The Best Albuquerque Neighborhoods for Luxury Custom Homes

by Vinay Rodgers

Buying a luxury home is one decision. Building one is another conversation entirely.

The buyer who commissions a custom luxury home is not simply purchasing square footage and finishes — they are choosing a canvas. The land, the view orientation, the soil conditions, the utility infrastructure, the regulatory environment that will govern what they can build and how they can build it, and the specific relationship between their lot and the natural landscape that surrounds it. Every one of those dimensions varies significantly across Albuquerque's custom luxury neighborhoods — which is why choosing the right neighborhood for a custom build is as important as choosing the architect.

"Luxury in New Mexico does not always look the way out-of-state buyers expect. That is why the same buyer might compare a custom home in North Albuquerque Acres, an estate in Corrales, a golf community home in Tanoan, or a view property in Placitas and find luxury expressed differently in each one," confirmed the WelcomeHomeABQ April 2026 luxury market analysis. That comparison — the same buyer, four different neighborhood expressions of luxury — is the most useful frame for understanding why neighborhood selection matters so specifically for custom home buyers in Albuquerque.

This guide covers the best neighborhoods in Albuquerque for luxury custom homes — what each area offers in terms of lots, views, regulatory environment, builder relationships, and the specific lifestyle the finished home will inhabit. The goal is to give buyers who are serious about a custom build the information they need before they choose the ground their home will stand on.

What Makes a Neighborhood Right for a Luxury Custom Build

Before evaluating specific neighborhoods, the criteria worth applying to any custom home site decision deserve enumeration — because they are different from the criteria that apply to a resale purchase.

  • Lot size and buildable area: Custom luxury homes require lot sizes sufficient to accommodate both the footprint of the main structure and the outdoor living spaces, casita, garage, and landscape that define the luxury experience. Setback requirements, slope restrictions, and the relationship between lot size and buildable area (not the same thing, particularly in the foothills where grade can eliminate significant portions of a lot's buildable area) all require due diligence before a lot purchase.
  • Regulatory environment: The difference between building in a neighborhood with an active HOA and architectural review board and building in a no-HOA area is the difference between extensive pre-approval of design decisions and near-complete freedom. Neither is inherently better — but they produce fundamentally different custom build experiences, and buyers who do not understand which environment they are entering before they begin will be surprised.
  • Utility infrastructure: Municipal water and sewer versus private well and septic is a fundamental distinction that affects construction cost, ongoing operating cost, and the complexity of the build. Within-city neighborhoods have municipal infrastructure. Some semi-rural neighborhoods in Corrales, Placitas, and the East Mountains require private well and septic — which adds cost and site-specific engineering complexity to the build.
  • View orientation: The direction a custom home faces — east toward the Sandia Mountains, west toward the volcanic mesa and Jemez Mountains, south toward the Manzanos, north toward the open desert — is the single most permanent design decision made at the lot selection stage. Custom architecture can manage almost any site condition, but it cannot change the direction the mountain is. Site selection determines view orientation, and view orientation is the feature that will be lived with for every year of ownership.
  • Lot availability and pricing: The most desirable custom home neighborhoods in Albuquerque have limited vacant lot inventory — because they are established communities where most buildable land was already developed. Vacant lots in High Desert, North Albuquerque Acres, and Sandia Heights are rare enough that they should be considered opportunistically rather than assumed to be available on buyer timeline.
  • Builder relationships: Some neighborhoods have established relationships between the community and specific luxury custom builders who know the site conditions, the design standards, and the regulatory requirements specific to that area. Those relationships produce smoother builds with fewer surprises. Understanding which builders are active in which neighborhoods is pre-work worth doing before selecting a site.

The Best Neighborhoods for Luxury Custom Homes in Albuquerque

1. North Albuquerque Acres — Maximum Freedom on Maximum Land

Price range for vacant lots: $200,000 to $800,000+

Buildable area: 0.75 to 1+ acre lots

HOA status: No HOA, no architectural review

Utilities: Municipal water and sewer

"North Albuquerque Acres is a leading choice for buyers who want custom," confirmed the Myers & Myers Real Estate mansions guide for Albuquerque. The reason is specific: North Albuquerque Acres is the only luxury neighborhood in Albuquerque's city limits that combines large acreage lots, no HOA governance, municipal utility infrastructure, and the Northeast Heights location that delivers school zoning and convenience simultaneously.

