Nogales Arizona Real Estate Market Report — May 2026
Nogales Arizona real estate sits in a category by itself in the state. This is a working border-trade economy with a 130-year incorporated history, three K-8 schools rated B by the Arizona Department of Education, and an A-rated high school… priced at a fraction of what comparable Arizona markets demand. The median single-family sale in May 2026 lands around $225,000, the price per square foot runs about $160 (up double digits year-over-year), and the typical home sells in roughly 94 days. Volume is light at about 16 to 38 closed sales per month depending on the season, which means strategy matters more here than market timing… and the buyer pool is dominated by cash, investors, and local trade-industry employees rather than out-of-state relocations.
May 2026 Market Snapshot
Median Sale Price $225,000 → Stabilizing |
Average Sale Price $258,000 ▲ Wide spread |
Price / Sq Ft $160 ▲ 9.9% YoY |
Homes Sold (Mo) 16 to 38 → Seasonal range |
Active Listings 47 to 67 ▲ Healthy supply |
Days on Market 94 Days → Patient market |
Sale-to-List 87% to 95% ▼ Buyer-favorable |
Months of Supply 3.5 to 4.2 → Balanced |
Prices & Volume… May 2026
The Nogales market in spring 2026 tells two different stories depending on which metric you read. The median sale price has compressed back to roughly $225,000 as more entry-level inventory closed, with several sales under $100,000 pulling the median down. The median list price, however, sits around $287,000 as sellers price homes for the season… and the gap between the two is the negotiation room a prepared Nogales buyer can capture. Price per square foot is the cleaner read on direction: up about 9.9% year-over-year to $160, with strong gains in the larger north-side homes. That metric is the right one to track if you own here.
Volume is light by Arizona standards. The 85621 zip closed approximately 216 properties across the past 12 months, which works out to roughly 16 to 38 sales per month depending on season. Days on market averages 94, with the slowest segment being older central-city homes that need updating and the fastest being move-in-ready north-side homes in Kino Springs, Meadow Hills, and Vista Del Cielo. Inventory ran between 47 and 67 active listings through Q1 2026 with the list range stretching from about $10,000 (raw land or tiny tear-downs) to over $5,000,000 (large estate or commercial-zoned parcels). Sale-to-list ratios run 87% to 95%, meaning patient cash buyers can negotiate effectively here in ways they cannot in tighter markets.
By Zip Code… One Nogales
Nogales is a single-zip city. All Nogales mailing addresses inside city limits use 85621. Rural Kino Springs (golf course community to the north) is also 85621 but technically falls in unincorporated Santa Cruz County. The Rio Rico master-planned area immediately north uses 85648 and operates as a separate market with its own price dynamics… do not confuse the two when evaluating a property.
- 85621 (Nogales city + Kino Springs): Median sale price $225,000… up modestly from the prior 12-month median of $243,672. Covers all Nogales city neighborhoods plus the rural Kino Springs golf community. Inventory mix runs from $80,000 fixer-uppers near downtown to $400,000-plus stucco homes on the north side. Roughly 216 closed sales over the trailing 12 months.
- 85648 (Rio Rico, adjacent and NOT Nogales): Median sale price runs higher than 85621, typically $300,000 to $375,000 for the master-planned Rio Rico market. Buyers researching Nogales should check this zip separately if they are willing to live 15 minutes north.
- 85646 (Tubac, adjacent and NOT Nogales): Median sale price runs significantly higher ($400,000-plus) and operates as an arts/retirement market. Listed here only because some MLS searches pull Tubac when filtering Nogales.
Nogales Neighborhoods & Subdivisions
Nogales is geographically compact (just over 20 square miles), but the city splits cleanly between the historic central core near downtown and the newer north-side stucco subdivisions. The price spread between the two halves of town is the widest within-city gap in Southern Arizona. Below are the verified north-side and golf-anchored neighborhoods buyers consistently target… each confirmed with current MLS addresses inside 85621 and Santa Cruz County GIS boundaries.
Kino Springs
Quiet residential golf course community 12 miles northeast of Nogales city center, anchored by the Kino Springs golf course. Mix of retirees, families, and second-home owners on larger lots with desert and mountain views. Strong rental potential due to seasonal demand.
