Why work with Mali in Fairview
Fairview is a small town in Collin County (10,783 people per the US Census ACS 2020-2024 5-year estimate), and its character is not an accident of history. It is written into the zoning code. Fairview's Ranch Estate districts set minimum lot sizes of three acres, two acres, an acre and a half, and one acre, and the RE-1 district requires at least a full acre excluding road rights-of-way. That structurally caps density, which is why the town grows slowly, why the housing product is estate homes on land rather than production subdivisions, and why the median owner-occupied home value is $597,300, roughly 70% above Anna's. Two things every Fairview buyer has to get right before writing an offer: the school district line, which splits the town between Lovejoy ISD and McKinney ISD; and the demographics, which are older than almost anywhere nearby.
- Local to Fairview, not just "the metroplex" - she knows the neighborhoods, schools, and HOAs block by block.
- Represents you on both sides: buying, selling, or selling-to-buy with the two closings coordinated.
- Straight answers on price and fees up front - no pressure, no jargon.
- Access to off-market and new-build inventory beyond what's on the public portals.
What buyers love about Fairview
- Ranch Estate zoning with 3-acre, 2-acre, 1.5-acre and 1-acre minimum lot sizes: the land-use rule that defines the whole town
- Heritage Ranch: a gated 55+ active-adult community of 1,144 homes on roughly 575 acres, with an 18-hole Arthur Hills-designed championship course
- Fairview Town Center (formerly The Village at Fairview), the town's mixed-use retail, dining and entertainment anchor