The no-HOA, no-architectural-review reality of North Albuquerque Acres is the feature that custom home buyers either love immediately or need time to appreciate. It means you can build what you want — the architectural style, the materials, the gate design, the accessory structures — without submitting plans to a committee and waiting for approval. You are the final authority on your design, bounded only by city building codes and setback requirements.

That freedom produces the architectural variety that makes driving through North Albuquerque Acres a genuinely interesting experience: English country manor homes alongside traditional New Mexican adobes alongside contemporary glass-and-steel builds alongside equestrian compounds. Every home is somebody's specific vision, executed without compromise.

The practical custom build consideration: North Albuquerque Acres lots are within the City of Albuquerque's permitting jurisdiction, which means standard residential building permits rather than the sometimes-more-complex county or unincorporated territory permitting processes. The municipal water and sewer infrastructure eliminates the well and septic engineering complexity that adds cost and timeline to rural custom builds.

Current vacancy: Truly vacant lots in North Albuquerque Acres are rare — the neighborhood is largely developed and lots change hands primarily through teardown opportunities where an older home is purchased, demolished, and replaced. Buyers who are serious about North Albuquerque Acres custom builds should work with a local agent who actively tracks the neighborhood's teardown inventory, which is not always publicly listed before the opportunity is identified and acted upon.

Best for: buyers who want maximum creative freedom with no HOA governance, who want the largest possible lots within the city's established infrastructure, and who want the Northeast Heights school zoning and convenience without the design constraints that HOA communities impose.

2. High Desert — Architectural Standards That Protect Value While Enabling Quality

Price range for vacant lots: $300,000 to $1.2 million+

Buildable area: 0.5 to 2+ acres

HOA status: Active HOA with Design Review

Utilities: Municipal water, sewer in most areas

High Desert is where the most architecturally ambitious custom builds in Albuquerque's foothills are concentrated — and the reason is the specific combination of the community's Design Review standards, its National Forest adjacency, and its protected open space character that preserves the view corridors that make the lots premium in the first place.

The High Desert Design Review process is what luxury custom home buyers either embrace or avoid. It requires architectural plans to be submitted and approved by the community's design review committee before permits are pulled. It enforces material standards, massing guidelines, and the specific building envelope controls that prevent any single home from compromising the view corridors of its neighbors. For buyers who want to build in a community where their investment is protected by the same standards that govern their neighbors' builds, this governance is the point. For buyers who want no external input on their design, North Albuquerque Acres is the right alternative.

The National Forest boundary is the specific site advantage that High Desert offers above any other Albuquerque custom home neighborhood. Lots in the Desert Mountain sub-neighborhood of High Desert — the most exclusive section of the community — sit at the actual federal wilderness boundary. Building on one of these lots means your eastern property line is the beginning of land that will never be developed. The view from your home to the Sandia Mountains is not just mountain — it is permanently protected wilderness, with wildlife corridors and trail access immediately accessible.

Current custom build activity in High Desert is concentrated in the community's remaining vacant lots and in the handful of positions where older homes on exceptional lots have become teardown candidates for buyers who specifically want the lot position rather than the existing structure.

Best for: buyers who want the most prestigious custom build address in Albuquerque's foothills, who embrace the design quality protection that the HOA's architectural standards provide, and whose specific vision for a custom home aligns with the Southwestern Contemporary aesthetic that High Desert's architectural vocabulary reflects.

3. Sandia Heights — Elevated Custom Living at the Mountain's Edge

Price range for vacant lots: $150,000 to $600,000

Buildable area: 0.5 to 1.5 acres, with significant grade variation

HOA status: HOA with Architectural Review in most sub-communities

Utilities: Municipal in lower elevations; well and septic possible at higher elevations

Sandia Heights is where the relationship between custom home architecture and site topography is the most challenging and the most rewarding in the Albuquerque luxury market. Building on the Sandia Mountains' western face — at elevations from 5,800 to 7,000 feet — requires architects and builders who understand slope construction, retaining systems, drainage engineering, and the specific structural requirements for mountain-adjacent construction.