Vista Del Cielo
One of the two most expensive Nogales neighborhoods. Two-story Spanish Revival stucco homes on the city’s outskirts with elevation views toward both sides of the border. Buyers here are typically established Nogales families or long-distance commuters to Tucson.
Meadow Hills
Sister market to Vista Del Cielo with similar Spanish Revival architecture and large-lot layouts. Sits among the safest census tracts in Nogales by the CrimeGrade north-side measure. Newer stucco builds dominate, with some early 2000s construction stock.
North Grand Avenue Corridor
Established residential streets running north along Grand Avenue (US-89/SR-82) toward the Walmart Supercenter and Nogales Police headquarters. Solid mid-range stock… ranch-style brick and stucco built largely 1970s to 2000s. Closest neighborhood to municipal services.
Mariposa Corridor
West-side residential streets near Mariposa Road, anchored by the Mariposa Shopping Center and the University of Arizona Nogales (Eagles Educational Center). Mix of ranch homes and newer infill stucco. Commute to the Mariposa Port of Entry is under 10 minutes.
Downtown / Morley Historic District
The historic city core. Architectural mix is striking… Sonoran Style, Queen Anne Cottage, Second Empire, Spanish Colonial, Pueblo Revival, Mediterranean, and Bungalow stock all within walking distance of Morley Avenue. Older brick stock… excellent entry point for investors and patient owner-occupants with renovation budgets.
Target Range / Carondelet Area
Residential blocks surrounding Carondelet Holy Cross Hospital (1171 W Target Range Road). Stable homeowner-occupied mid-range stock. Strong medical-professional rental demand, walkable to the city’s primary hospital and adjacent medical office buildings.
West Nogales / Mastick Way
West-side neighborhoods anchored by the Mariposa Community Health Center (1852 N Mastick Way). Mixed residential stock with strong workforce-housing demand from healthcare and produce industry employees. Tends to clear faster than central neighborhoods.
Note: All addresses verified inside Nogales 85621 city limits. Border-area properties carrying Rio Rico (85648) or Tubac (85646) mailing addresses are NOT included even when MLS may list them under Nogales searches. The historic central core has additional named pocket neighborhoods (Bonita Heights, Crawford Hill, Government Hill) that operate as part of the downtown market profile rather than as discrete subdivisions for pricing purposes.
Nogales’s Neighboring Cities & Surrounding Markets
Nogales sits within Santa Cruz County… Arizona’s smallest and southernmost county. Most Nogales buyers comparison-shop within the Southern Arizona site menu region (Sierra Vista, Bisbee, Patagonia, the historic mining towns) and the immediately adjacent Tucson Metro Area (Sahuarita, Green Valley) for the next price tier up. Below are the most relevant neighboring markets the site currently covers, plus the parent county hub page for the full Santa Cruz County view.
Explore All of Santa Cruz County Real Estate
Santa Cruz County is Arizona’s smallest county by area and operates as a tightly knit cross-border economy. The full county hub covers Nogales, Patagonia, Tubac, Rio Rico, Sonoita, Elgin, and Tumacácori as one connected market view… including produce-industry employment data, port-of-entry trade volumes, and the wine-country submarket north of Patagonia.
▶Santa Cruz County Real Estate◀Schools & School Districts
Per the Arizona Department of Education FY25 A-F Letter Grades (released April 15, 2026), Nogales Unified School District earned a B LEA grade across its 11 schools. The district serves all of incorporated Nogales for grades K-12. Three of the district’s K-8 schools and the flagship Nogales High School earned individual school grades of A… a level of performance that is materially better than the city’s overall reputation suggests, and a major factor for buyers considering this market for family use.
