New Build Homes in Arizona 55+ Communities
Ten Valley communities are still building new homes right now. Here’s who’s building where, what stage each one is at, and the one thing to do before you walk into a builder’s sales office.
Read this before you tour a model home
Walk into a builder’s sales office alone and you’ll meet a friendly, knowledgeable person who does not work for you. They work for the builder. That’s not a criticism — it’s their job, and they’re good at it.
Here’s the part that costs people money: most builders ask you to register on your very first visit, and once you’ve registered without representation, bringing in your own agent afterward can be difficult or impossible. One walk-through on a Saturday afternoon can quietly decide whether you have someone on your side for the rest of the transaction.
So the fix is simple and it’s free to do: call us before you visit. We’ll register you properly, come with you, and represent you from the model home through the walk-through and closing.
- We represent you, not the builder — on lot premiums, upgrades, incentives, and what’s actually negotiable.
- We know what these communities are like after the trucks leave — how the HOA runs, what the dues do over time, which phases turned out better.
- We’re there for the inspections and the walk-through, including the ones most buyers skip on a new build.
- On compensation — builders typically cover buyer representation, but the terms vary by builder and they’ve changed recently. We’ll put ours in writing with you before you commit to anything.
Arizona 55+ communities still building new homes
Current as of July 2026. Build status changes — phases sell out, communities finish — so check with us before you plan a trip around any one of them.
Del Webb. Opened in 2006 and still releasing new phases — the largest active Del Webb build in the West Valley.
Del WebbSeveral different builders are active here at once, which means real variety in floor plans and price points inside one community.
Multiple buildersDel Webb, and the sister community to Sun City Festival — same builder, same floor plans, a very similar clubhouse. Worth comparing the two directly.
Del WebbStill building, with twelve lighted pickleball courts, Gemini twin homes, and RV-garage floor plans.
Building nowShea Homes’ newer boutique Trilogy community inside the Vistancia master plan. Still building.
Shea / TrilogyStill building, gated, with a Nicklaus course. Note that it has both a 55+ section and a family section — make sure you’re looking at the right one.
Building nowNear the end of its build cycle but still offering new homes. If you want new here, the window is narrowing.
Near buildoutAlso near the end of its build cycle, with new homes still available. The rest of PebbleCreek is resale only.
Near buildoutA few lots left, high-end custom homes only. Not age-restricted — but it lives like a resort community and we get real calls about it.
Not 55+ · few lotsShea Homes, still building, in the scenic pocket northeast of Scottsdale. Not age-restricted.
Not 55+Not 55 yet? There may be a door open.
This is the most under-used thing we know, and it comes up constantly with buyers in their late forties and early fifties who’ve been told to come back in a few years.
Federal law lets an age-restricted community keep a limited share of its homes occupied by residents under 55. While a builder is still building, that generally means the builder can sell a new home to buyers as young as 45. That’s true in most communities still offering new homes — which is to say, most of the communities on this page.
After a community is fully built out, whether to keep allowing residents under 55 becomes the association’s own decision. Most communities keep the option. Some don’t. It isn’t automatic in either direction.
How to use this: the policy belongs to the builder and the association, it can change, and no one should ever treat it as a guarantee. But if you’re 45 to 54 and you’ve assumed these communities are closed to you, that assumption may be costing you years. Ask us and we’ll confirm in writing with the specific community before you get attached to it.
The federal framework is the Housing for Older Persons Act; each community sets its own policy on top of it.
Model homes look best in the order the builder shows them.
When you come to town, you ride with us and we drive — our gas, not yours. We’ll run you through several of these communities in a day or two, model homes and all, so you’re comparing them against each other instead of against a brochure.
Coming in from out of state? Most of our buyers are. Tell us when you’re planning to visit and we’ll help with the whole trip — where to stay so you’re close to the communities you want to see, and how to lay out the days so none of them get wasted.
Call us before you walk into the sales office.
It’s the one step that costs you nothing and can’t be undone later. We’ll register you properly, come along, and represent you the rest of the way.
Call or Text: (480) 710-6326 Contact Page