"Sandia Heights is one of the best-known areas for Albuquerque mansions thanks to its elevated setting, panoramic views, and custom homes. Buyers looking for privacy, foothill access, and dramatic scenery often start here," confirmed the Myers & Myers Real Estate mansions guide for Albuquerque. That characterization captures the specific appeal of Sandia Heights for custom home buyers: you are building at elevation, in a setting that no other Albuquerque neighborhood provides, with views that are a function of where the lot physically sits on the mountain.

The grade complexity that makes Sandia Heights custom builds challenging also produces the most distinctive architectural opportunities. A home designed specifically for a steeply sloping Sandia Heights lot — with levels that step down the hillside, decks cantilevered over the grade break, and views from every elevation of the structure — is architecturally richer than a comparable home on flat ground. The slope is not an obstacle. It is the site condition that produces the design vocabulary that makes the best Sandia Heights homes among the most memorable in the city.

The utility consideration at higher Sandia Heights elevations: some lots at the mountain's upper reaches are served by private well rather than municipal water, which adds to construction cost and infrastructure complexity. This is a site-specific due diligence item that varies by exact location within Sandia Heights.

Best for: buyers who want the most dramatic elevated setting for a custom build, who are comfortable with the architectural and engineering complexity of slope construction, and whose design vision specifically responds to mountain adjacency and elevation as features rather than site challenges.

4. Los Ranchos de Albuquerque and North Valley — Custom Historic Land

Price range for lots and teardown properties: $400,000 to $2 million+

Buildable area: 0.25 to 5+ acres

HOA status: Minimal (Los Ranchos village governance, not HOA)

Utilities: Municipal water in most areas; acequia access on many properties

Building a custom luxury home in Los Ranchos de Albuquerque or the North Valley is a fundamentally different proposition from building in the Northeast Heights foothills — because the land itself is the primary feature, and the land here is unlike any other luxury building site in the metro.

Los Ranchos is an independent village with its own governance structure — not an HOA, but municipal-level design standards focused on preserving the agricultural and village character that has defined the area since Spanish colonial times. The most significant custom home opportunity in this corridor is the infill opportunity: acquiring a site with an older structure on mature, established land — with mature cottonwoods, acequia access, and the specific riparian character of the North Valley — and building a custom home that responds to that landscape while replacing the structure that no longer serves it.

"Luxury Living in the Heart of Los Ranchos - Now Framing! Experience elevated design and curated comfort in this custom estate, nestled in one of Albuquerque's most prestigious enclaves. One of only five bespoke residences in this private, gated development, this home blends classic elegance with modern sophistication — crafted to impress and designed to live beautifully," reads a current listing on Homes.com. This active new custom build within Los Ranchos illustrates the specific opportunity: a small private gated development of five custom homes within the village, each responding to the historic landscape character while delivering contemporary luxury finishes.

The cottonwood trees that shade the most mature North Valley and Los Ranchos lots are decades old — in some cases significantly older — and represent a landscape feature that no amount of money can create on a raw lot. The buyer who acquires a mature-land site in this corridor is buying the landscape as much as the ground.

Best for: buyers whose luxury vision is specifically defined by mature landscape, acequia irrigation, Rio Grande proximity, and the specific quiet character of the North Valley — and who are willing to engage with the infill acquisition complexity that the most mature sites in this corridor typically require.

5. Corrales — Acreage Custom Builds With Equestrian and Agricultural Character

Price range for lots: $200,000 to $800,000

Buildable area: 1 to 10+ acres

HOA status: Village governance, not HOA

Utilities: Well and septic standard; some municipal water available

Corrales offers the largest acreage available for a luxury custom build within reasonable proximity to Albuquerque — and the specific lifestyle that large-lot, river-adjacent, village-character building sites produce.

Building custom in Corrales is building with space as the primary architectural element. The typical Corrales custom home site is one to five acres — enough that the main house, casita, horse facility, workshop, and landscape can all exist within a single property without compromise. The acequia irrigation systems that traverse most Corrales properties bring water to the land in a way that produces the lush, mature-landscape character that the high desert otherwise does not generate naturally.

The village governance of Corrales — like Los Ranchos, a distinct municipality rather than an HOA — focuses on preserving the agricultural and equestrian character of the village rather than on architectural style review. Custom builds here are regulated by building codes and setback requirements rather than by a design review board making aesthetic judgments. The freedom to build in the style that fits the buyer's vision — whether traditional adobe hacienda, contemporary ranch, or anything in between — is genuine.

