The fastest-growing town on the Durant–Denison corridor — newer homes on US-75, with DFW about 90 minutes south.
Live MLS listings, updated continuously.
Calera sits in Bryan County on US-75 — the main north–south corridor between Durant and the Texas line — about 12 miles south of Durant and roughly 10 miles north of Denison, TX. It's the corridor town in the middle, which is the whole pitch: Durant is about 12 minutes north for the hospital, university, and big-box retail, and Denison is about 10 minutes south across the state line. Lake Texoma's eastern (Bryan County) arm near Colbert and Platter is roughly 15–20 miles southwest — about a 20-minute drive — so the water is an easy day trip, not the front yard. DFW Airport is about 80–90 miles south, a 1.25–1.5 hour run down US-75, which actually puts Calera a touch closer to the metro than Durant.
Start with the live MLS listings above — that's the current truth. The portal estimates below are useful for context, but they're third-party snapshots and they disagree with each other, partly because Calera is a small market where a handful of sales swings the median:
Across the portals there were roughly 60–80 homes for sale in early 2026, with listings turning over reasonably quickly. The spread between Redfin's ~$231K and Movoto's ~$269K list price is normal — one leans toward recent closed sales, the other toward what's currently asked — and it's wider than usual here simply because Calera is small. The clearer story is the trend: prices have held up better in Calera than in the larger Durant market, helped by steady new construction. By any national measure it's still affordable, especially next to the DFW suburbs.
Why the numbers don't matchRedfin, Rocket, Movoto, and Zillow each estimate differently, on different schedules, and in a town this size one or two sales can move the median several thousand dollars. None of them is the MLS. For an accurate read on a specific home or neighborhood, the live listings above — and a quick call — beat any portal average.
Calera went from 2,164 people in 2010 to 2,916 in 2020 — a 34.8% jump, the fastest of any town on this corridor — and is estimated near 3,192 by 2026. It's a bedroom community: most of that growth is spillover from Durant plus buyers who want the DFW corridor without DFW prices. Calera itself has no single large employer, so paychecks come from both directions:
Calera is served by its own district, Calera Public Schools (Calera ISD) — roughly 900–1,000 students across two campuses, Calera Elementary and Calera High School. It's a small rural district, which cuts both ways: smaller class sizes and a tight-knit feel, but a narrower slate of advanced courses and extracurriculars than a big-city district. Oklahoma uses the OSDE accountability dashboard rather than A–F letter grades; check the current report card at OklaSchools.com, and always confirm the assigned school for a specific address before you buy.
Calera is residential and quiet — you live here and drive to Durant or Denison for work, shopping, and dinner out. The feel is young and growing: a lot of the housing is newer than what you'll find in the older Durant neighborhoods, and the buyers reflect that mix — dual-income families, remote and hybrid workers, Choctaw and hospital employees, and DFW-area buyers trading metro prices for space. You get a small-town pace with two real towns inside fifteen minutes in either direction. The lake is a day trip, not a daily lifestyle, so people who specifically want lake life usually look southwest toward the Bryan County arm or west toward Kingston instead.
No place is perfect, and a straight answer beats a sales pitch:
Be honest about what Calera is: it's a corridor town, not a lake town. The eastern Bryan County arm is about 20 minutes southwest, so the lake is an easy weekend, but if living on the water is the goal you'll want Kingston or a lakefront community instead. Where Calera wins is everything around the lake life — newer homes, the fastest growth on the corridor, a price that's held up well, and two real towns plus the DFW metro all within reach. American Dream Realty isn't only a lake shop or only a town shop; we sell across the whole Texoma region, from a starter home in Calera to lakefront property a short drive away. Same brokerage, both sides of the map.
American Dream Realty has worked the Texoma region for 23 years. Tell us what you're after — a newer home in Calera, a corridor lot to build on, or lakefront a short drive southwest — and we'll get straight to it.
Calera sits in the middle of the corridor — the region's real city to the north, the Texas hub to the south, and quiet Bryan County land to the east.
The region's real city — hospital, university, casino, and chain retail, lake a short drive south.
View Durant listings →The Texas-side hub — Texoma Medical Center, an award-winning downtown, lake access north.
View Denison listings →Quiet rural Bryan County on US-70 — land, privacy, and low Oklahoma prices.
View Mead listings →MLS Early Access
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