Homes on the courthouse square · Brick cottages a block off the square · Farmhouses on row-crop acreage · Lots near the river(555) 274-0163 · hello@example.com
Mississippi Delta Real Estate

Find your place
where the fields meet the square.

A columned home on a shaded street a short walk from the courthouse, a brick cottage a block off the square with a porch made for July evenings, a farmhouse on a few rows of black Delta ground, or a quiet lot near the river, shown to you by people who grew up on these turn rows, know which towns still keep a real square, and can tell you which streets stay cool under the pecans when the heat sets in.

On the SquareHistoric HomeFarmhouse on AcreageNear the RiverUnder $300k
11
Delta towns and county seats we know square by square, street by street, and turn row by turn row
Both
The grand old homes in town and the working farmland out past the gin where the cotton and soybeans run flat to the treeline
Local
We were raised here, on the same squares, ball fields, and catfish ponds as the families we help find a place to land
520+
Families we have helped settle into a home in town or a place on the land out in the Delta they now call home
On the market

Homes built for long porches, slow evenings, and shade from the pecans.

A few of the places this stretch of the Delta is known for, with fresh listings every week.

On the Square
Pecan Street

The Columned Home in Town

$329,000
4 Bed3 BathWalk to Square
Historic
Magnolia Avenue

The Brick Cottage Off the Square

$214,000
3 Bed2 BathDeep Porch
On the Land
River Road

The Farmhouse on Delta Ground

$405,000
4 Bed3 Bath40 Acres
Why people put down roots down here

More than a house. A life lived close to the square, the river, and the open fields that go gold come fall.

01

The seasons run easy down here

A green planting spring when the fields go in and the dogwoods bloom on the side streets, a long warm summer of porch fans, snowball stands, and ball games under the lights, a soft fall when the cotton opens white and the soybeans turn gold to the treeline, and a mild gray winter you can still spend on the porch. We help you find the place that fits the life you actually want, a home on the square or a place out on the land.

02

You learn the towns side by side

Which county seats still keep a real square with a courthouse, a hardware store, and a diner open at noon, which streets sit high and which go low when the river comes up, where the good school district lines fall, and which old homes have honest heart-pine bones behind the porch paint. We walk you through the real feel of each town and back road before you ever choose.

03

Straight about land, water, and the old houses

What a row-crop lease, a turn row, and a drainage ditch really mean if you buy ground, how the levee, the flood maps, and the gumbo soil shape what sits where, what a hundred-year-old house asks of you in wiring, plumbing, and a new roof, and which repairs can wait a season. We give you the honest Delta math up front, not after you have the keys.

The towns

Where you'll want to put down roots.

Each town in the Delta has its own feel. Here are the ones people fall for.

Cypress Bend

The classic county seat, a courthouse square with a hardware store and a blue-plate diner, shaded streets of columned homes, and ball fields a walk from the porch

Sunflower Crossing

Out where the rows run to the treeline, farmhouses and gin-town cottages on quiet lanes, room for a garden, a shop, and a porch facing the open fields

Willow Landing

Up near the river and the levee, brick homes on high ground, a Main Street that still fills for the fall festival, and catfish ponds a short drive out
New to the Delta

Moving down to the Delta is its own kind of move.

A lot of our buyers are trading a crowded block and a long commute for a town where the kids ride bikes to the square, a columned home with a porch wide enough for the whole family, or a farmhouse out where they can finally keep a garden, a shop, and a long view of the open fields, so we slow down and walk you through how a Delta property really lives across a full year, a hot bright July week and a soft gray January alike.

How a home in town and a place out on the land hold up, what a row-crop lease, a turn row, and a drainage ditch ask of you if you buy ground, what the levee, the flood maps, and the gumbo soil really cost and allow, and how a hundred-year-old house handles wiring, plumbing, and a new roof. Real answers before you commit, not after your first hard summer.

Start With a Local Guide
Come walk the square with us

The next chapter starts in the Delta.

Tell us what you picture, a columned home on a shaded street, a brick cottage off the square, or a farmhouse out on the land, and we will send you the places worth a look.

Plan a Visit
Library · High Cotton Homes (Mississippi Delta)