The Last House on the Street. On Purpose. Home For Sale Near Fort Bliss, Texas.

There’s a reason cul-de-sac homes sell faster than anything else on the block. No through-traffic. No headlights sweeping your living room at 11pm. Just quiet — and almost a quarter acre of it.
This one sits at the end of that quiet street, a short walk from Veteran’s Park, in North El Paso.
Here’s what you’re actually getting: 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, both recently redone — not “updated,” redone, the kind of work that means you don’t think about the bathroom for another decade. A kitchen that catches natural light most of the day, which sounds small until you’ve cooked dinner in a dark one.
Outside is where this house quietly wins. Real grass, not the patchy kind. A porch deep enough to actually live on, shaded enough for July. And a concrete-pad metal shed in genuinely good shape — the kind of detail buyers usually find out costs them $3,000 after closing.
Move-in ready. Priced like it isn’t.
The space, the privacy, and the location near the park are the kind of thing you don’t get back once someone else buys it first.

Key Insights
- El Paso is a seller’s-leaning market as of May 2026: the GEPAR median sale price hit a record $277,950 (+4.9% year-over-year), homes sold in a median of 21 days, sellers received 99.1% of asking price, and inventory sat at just 3.6 months — well below the 5–6 months considered balanced.
- Inventory is the defining story: 2,745 active listings (down 13.2% YoY) keep supply tight, even as closed sales softened 4.5% YoY to 768 homes — demand is healthy but constrained by affordability and ~6.5% mortgage rates.
- The narrative for buyers and sellers: this is a “shifting but resilient” market — prices keep grinding higher on tight supply, but slightly slower sales and gradually rising inventory give prepared buyers a marginally better footing than a year ago.
