Based in Gatesville and serving the surrounding communities of Coryell, Bell, Hamilton, McLennan, and Lampasas counties.
From Hamilton in the west to Waco in the east, Gatesville at the center to the Fort Cavazos corridor in the south — central Texas, where we know the homes and the weather they have to survive.
Coryell County seat · Home base · Historic mid-century stock
02Coryell County · The Cove · Fort Cavazos military families
03Bell County · 127K population · Fort Cavazos commuter hub
04Bell County · Upscale suburb · Newer construction · Stillhouse Hollow Lake
05McLennan County · Heart of Blackland Prairie · Historic + suburban
06Hamilton County · Rural acreage · Wells, septic, Hill Country transition
Historic homes around the square, ranches across the county, and the corridor running south toward Fort Cavazos.
Coryell CountyThe west gate to Fort Cavazos. Military families, fast turns, VA-loan-ready reports.
The largest housing market in our service area. New construction, established neighborhoods, PCS-paced timelines.
Bell CountyMove-up buyers and master-planned communities. Thorough inspections, clear reports.
Castle Heights bungalows to new builds out toward China Spring — full coverage across the metro.
Hamilton CountyRural acreage, ranch homes, outbuildings, wells, and septic — country-property expertise.
If your property is within roughly a 90-minute radius of Gatesville, we likely cover it. When in doubt, call.
Don't see your question? Get in touch — Gregg answers his own phone.
Killeen homes commonly present with foundation movement from clay soils, aging HVAC systems working overtime in Texas heat, aluminum wiring in 1960s–1970s military housing, polybutylene plumbing in 1980s–1990s construction, and hail damage to roofing from central Texas storms. Homes near Fort Cavazos may also have deferred maintenance from rental use.
Gatesville homes range from historic downtown properties to newer suburban construction. Common issues include aging pier-and-beam foundations on older homes, outdated electrical systems, plumbing material transitions (galvanized to copper to PEX), and roof damage from severe weather. Many properties also have well water and septic systems that need evaluation.
Waco-area homes face typical central Texas challenges: clay soil foundation movement, severe weather damage (the Waco area is in Tornado Alley), aging infrastructure in historic neighborhoods, and HVAC strain from extreme summer heat. Homes along the Brazos River corridor may also have flood plain considerations.
Copperas Cove sits at the edge of the Hill Country with rocky limestone soils transitioning to clay. Common issues include foundation movement, roof damage from hail and high winds, HVAC systems at end-of-life (many homes built in the 1970s–1990s military housing boom), and aluminum wiring in older military-adjacent construction.
Central Texas weather creates specific challenges: extreme summer heat (100°F+) degrades roofing and overworks HVAC, severe thunderstorms and hail damage exterior components, clay soil moisture cycles cause foundation movement, and occasional flooding can affect properties near waterways. A qualified inspector knows exactly what these conditions do to homes.
Hill Country and rural properties may have pier-and-beam foundations on limestone bedrock, well water and septic systems, metal roofing, propane gas systems, extended electrical runs from the transformer, and wildlife considerations (rodents, birds, insects). The building methods and materials differ from subdivision construction and require specific inspection knowledge.