Nogales Unified District… B-Rated District
Nogales Unified District (LEA grade B) operates five elementary schools, two middle schools, Nogales High School, and Pierson Vocational High School. Within the district, Francisco Vasquez De Coronado Elementary School earned the highest score at 85.70 points (A), followed by Desert Shadows Middle School at 84.28 points (A). Lincoln Elementary (80.39, B), Robert Bracker Elementary (79.64, B), A J Mitchell Elementary (75.79, B), Mary L Welty Elementary (74.76, B), Challenger Elementary (73.83, B), and Wade Carpenter Middle School (73.65, B) round out the B-rated tier. This is a district with no D or F schools… a meaningful credential for a smaller, lower-income district. Dual enrollment at Pima Community College allows Nogales High students to earn college credit during high school, and the University of Arizona operates out of the Eagles Educational Center adjacent to the Mariposa Shopping Center.
Nogales High School… A-Rated High School
Nogales High School earned an A letter grade with 81.52 total points per the ADE FY25 release. The district reports one of the higher graduation rates in Southern Arizona at the 10.00 maximum score on the ADE graduation-rate component. The high school anchors district academic identity and is the primary reason families in surrounding rural Santa Cruz County (Rio Rico, Patagonia attendees who out-enroll) consider relocating into NUSD attendance boundaries.
Nogales High School
Per ADE FY25 official data, Nogales High earned an A letter grade with 81.52 total points and a perfect 10.00 graduation-rate score. The flagship comprehensive high school for the city. Dual enrollment at Pima Community College available.
81.52 ADE points A grade Grad rate 10.00Francisco Vasquez De Coronado Elementary
Per ADE FY25 official data, the highest-scoring school in the entire Nogales Unified District at 85.70 total points, A letter grade. The school local agents most often cite as the academic anchor for buyers prioritizing elementary placement.
85.70 ADE points A grade Top K-8 in NUSDDesert Shadows Middle School
Per ADE FY25 official data, A letter grade with 84.28 total points. The strongest-performing middle school option in Nogales and a major factor for families with rising 6th graders… the feeder pattern from Coronado Elementary lands here.
84.28 ADE points A grade Top middle schoolLincoln Elementary School
Per ADE FY25 official data, B letter grade with 80.39 total points… the highest-scoring B-rated elementary in the district. Solid neighborhood-feeder option for buyers in the central-northwest residential corridor.
80.39 ADE points B grade Strong B-tier K-5School boundaries inside Nogales Unified District can be tight, particularly for the highest-scoring elementary schools. Buyers prioritizing Coronado Elementary or Desert Shadows Middle should verify attendance zones with NUSD directly before writing an offer… addresses just outside the boundary may feed to a different school despite proximity.
Source note: All letter grades on this page reflect the official Arizona Department of Education FY25 A-F release (April 15, 2026), the most current state-issued data available. Third-party aggregators (Niche, GreatSchools, SchoolGrade) are secondary references only and do not override official ADE grades.
Safety & Crime in Nogales
Nogales safety data demands a careful read. The citywide CrimeGrade is a D- with a 12th percentile safety ranking, driven primarily by property crime (notably motor vehicle theft) rather than violent crime… and concentrated in the south parts of the city near commercial and retail traffic. The violent crime rate is materially lower than the citywide aggregate suggests, with the chance of being a victim of violent crime ranging from 1 in 93 in central neighborhoods to 1 in 253 in the north. Buyers focused on the Kino Springs, Vista Del Cielo, Meadow Hills, and north-side residential blocks consistently report a different lived experience than what the city aggregate implies, because most crime counts cluster south near the border-trade and shopping districts.
Law Enforcement Jurisdiction in Nogales
Nogales is an incorporated city (incorporated 1893) with single-agency primary policing. Primary patrol is handled by the Nogales Police Department, headquartered at 777 N. Grand Avenue, Nogales, AZ 85621. The department operates 27 specialized units and 9 patrol divisions. Outside incorporated city limits (including the Kino Springs golf community north of town), Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office holds jurisdiction. The Arizona Department of Public Safety patrols Interstate 19 (the I-19 corridor running from Nogales north to Tucson), State Route 82 (Nogales to Patagonia to Sonoita), and State Route 189 (the spur connecting I-19 to the Mariposa Port of Entry). On the federal side, U.S. Customs and Border Protection staffs the four ports of entry (Mariposa, Dennis DeConcini, Morley Pedestrian, and Nogales International Airport) with the Mariposa POE alone running 12 passenger vehicle inspection lanes and 8 commercial lanes. This layered law enforcement footprint is normal for a major U.S. land port of entry and means buyers see a higher visible presence of federal officers along the I-19/SR-189 corridors than in most Arizona cities.