The well and septic reality in Corrales: the majority of Corrales properties are served by private wells and septic systems rather than municipal infrastructure. This is a standard feature of the community rather than a problem to be solved, but it adds to the construction cost and the ongoing maintenance obligations of ownership. Buyers considering a custom build in Corrales should engage a hydrologist to evaluate well yield potential on any lot where water availability is not confirmed by an existing well with documented production data.

Best for: buyers whose custom home vision centers on horses, large acreage, agricultural character, and the specific lifestyle that Corrales offers — and who are comfortable with rural infrastructure as part of their daily property ownership experience.

6. Placitas — Santa Fe Aesthetics at Albuquerque Proximity

Price range for lots: $100,000 to $400,000

Buildable area: 1 to 20+ acres

HOA status: Varies by sub-community; many areas have minimal governance

Utilities: Well and septic standard

Placitas is where buyers who want the Santa Fe aesthetic — the high desert rolling hills, the sweeping views, the sparse development density, the specific character of chamisa and piñon landscape — find that aesthetic at Albuquerque price points and with manageable access to the city's services.

"North of town in Placitas, a million-dollar home delivers what Tracy calls a Georgia O'Keeffe or Santa Fe vibe: open rolling hills dotted with chamisa, big views, and a quieter, retreat-like feel, often on larger lots that are still close enough in to keep the drive manageable," confirmed the WelcomeHomeABQ February 2026 luxury market analysis. That Georgia O'Keeffe reference is intentional and accurate — the specific quality of high desert light and landscape in Placitas is what O'Keeffe spent decades documenting 60 miles north of here. Buyers who want that specific visual and spatial experience find Placitas is the most accessible version of it in the Albuquerque market.

Custom building in Placitas requires engaging with the well and septic infrastructure that is standard here, and with the varied governance across Placitas' sub-communities — some have minimal HOA oversight, some have more substantive design standards. The due diligence on both the specific lot's infrastructure and the applicable governance standards is essential before committing to a Placitas custom build site.

Price for lots in Placitas remains lower than comparable acreage sites in the Northeast Heights or North Valley — reflecting the greater distance from Albuquerque's employment and service centers. For buyers whose lifestyle is primarily home-based, the value proposition is compelling. For daily commuters, the 30-minute drive to Albuquerque via I-25 needs to be honestly evaluated.

Best for: buyers who specifically want the high desert landscape character and generous acreage of the Placitas hills, who value the Santa Fe aesthetic at Albuquerque pricing, and whose daily life does not depend on proximity to city services.

7. Tierra Monte and the Eastside Premium View Neighborhoods — Best City Views for Custom Builds

Price range for lots: $200,000 to $600,000

Buildable area: 0.5 to 1+ acres

HOA status: HOA with architectural standards in most communities

Utilities: Municipal water and sewer

The Tierra Monte neighborhood and the broader premium eastside view corridor — situated at the elevated mesa edge east of Tramway — offers a specific custom home site opportunity that the foothills neighborhoods above it do not: the combination of mountain views to the east AND city panorama views to the west, from a position that is elevated above the city floor but below the mountain terrain where slope construction complexity increases.

"Do not miss your opportunity to own this beautiful custom home located in the highly sought-after Tierra Monte Neighborhood, with THE BEST VIEWS in Albuquerque," reads an active listing description on Homes.com. That claim — the best views in Albuquerque — is made with some regularity from the elevated mesa edge neighborhoods, and it reflects the specific dual-view orientation that this position produces: the Sandia Mountains filling the eastern sky and the entire city spreading to the Rio Grande to the west.

The lots in Tierra Monte and similar eastside premium communities are within city limits, served by municipal infrastructure, and subject to HOA governance that maintains consistent architectural quality across the neighborhood. For buyers who want the dual-view site advantage without the slope engineering complexity of Sandia Heights' steeper positions, the premium mesa edge neighborhoods represent a compelling alternative.

Best for: buyers who want the maximum Albuquerque city light view combined with strong mountain views, who prefer building on relatively level ground within municipal infrastructure, and who want a finished custom home environment with HOA governance that protects the neighborhood's quality and character.

