Find Homes with Tulsa Realtors MLS

 Map Search Tulsa Realtors Homes Here

Tulsa Realtors Homes are more abundant than any other home search available in Oklahoma. This website offers every home listed by any licensed realtor in NE Oklahoma and you can Save Your Favorites with SearchSaver today.  You will automatically be notified of all new listings that match your criteria, just as soon as they hit the market. Most of our realtor listed homes offer complete listing descriptions, real estate photos, virtual tours and directions by Mapquest.  Our Google Earth Cam offers an overhead hybrid view of the contoured hills and trees, plus you can even zoom in for a closer look at streets, driveways and swimming pools.   Each Hybrid MapSearch can be custom designed by you to open exactly to the size grid for the area you choose to live. 

You may also  Search MLS Listings by subdivision, zip code, school district, city or county, not to mention all the smaller perameters to choose like # of beds, baths, price, size and etc.  Save your favorite properties in “SearchSaver”and receive an immediate email notification of any new listing that matches your criteria.  Start Tulsa Realtors Map Search Now.

PUBLIC BLOG FOR HOMEBUYERS, HOMESELLERS AND REAL ESTATE AGENTS

Whether you need to sell a home or buy a home, we know you have unanswered questions regarding real estate.  Feel free to post to our blog or comment on someone elses post.  There’s a numerous amount of professional tulsa realtors floating around here with hundreds of years of combined experience that are more than happy to answer your questions.  After all, that’s exactly why we’re here and we hope that you continue to re-visit us as much as possible.   
The integrity of Tulsa homes and real estate have been monitered and maintained by Tulsa Realtors since 1921.  Your association with licensed realtors in Tulsa will protect your real estate investment when buying or selling a home in Tulsa, thanks to the ongoing support of Greater Tulsa Association of Realtors and the Oklahoma Real estate Commission.

ABOUT TULSA

File:Tulsa Panorama 1909 edit1.jpg

Tulsa is the second-largest city in the state of Oklahoma and 47th-largest city in the United States. With an estimated population of 389,625 in 2009, it is the principal municipality of the Tulsa Metropolitan Area, a region of 929,015 residents projected to reach one million between 2010 and 2012. The city serves as the county seat of Tulsa County, the most densely populated county in Oklahoma, and extends into Osage, Rogers, and Wagoner counties.

Tulsa was first settled in the 1830s by the Lachapoka Band of Creek Native American tribe. In 1921, it was the site of the infamous Tulsa Race Riot, one of the largest and most destructive acts of racial violence in the history of the United States.  For most of the 20th century, the city held the nickname “Oil Capital of the World” and played a major role as one of the most important hubs for the American oil industry.  Tulsa, along with several other cities, claims to be the birthplace of U.S. Route 66 and is also known for its Western Swing music.

Once heavily dependent on the oil industry, economic downturn and subsequent diversification efforts created an economic base in the energy, finance, aviation, telecommunications and technology sectors.  The Tulsa Port of Catoosa, at the head of the McClellan-Kerr Arkansas River Navigation System, is the most inland river port in the U.S. with access to international waterways.  Two institutions of higher education within the city operate at the NCAA Division I level, Oral Roberts University and the University of Tulsa.

Located in Tornado Alley, the city frequently experiences severe weather. It is situated on the Arkansas River at the foothills of the Ozark Mountains in northeast Oklahoma, a region of the state known as “Green Country“. Considered the cultural and arts center of Oklahoma, Tulsa houses two world-renowned art museums, full-time professional opera and ballet companies, and one of the nation’s largest concentrations of art deco architecture.  The city has been called one of America’s most livable large cities by Partners for Livable Communities, Forbes, and Relocate America.  People from Tulsa are called “Tulsans,” and tulsa real estate  is and always has been a great business opportunity for for Tulsa Ok realtors

METROPOLITAN AREA

The Tulsa Metropolitan Area, or the region immediately surrounding Tulsa with strong social and economic ties to the city, occupies a large portion of the state’s northeastern quadrant. It is informally known as “Green Country“, a name derived from the state’s official tourism designation for all of northeastern Oklahoma, though its usage in relation to the Tulsa Metropolitan Area can be traced to the early part of the 20th century.

The United States Census Bureau defines the sphere of the city’s influence as the Tulsa Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA), spanning seven counties: Tulsa, Rogers, Osage, Wagoner, Okmulgee, Pawnee, and Creek. The 2007 U.S. Census Estimate shows the Tulsa MSA to have 905,755 residents with a population expected to reach one million between 2010 and 2012. The Tulsa-Bartlesville Combined Statistical Area (CSA) is created by adding the nearby Bartlesville, Oklahoma, micropolitan area, consisting of Washington County in Northeastern Oklahoma. In 2005, U.S. Census Estimates show the Tulsa-Bartlesville CMSA to have 936,864 residents, of which most live in tulsa homes.

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3 Responses to Find Homes with Tulsa Realtors MLS

  1. Sell My Home says:

    There is a variety of FSBO choices on the internet. I chose to list mine with Central Florida For Sale By Owner (www.CFLfsbo.com). Some seem to think MLS listing is the correct way to go, but I think that is an old way to sell a home. In fact, I can no longer see a use for expensive MLS listings or realtors this day-in-age. Most buyers look on the internet first before ever even contacting a realty company. When and if they DO contact a realtor, they use the internet. So why not cut out the expenses and middle men and list on inexpensive or free websites? Just my two cents.

    Hope this helps people!

    • JD Smith says:

      Thanks for your comment on MLS information and I agree with you…somewhat! I do agree that sellers can sell their own home providing they price it right and advertise in the right place. Buyers can also purchase a home they find on these FSBO sites, however, the biggest percentage of buyers searching FSBO homes cannot qualify to purchase. Why do I know this? I use to own the exclusive rights to homesbyowner for tulsa area and had 4 years to realize this. Here’s more explanation.

      If a realtors buyer services are FREE to the buyer and a realtor has much more access to more properties then thats why the buyers use us. The buyers who dont qualify are the ones we won’t work with. Where do they end up? You guessed it, searching FSBO sites because they assume that the FSBO might just carry the note. Most of the buyers I dealt with thought for sale by owner meant owner finance and they still think that.

      #2 I would much rather advertise my home to 4000 realtors who may have 3 to 4 buyers working with them then to submit to dozens of websites that only 5% of the world actually look at. You see, MLS gets you realtor.com (which is #1) and once listed on the mls and realtor.com, our listings are already connected to over 50 some major websites throughout the globe. Not minor sites like FSBO…but major sites like yahoo and google which also connect us to several dozen more per piece.

      On mls our sellers disclosures are automatically downloaded and easy access is a true benefit…also with so many homes on the market right now, why would a realtor even waste time showing a FSBO home. No need to. In a sellers market, yes, but in our present day buyers market…I haven’t needed to show a fsbo home in 2 years because everything I need is right there on my mls.

      And let me ask you this…politely. Why would you waste time advertising a home on a site that only 5% of the world ever looks at? I choose to focus on the major sites that homeowners don’t have access to because that’s where 95% of the buyers hang out…not to mention these are smart buyers who usually qualify because they learn this information on these SMART sites. Remember my friend…inexpensive and free usually return the same investment…very little.

      Thanks so much for your comment and if you need any more advice on fsbo listings for Florida just send me a personal email. I know ways of getting homes listed on many more sites through syndication. If you’re gonna use free and inexpensive…you better have about 50 or 60 of these sites in order to benefit in pale comparison to mls.

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