Nogales Safety Snapshot
The headline grade looks rough… but the geographic split inside the city is real. North-side residential neighborhoods perform measurably better than the citywide aggregate, and homeowner-occupied subdivisions away from commercial corridors track closer to small-town Arizona norms than to border-city stereotypes.
For owner-occupant buyers, the practical reading is straightforward. North-side subdivisions (Kino Springs, Vista Del Cielo, Meadow Hills) sit in the safer census tracts and total roughly 4 violent incidents per year combined. Central-city pockets near major retail and the border ports see the highest counts, both because more people are concentrated there and because retail/shopping environments produce more property crimes per capita. Motor vehicle theft is the single property crime category worth taking seriously here… Nogales ranks in the bottom 10% nationally for vehicle theft, and homeowners insurance and personal vehicle security should be priced accordingly. Carondelet Holy Cross Hospital, the Nogales City Library, and the Santa Cruz County Courthouse complex on Morley Avenue are well-policed and operate as anchor points for daytime activity.
Major Employers & Commute
Nogales is functionally Arizona’s largest land port of entry and the dominant U.S. gateway for Mexican fresh produce. The Mariposa Port of Entry alone handles approximately $30 billion in annual trade… including about 60% of all fresh fruits and vegetables that enter the U.S. from Mexico during the November-to-March winter season. That trade engine supports about 2,500 direct jobs and over 4,000 total jobs in the produce industry, plus another 1,140 direct jobs in the maquiladora-linked manufacturing supply chain. The result: Nogales has more stable trade-economy employment than most cities its size, and the workforce mix is unusually bilingual and federally-employed.
Top employers within commuting distance
For longer-distance commuters, Tucson sits about 70 minutes north via I-19, which gives Nogales residents access to the much larger Tucson metro employer base (Raytheon Missiles & Defense, Banner UMC, the University of Arizona, Davis-Monthan AFB) without sacrificing Nogales home price points. That commute trade-off is real… drive an hour each way to save $300,000 to $500,000 on the comparable Tucson home. Sahuarita and Green Valley sit 50 minutes north for an even shorter commute. The I-19 corridor is well-built and not congested by Phoenix-area standards.
New Construction… Limited Infill, No Tract Builders
Nogales does not have an organized large-scale tract new construction market in 2026. No national production builders (D.R. Horton, Lennar, KB Home, Meritage, Pulte, Taylor Morrison) operate active subdivisions inside Nogales city limits. New construction here means small private builder infill projects on the north and west sides… typically priced from the high $200,000s to around $400,000 with stucco finishes, larger lots than the central historic stock, and one-at-a-time delivery rather than scheduled phase releases.
Buyers wanting tract new construction within Santa Cruz County should look at Rio Rico to the north (master-planned community with periodic builder activity) or consider the much larger inventory in Sahuarita and Marana (Tucson metro). The historic Nogales market is dominated by resale activity, which is the reason median price-per-square-foot is one of the most useful metrics to track here… new build comparable sales are sparse enough that they do not anchor pricing the way they do in Phoenix-metro suburbs.
Important disclosure: The “new construction” listings buyers find on national portals filtered to Nogales are often custom infill builds, completed spec homes from individual small builders, or new construction in adjacent zip codes (Rio Rico 85648 in particular). Always verify the actual mailing address sits inside 85621 and inside the City of Nogales limits before treating a listing as “Nogales new construction.”
Read the full Arizona New Construction Buyer Guide before you visit any builder model or sign a purchase contract.
What Nogales Residents Say
Nogales residents have a consistent pattern in how they describe their city to people considering a move. The themes below pull from published community reviews and local sources, anonymized to protect identities.
“It’s a mellow city where you can be outside all year. In the winter, I call my relatives back east who can barely get outside because of the weather, and they’re jealous because it’s always 80 degrees here. The elevation makes a real difference… we’re 3,800 feet up, not down in Sonoran Desert heat.”