8. East Mountain Acreage — Forested Custom Builds in Tijeras, Cedar Crest, and Sandia Park

Price range for lots: $80,000 to $350,000

Buildable area: 1 to 20+ acres

HOA status: Varies; most areas minimal

Utilities: Well and septic standard

The East Mountain communities — Tijeras, Cedar Crest, Sandia Park, and the Paa-Ko corridor — offer the most affordable large-acreage custom build sites available within 30 to 45 minutes of Albuquerque, in a ponderosa pine and piñon forest setting that no within-city neighborhood can replicate.

Custom building in the East Mountains is building in the forest. The site conditions are fundamentally different from the high desert canyon and mesa neighborhoods closer to the city: ponderosa pine and juniper as the immediate landscape context, creek and arroyo drainages as site features, the specific challenge and opportunity of building in a fire-adapted landscape, and the eastern-facing views over the Estancia Valley that the opposite-facing foothills neighborhoods cannot produce.

The fire mitigation reality is worth addressing directly for East Mountain custom home buyers: building in the ponderosa pine zone requires fire-safe site design, defensible space around the structure, non-combustible roofing and siding materials, and specific landscape management practices. These are the standards that East Mountain communities have developed in response to the New Mexico fire environment, and they are not restrictions that compromise the quality of the finished home — they are building practices that protect the investment.

Lot prices in the East Mountains reflect both the distance from Albuquerque's services and the rural infrastructure requirements. They are the most accessible large-acreage custom build sites in the greater metro — and for buyers whose vision includes a specific number of forested acres at a price that comparable size in the city cannot approach, the East Mountains deliver on that vision more completely than any alternative.

Best for: buyers who specifically want forested acreage for their custom home, who are comfortable with rural infrastructure and the 30-to-45-minute Albuquerque access, and who are drawn to the mountain forest character that no within-city neighborhood offers at any price.

The Custom Build Process in Albuquerque — What Buyers Need to Know

Finding the Right Lot Before the Right Architect

The single most important decision in any Albuquerque custom build project is the lot selection — because the lot determines everything that follows. The view orientation. The buildable area. The soil conditions that affect foundation design. The regulatory environment. The infrastructure availability. The relationship between the home and the natural landscape.

Most custom home buyers who are new to the process start with the architect. This is backwards. The architect can design a beautiful home for any lot — but designing a beautiful home for the specific lot you have selected, with all its opportunities and constraints, requires the lot to be chosen first. Hire the architect to evaluate the lot you are considering before you close on it, not after.

In neighborhoods like High Desert and Sandia Heights, where topographic complexity is significant, a pre-purchase architectural feasibility assessment is essential. Some lots that appear to have great views from the street have restricted buildable areas that limit the scale of home that can actually be placed on them. Some lots that appear modest from the road have exceptional interior view corridors that only become apparent after a site visit with someone who is specifically looking for them.

The Regulatory Landscape — HOA vs. City vs. County Jurisdiction

Custom home buyers in Albuquerque navigate a regulatory environment that varies significantly depending on whether the lot is within city limits, in an unincorporated county area, or within an independent municipality like Los Ranchos or Corrales.

City of Albuquerque lots follow the Integrated Development Ordinance (IDO) and the city's building permit process. Lots in unincorporated Bernalillo County follow county standards that are in some respects more permissive and in others more complex than city requirements. Independent municipalities like Los Ranchos and Corrales maintain their own building standards and permit processes that reflect the specific character those communities are designed to preserve.

In all cases, HOA-governed neighborhoods add a layer of design review on top of the governmental permitting process. Understanding which approvals are required, in which sequence, and with which timelines is essential pre-planning for any custom build project. Working with an architect who has active experience in the specific neighborhood is the most efficient way to navigate these overlapping regulatory systems.

Construction Timelines and Costs in Albuquerque's 2026 Market

Custom luxury home construction in Albuquerque in 2026 is subject to the same material cost and labor availability constraints that affect construction nationwide — but with the specific New Mexico context of a relatively small construction labor pool, material supply chains oriented toward the Texas and California markets, and the seasonal weather patterns that affect construction schedules.

A well-planned custom luxury build in Albuquerque — from lot closing through certificate of occupancy — typically runs 18 to 30 months depending on the complexity of the design, the availability of the architect and contractor, the permitting timeline for the specific jurisdiction, and the extent of site preparation required. Buyers who are planning to be in a custom home within 12 months are planning for production-custom rather than fully commissioned custom.

