we present ZIP-area figures as area benchmarks and note where plan-record data applies. Follow any link below to verify a figure.
- Las Vegas REALTORS (LVR / GLVAR) — Median list and sold prices, days on market, active and closed counts for the 89131 ZIP corridor. lasvegasrealtors.com
- U.S. Census Bureau — Las Vegas city population, income, age, and housing data (Wild Horse is not separately tabulated). census.gov/quickfacts
- City of Las Vegas — City services, police coverage, park facilities, and short-term rental regulations. lasvegasnevada.gov
- Clark County Assessor — Property tax rates, assessed values, and parcel data for Clark County. clarkcountynv.gov/assessor
- Nevada Revised Statutes 361.471 — The 3% annual property-tax cap on primary residences in Nevada. leg.state.nv.us
- FBI Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) — Las Vegas area violent and property crime rates for safety benchmarking. fbi.gov/ucr
- U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Las Vegas metro employment, unemployment, and wage data. bls.gov
- GreatSchools.org — K-12 school ratings, test scores, and student-teacher ratios for Clark County schools. greatschools.org
- Bureau of Land Management — Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area acreage, access, and recreation data. blm.gov
- Freddie Mac PMMS — Mortgage rate weekly survey used in the payment calculator modeling. freddiemac.com/pmms
Methodology: Listing data is sourced via Repliers IDX feed (Las Vegas MLS) and refreshed every 15 minutes. Demographic and economic data are pulled monthly via Census/BLS APIs. School data is refreshed quarterly. All comparisons are like-for-like (same metric, same time period).
Last refresh: June 2026 · Next scheduled refresh: July 2026