“What outsiders don’t understand about Nogales is that the cartels avoid involving innocent people, especially tourists. I’ve lived here two years and I honestly feel safer here than I did when I lived in Phoenix. The U.S. side is a normal working town… people just have a lot of opinions about it from a distance.”
“The fact that you can buy a real 3-bedroom home here in the $200,000s and put your kids into an A-rated high school is the part nobody talks about. Nogales is set up for working families who don’t need the Phoenix metro lifestyle. It punches above its weight.”
“Birdwatching is bigger than golf here in terms of tourism economy. About 400 bird species across Santa Cruz County. The lifestyle is wineries up in Sonoita and Elgin, birding at Patagonia-Sonoita Creek Sanctuary, and quick weekend trips to Patagonia Lake State Park… not what you picture when you hear ‘border city.'”
Why Nogales Arizona Real Estate Matters in 2026
Nogales is the most overlooked working-economy market in Arizona. It is a permanent international trade hub, not a discretionary lifestyle market… which means demand here is structurally tied to commerce that does not stop. That changes how you should think about this asset class compared to Phoenix-metro suburbs.
Key drivers supporting Nogales Arizona Real Estate include:
- Permanent port-of-entry economy… $30 billion in annual trade through Mariposa POE, 60% of all winter fresh produce entering the U.S. from Mexico passes through Nogales.
- Stable federal employment base… U.S. Customs and Border Protection, federal courts, GSA-leased real estate, and federal contractors anchor the labor market regardless of housing-market cycles.
- A-rated high school in a B-rated district… Nogales High School at 81.52 ADE points (A) gives families a credible public-school option at a fraction of north-Tucson and Phoenix-metro housing cost.
- Price-per-square-foot momentum… $160/SF up 9.9% year-over-year, demonstrating real demand even with light volume and long days on market.
- Wide architectural inventory… Sonoran Style, Spanish Revival, Queen Anne Cottage, Second Empire, Pueblo Revival, Mediterranean, and Bungalow stock in one walkable historic core.
- Elevation lifestyle advantage… 3,865 feet of elevation means 80-degree winters and significantly cooler summers than Phoenix-metro. Year-round outdoor lifestyle without the brutal July-August.
- Bilingual workforce premium… The trade-economy bilingual workforce is in structural demand for any business expanding into U.S.-Mexico cross-border commerce.
- Investor cash advantage… Sale-to-list runs 87% to 95% with 94 days on market… patient cash buyers can negotiate effectively here in ways tighter Arizona markets do not allow.
- Birding and wine country lifestyle… Santa Cruz County is one of the top three U.S. birdwatching destinations and the gateway to the Sonoita-Elgin wine region.
- No municipal property tax in Nogales… A genuine structural cost advantage over Phoenix-metro municipalities.
This is a market where local relationships matter more than national portal searches. The inventory on the major search sites is incomplete, the actual condition of central-city homes varies enormously, and the buyer pool is too narrow for casual list-price decisions. A dedicated full-time agent who works this submarket every week is the single biggest variable in whether you buy or sell well in Nogales… or whether you leave money and information on the table.
May 2026… Buyer & Seller Takeaways
- Buyers: The market gives you real negotiating room. Sale-to-list at 87% to 95% and 94 days on market means you can walk away from the wrong house. Get a Nogales-specific agent who knows which central-city blocks have title issues and which north-side subdivisions have HOA constraints. Prioritize Coronado Elementary or Desert Shadows Middle attendance zones if schools matter.
- Sellers: Price discipline is the difference between 60 days and 180 days. North-side homes (Kino Springs, Vista Del Cielo, Meadow Hills) priced realistically clear faster than central-core homes priced for hope. Stage to the bilingual professional family demographic, not the out-of-state retiree.
- Investors: Property crime risk (especially motor vehicle theft) prices into insurance. Workforce-housing rental demand is strong and steady, particularly near Carondelet Holy Cross and the Mariposa corridor. Patient cash wins here.
- School-driven buyers: Verify attendance boundaries with NUSD directly. Do not assume the neighborhood determines the school… boundaries inside the district are tight and a block can put you in a different feeder.
