Carothers Executive Homes in Bell County TX (2026) — Buyer’s Agent Review

New Construction — Bell County TX

Carothers Executive Homes in Bell County TX — A Buyer’s Agent Review

47 years of building in Central Texas. Four home series from $335K to $869K+. Standard inclusions that cost $25,000+ as upgrades at national builders. Here’s what the contract says, what the preferred lender math actually looks like, and what an independent buyer’s agent does differently in a Carothers transaction.

By Moody Glasgow, REALTOR® · Orchard Realty · Updated June 2026 · ~10 min read
47 yrs
Family-owned building in Bell County since 1979
10+
Active communities across Temple, Belton, Salado, Troy, Lorena
$25K+
Standard inclusions vs. upgrade cost at national builders
3
Separate family entities — make sure you’re talking to the right one

Carothers is the most common builder name I hear from move-up buyers and BSW professionals researching new construction in Bell County. That’s not an accident — they’ve been building here for nearly five decades, they’re family-owned, and their standard inclusions genuinely distinguish them from national volume builders at comparable price points.

What this page covers is what their own website doesn’t: the three-entity structure and why it matters which Carothers you’re calling, the specific contract clauses that differ from a standard TREC transaction, the preferred lender math run honestly, and the six things a buyer’s agent negotiates in a Carothers deal that buyers typically leave on the table when they go in unrepresented.

The Three-Entity Structure — Which Carothers Are You Calling?

The Carothers name covers three separate, independently operated businesses. They share a family name and a commitment to Central Texas construction, but they target different buyers in different markets with different products. Getting this wrong means you’re calling the wrong sales team for your situation.

This Page — For You
Carothers Executive Homes
Jason & Jamie Carothers · 50 S Wheat Rd, Belton

Temple, Belton, Salado, Troy, Academy, Lorena. Four home series ($335K–$869K+). Targets civilian professionals, BSW medical workers, and move-up buyers. 100+ homes per year. Belton ISD communities. This is the entity relevant to most buyers who find this page.

Military / Fort Hood Buyers
Carothers Homes LLC
Robert & BJ Carothers · Killeen

Killeen, Harker Heights, Copperas Cove. Focused on VA loan buyers and active-duty military families at Fort Hood. Different price points, different communities, different contract terms from the Executive Homes division. Separate BBB listing (A+ rated).

Rural / Acreage Buyers
Keith Carothers Homes
Keith & Nicole Carothers · Kempner TX, since 1995

Build-on-your-lot semi-custom construction in rural Bell County and surrounding areas. For buyers who have acreage and want a custom build rather than a production community. Longest timeline (6–9+ months) and highest customization level of the three.

The Four Home Series — What Each One Actually Means

Carothers offers four series — Lone Star, Diamond, Executive, and Signature — each with its own inclusions and options, plus a build-on-your-lot option. In practice, the series determines your standard inclusion package and which communities you have access to. Here’s the honest breakdown:

Lone Star Series
~$335K–$420K

Entry-level Carothers product. Smaller footprints (1,400–2,200 sq ft typically), core standard inclusions apply, but fewer customization options and limited elevation choices. Most commonly found in Troy, Academy, and Lorena communities.

Best for: buyers who want Carothers’ structural quality at a lower price point and don’t need a large footprint.

Diamond Series
~$400K–$550K

Mid-range sweet spot. Larger floor plans, expanded elevation options, additional design center selections. Most of the active Belton and Temple inventory sits in this range. Belton ISD communities like Three Creeks and Bella Terra.

Best for: move-up families who want Belton ISD and a 2,200–3,200 sq ft home.

Executive Series
~$530K–$699K

Elevated finishes, larger lots, more architectural detail. Custom cabinetry upgrades standard in newer communities. The series that puts Carothers in direct competition with the resale move-up market rather than just production builders.

Best for: buyers comparing against $500K–$700K resale with a preference for new construction.

Signature Series
~$699K–$869K+

Top of the Carothers range. Custom-adjacent production homes with expanded lot sizes, premium finishes standard, and the highest level of design center customization available without going full build-on-your-lot. Limited communities — primarily Salado and select Belton locations.

Best for: buyers who want high-end finishes with the predictability of a production timeline.

Standard Inclusions — What’s Actually in the Base Price

This is where Carothers Executive Homes genuinely separates from national volume builders in Bell County. The features below are standard across all four series — not upgrades, not options, not design center add-ons. The “upgrade value” column shows what a comparable national builder charges to add the same feature.

