Pahrump. Funny name, isn't it?
It comes from the Southern Paiute word Pah-Rimpi, and it means "Water Rock." The Paiute lived here long before anybody else, and they named the valley for the artesian wells - natural springs where cold, clean water pushes up out of the ground all by itself. When settlers showed up in the late 1800s, those same wells let them run cattle ranches over a thousand acres each, and grow alfalfa and cotton in country that looks, on first glance, like it shouldn't grow anything at all.
That's the country your lot sits in.
5,401 square feet on North Quebrada Avenue, in a quiet residential pocket of Pahrump where the roads already have names and the parcel lines are already drawn. Look at the aerial. You'll see the lot tucked into a grid of neighboring parcels, with mountains on the horizon and the open desert rolling east. Dirt road access right up to the property line. Zoning is Village Residential in Nye County, Nevada.
And here is the thing about Pahrump weather most people get wrong. Yes, the summer days are hot - 100°F is normal, 110°F happens. But the valley sits at elevation, which means the heat escapes the moment the sun drops. Summer nights cool down into the 60s and 70s. Winter days run in the 50s and 60s. Snow shows up maybe once a year and leaves the same afternoon. Death Valley is right next door and roasts twenty degrees hotter. Pahrump doesn't.
The town has its own school district, its own public library, and Great Basin College for anybody pursuing higher education in the county.
Now - the terms.
Purchase price is $11,095. Down payment is $111. After that you pay $111 a month. No credit check. Nobody pulls your report, nobody cares what your score is, nobody asks where you work. On the checkout page you'll see every piece of paperwork before you put a dollar down. And if you change your mind inside thirty days, you get your money back.