- Cross-border professionals: Nogales rewards bilingual buyers in a way no other Arizona market does. If you work in trade, customs, or logistics, the workforce premium is real and durable.
- Tucson commuters: 70 minutes via I-19 to central Tucson, 50 minutes to Sahuarita. Genuine option for Tucson employers who want $200,000 home prices instead of $400,000+.
Frequently Asked Questions
The median single-family sale price in Nogales Arizona real estate is approximately $225,000 in May 2026, with the typical home selling around $160 per square foot. Volume is light at roughly 16 to 38 closed sales per month, and homes typically take 94 days to sell. Price per square foot is up 9.9% year-over-year, the cleaner read on direction than the median (which can be pulled around by entry-level closings under $100,000).
Safety varies sharply by neighborhood. CrimeGrade rates Nogales at D- overall (12th percentile citywide), but the chance of being a violent crime victim is 1 in 253 in north Nogales versus 1 in 93 in central neighborhoods. North-side subdivisions like Kino Springs, Meadow Hills, and Vista Del Cielo measurably outperform the citywide average. Cost of crime per resident is $730 per year, $265 above the national average. Motor vehicle theft is the single property crime category to take seriously.
Per the Arizona Department of Education FY25 A-F Letter Grades (released April 15, 2026), Nogales Unified District earned a B LEA grade across its 11 schools. Nogales High School earned an A letter grade with 81.52 total points. Francisco Vasquez De Coronado Elementary led the district at 85.70 points (A), Desert Shadows Middle earned an A at 84.28, and Lincoln Elementary, Mary L Welty, Robert Bracker, Challenger, A J Mitchell, and Wade Carpenter Middle all earned B grades.
Nogales is a single-zip city: 85621 covers the entire incorporated city, with the rural Kino Springs area also using 85621 and adjacent Rio Rico using 85648. The 85621 zip carries all Nogales mailing addresses inside city limits. Buyers researching Nogales should not confuse 85621 with 85648 (Rio Rico) or 85646 (Tubac)… those are separate markets with materially different price profiles.
Nogales has no organized large-scale tract new construction market in 2026. New builds in the market are infill custom homes and small private builder projects on the north and west sides, typically priced from the high $200,000s to around $400,000 with stucco finishes and larger lots than the central historic stock. Buyers wanting tract new construction should look at Rio Rico or the much larger Sahuarita/Marana inventory in Tucson metro.
Nogales is the largest U.S. port of entry for Mexican fresh produce, with about 70 produce warehouses, the Mariposa Port of Entry handling over $30 billion annual trade, and the maquiladora cluster supporting 1,140 direct jobs locally. Top employers include US Customs and Border Protection, Carondelet Holy Cross Hospital, Mariposa Community Health Center, Nogales Unified School District, City of Nogales, Santa Cruz County, Walmart, Home Depot, and the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas member companies.
Nogales has one of the widest price-per-square-foot spreads in Arizona because the city is a mix of historic ranch-style red brick homes near downtown, modest infill ranches, and larger stucco Spanish Revival homes in north-side neighborhoods like Vista Del Cielo, Meadow Hills, and Kino Springs. The same median can hide entry-point properties under $100,000 alongside north-side homes above $400,000, so tracking price-per-square-foot or median list price is more useful than median sale price alone.
Nogales attracts investors targeting low entry prices, strong rental demand from the border-trade workforce, and rising price-per-square-foot trends. The market favors patient cash and conventional buyers… financing is harder for older central-city homes, and days on market routinely runs above 90. Investors should pair every Nogales acquisition with a current title and zoning check given the historic split between Santa Cruz County unincorporated parcels and incorporated city limits.
Get Personalized Nogales Arizona Real Estate Data
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Resources
Nogales Business & Commercial Real Estate
Nogales commercial real estate is built around international trade, not local consumer retail. The two move on different cycles. The city has roughly 70 produce warehouses concentrated along the I-19 corridor, the Mariposa Port of Entry industrial-services cluster, and the Morley Avenue downtown retail district anchored by cross-border foot traffic. Cap rates and lease terms here look unlike anywhere else in Arizona because the tenant pool is dominated by trade-services businesses with long-cycle, federally-tied revenue rather than discretionary retail.