Construction costs for luxury custom builds in Albuquerque in 2026 typically run $300 to $600 per square foot for the finished structure, depending on the quality of finishes, the complexity of the design, and the specific site conditions. Lots in High Desert and Sandia Heights at the upper end of the land premium add to the total project cost; East Mountain and Placitas lots at the lower end of land cost offset construction cost for buyers who can accept the rural infrastructure and access trade-offs.

What the Right Neighborhood for a Custom Build Actually Looks Like

The right neighborhood for any specific custom build project is not the one with the best general reputation or the highest resale values — it is the one where the specific combination of lot availability, view orientation, regulatory environment, infrastructure, and lifestyle character aligns most closely with the buyer's vision for their finished home and their daily experience of living in it.

A buyer whose custom home vision is a modern glass-and-steel structure with mountain views as the primary architectural feature, in a neighborhood where the quality of neighboring homes is protected by design standards, and within the La Cueva school zone for their children, belongs in High Desert or the Northeast Heights premium view corridor — not in Corrales or Placitas, where the landscape character and regulatory environment produce a fundamentally different custom home opportunity.

A buyer whose vision is a two-acre equestrian compound in a river-valley setting, with acequia irrigation and mature cottonwood trees as the landscape foundation, and with no HOA governance over their design decisions, belongs in Corrales or Los Ranchos — not in High Desert, where the lots are smaller, the HOA is active, and the landscape character is desert scrub rather than riparian.

Getting this alignment right before a lot is purchased is the most significant single contribution an experienced local agent makes to a custom build project. The lot is the decision that cannot be undone.

For buyers who want to understand the full range of luxury living options in Albuquerque — custom builds, existing homes, and gated communities — our comprehensive guide to luxury neighborhoods in Albuquerque covers every major luxury community with lifestyle context and current price ranges. And for buyers specifically interested in the East Mountain communities where forested acreage custom builds are most accessible, our post on East Mountains vs Albuquerque — which lifestyle is better gives the complete lifestyle comparison.

The Bottom Line — Albuquerque Offers the Best Custom Build Canvas in the Southwest

Compared to luxury custom build markets in comparable Southwest metros, Albuquerque offers a combination of landscape variety, lot availability, value per acre, and lifestyle diversity that most competitors cannot approach.

"Compared to luxury markets in larger metro areas, Albuquerque gives buyers access to larger homes, more land, and distinctive custom properties without the pricing seen in many coastal markets," confirmed the Myers & Myers Real Estate mansions guide for 2026. That value advantage is real, and it is most acutely felt in the custom build category — where the price per acre for a National Forest-adjacent lot in High Desert, a mature-landscape North Valley infill site, or a ten-acre forested East Mountain parcel compares favorably with what comparable positions in Scottsdale, Denver, or Santa Fe would cost.

The neighborhoods covered in this guide each offer a different expression of what luxury custom home living looks like in Albuquerque. The right one for any specific buyer is the one that matches how they actually want to live — not the one that ranks highest on a general prestige scale.

That matching process — understanding the specific vision, identifying the neighborhoods that can deliver it, finding the lots within those neighborhoods that provide the specific site conditions the vision requires — is exactly the work that determines whether a custom build project becomes the home someone describes for the rest of their lives or the project they wish they had approached differently.

Start with the lot. Choose the neighborhood first. Everything else follows from the ground you stand on.

Ready to Find Your Custom Home Site in Albuquerque?

Jenn & Vinay from The Rodgers Neighborhood Real Estate Group work with custom home buyers across every neighborhood in this guide — helping them identify the specific lots that match their vision, navigate the HOA and regulatory pre-work that custom builds require, and connect with the architects and builders who know the specific site conditions of the neighborhoods they are targeting. Whether you are looking for a vacant lot in High Desert, a teardown opportunity in North Albuquerque Acres, or acreage in Corrales or the East Mountains, the conversation starts with a call.

 

Jenn & Vinay Rodgers are Albuquerque's trusted real estate professionals with The Rodgers Neighborhood Real Estate Group, brokered by Real Broker, LLC, serving buyers and sellers across Albuquerque, Rio Rancho, Corrales, Los Lunas, Tijeras, Cedar Crest, Sandia Park, the East Mountains, Bernalillo County, Sandoval County, and surrounding New Mexico communities.

 

The Rodgers Neighborhood Real Estate Group

Jenn & Vinay Rodgers

Real Broker, LLC

Albuquerque, NM

📞 505-417-2733

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