For commercial transactions and business sales, you need specialists… not residential agents handling commercial deals on the side. Here is what is actually moving in this market right now:
Office Lease Rates $10 to $18/SF → Annual NNN range |
Retail Lease Rates $12 to $22/SF → Annual NNN range |
Industrial Lease $0.55 to $0.85/SF → Monthly NNN, produce warehouse |
Cap Rates Trading 7.5% to 9.5% → Recent sales |
Active Listings 35 to 50 ▲ Lease + sale |
Total Inventory 3M+ SF → Produce + retail + office |
For Sale Range $285K to $5.25M → Mixed |
Anchor Asset Mariposa POE → $30B annual trade |
Buying or Selling a Nogales Business?
Thinking about buying or selling a Nogales business… with or without the real estate? The Nogales business market is dominated by produce import/export operations, customs brokerages, freight forwarders, warehouse operators, and small-business retail along Morley Avenue. Valuation here is unusual because cross-border supply chains and federal trade-zone designations affect every transaction. We have dedicated full-time business brokers who specialize in Arizona business transactions and know how to value, market, and close Nogales businesses at maximum value… with complete confidentiality from first conversation through closing day.
▶Talk to a Business Broker◀Buying or Selling a Nogales Commercial Building?
Thinking about acquiring or selling a Nogales commercial building? Nogales commercial real estate includes produce warehouses along I-19, retail along Morley Avenue and Grand Avenue, office along the Mariposa corridor, and industrial near the Mariposa Port of Entry… each segment with its own cap rate logic and tenant profile. We have dedicated full-time commercial real estate agents who cover this entire submarket. Do not trust commercial property to a residential agent who handles it occasionally.
▶Talk to a Commercial Agent◀
Buying a Business, Fix & Flip, or Commercial Building in Nogales?
Visit 75BizLoans.com for fast, competitive financing on business acquisitions, commercial real estate, and investment properties in Nogales… from $100,000 to $50 million. Whether you are acquiring a Nogales produce warehouse, financing a fix-and-flip residential investment in the historic downtown, executing a BRRR strategy on a north-side rental, building a multi-family rental near Carondelet Holy Cross, or purchasing a Morley Avenue commercial property, 75BizLoans.com offers nationwide commercial lending with fast approvals and terms that actually close deals.
▶Get Funded at 75BizLoans.com◀Methodology & Sources
Coverage area: Nogales Arizona Real Estate across all incorporated City of Nogales (zip code 85621) and the surrounding rural Santa Cruz County 85621 census tracts including Kino Springs.
Data sources: Monthly closed-sale and active-listing data is compiled from local sales records and verified across multiple area data sources before publication. Public records, builder sales centers, and city planning documents are used for new construction figures and address verification. School ratings are drawn from Arizona Department of Education state report cards (FY25 release, April 15, 2026), with Niche, GreatSchools, and SchoolGrade as secondary references. Crime data comes from CrimeGrade, AreaVibes, and FBI Uniform Crime Reports. Trade and employer data comes from the Nogales Economic Development Foundation, Arizona Commerce Authority Community Profile, and the Fresh Produce Association of the Americas.
Update cadence: This report is rebuilt the moment new market data is released each month, typically between the 7th and the 10th. Reported figures reflect the most recent complete monthly cut available at publication. Figures presented as ranges reflect normal mid-month variation across data sources, so you always see realistic numbers… not cherry-picked ones.
Author: Compiled by Arizona Homes and Condos Realty. We intentionally do not list properties on this site… Arizona’s market changes too fast for static listing pages to remain accurate.
Here is what actually happens when you reach out. If you are a buyer, a dedicated full-time agent who specializes in your exact target area starts working on your behalf immediately… researching both on-market AND off-market opportunities. Nogales in particular has a meaningful pocket of off-market inventory that never reaches the national websites, and you need someone with local relationships pulling for you.
If you are a seller, a local dedicated full-time listing agent reaches out personally to discuss your goals, your timeline, and the details of your property… so we can position you for the strongest possible outcome given the city’s distinctive buyer pool.
Last updated: May 12, 2026.