Feature Carothers Standard National Builder Equivalent Upgrade Value
Foundation Post-tension engineered slab Conventional slab standard; post-tension upgrade +$4,000–$8,000
Insulation Full spray foam (attic + walls) Batt insulation standard; spray foam upgrade +$8,000–$12,000
Exterior 80% masonry (stone/brick), no vinyl siding Vinyl/fiber cement standard; masonry upgrade +$5,000–$10,000
Cabinetry Custom-built with soft-close (newer communities) Builder-grade semi-custom; upgrade required +$3,000–$6,000
Countertops Granite or quartz kitchen + primary bath Granite standard in kitchen only +$1,500–$3,000
Yard & Irrigation Full sod front + back, multi-zone irrigation w/ rain sensor Front sod only; irrigation upgrade +$4,500–$7,000
Windows Double-pane Low-E throughout Standard in most; Low-E standard at some builders +$1,500–$3,000
Patio & Fencing Covered rear patio, privacy fencing Varies; often upgrade or separate +$2,000–$4,000

Feature list based on Carothers specification sheets and builder contract review, Bell County 2025–2026. Upgrade values based on national builder option pricing in Central Texas market. Verify current standards directly with Carothers before signing.

The honest summary: A comparably-equipped D.R. Horton or KB Home costs $25,000–$40,000 more in upgrades to reach Carothers’ standard inclusion level. That gap is real — and it’s why Carothers homes have historically held value well against national builder resale in Bell County. The post-tension foundation and spray foam insulation aren’t cosmetic — they matter in Bell County’s Blackland Prairie clay soil and Central Texas heat load.

Notable Upgrades Worth Considering

Even with strong standard inclusions, there are a handful of Carothers upgrades that have consistently good ROI on resale or quality-of-life impact:

Tankless water heater ($1,950) — worth it in Central Texas for a family home. Conventional 50-gallon tanks in a hot attic run hard and fail earlier. Epoxy garage flooring ($3,950) — resale buyers in the $450K–$700K range expect this; adding it at builder pricing is significantly cheaper than retrofitting post-close. Window coverings ($1,950) — buy at build, not after move-in. Full-wrap gutters ($975) — non-negotiable for Bell County hail and downpour events.

Active Carothers Communities in Bell County (June 2026)

Community Location School District MUD Tax Series Available
Three Creeks Belton Belton ISD ✓ +0.783% Diamond, Executive
Bella Terra Belton Belton ISD ✓ None confirmed Diamond, Executive
Settlers Pass Temple Temple ISD None Lone Star, Diamond
South Pointe Temple Temple ISD None Lone Star, Diamond
Mill Creek Crossing Salado Salado ISD None confirmed Diamond, Signature
Various Troy / Academy Troy, Academy Troy ISD / Academy ISD None Lone Star

Community list current as of June 2026. MUD status should be verified on every specific lot via BellCAD before offer submission. School district verified at property level — not subdivision level.

⚠️

Three Creeks MUD tax adds $294/month on a $450,000 home. Bell County MUD #1 at 0.783% brings the effective property tax rate to 2.279%. That’s $3,524/year added to your escrow — real money that doesn’t build equity. It’s not a reason to avoid Three Creeks, but it belongs in your PITI calculation before you compare it to a no-MUD community. Full breakdown: Bell County property tax guide →

The Preferred Lender Math — Run Honestly

Carothers offers a 2/1 rate buydown through their preferred lender. The buydown works like this: Carothers funds an escrow account — typically up to 2% of the purchase price — that subsidizes your mortgage rate for the first 24 months. Your rate is effectively 2% lower in Year 1 and 1% lower in Year 2, then adjusts to your full locked rate in Year 3.

On a $450,000 home at a 7.0% rate, here’s what the buydown actually saves:

2/1 Buydown — $450,000 Purchase, 7.0% Base Rate (Illustrative)
Year 1 rate (2% below market) 5.0% → $2,416/mo P&I
Year 2 rate (1% below market) 6.0% → $2,698/mo P&I
Year 3+ rate (full market rate) 7.0% → $2,994/mo P&I
Monthly savings Year 1 vs. full rate $578/month
Monthly savings Year 2 vs. full rate $296/month
Total buydown value over 24 months ~$10,464
Closing cost credits (preferred lender only) $5,000–$10,000
Total incentive package value (preferred lender) ~$15,464–$20,464

Rates illustrative based on Central Texas builder incentive norms as of Q1 2026. Actual rates depend on credit profile and market conditions at lock. Verify current incentive package directly with Carothers.

Here’s the trade-off: if you use your own lender instead of Carothers’ preferred lender, you forfeit all of the above — the buydown subsidy and the closing cost credits. That’s a real $15,000–$20,000 difference. For most buyers in 2026, using the preferred lender is the mathematically correct choice.

The question worth asking before you decide: what is the preferred lender’s rate in Year 3 and beyond? The buydown only subsidizes Years 1–2. If the preferred lender’s unsubsidized rate is 0.5%+ above what you’d get independently, and you plan to stay in the home beyond Year 3, the long-term interest cost difference matters. Get a competing quote from an independent lender — not to decline Carothers’ incentive, but to know exactly what you’re comparing.

What a Buyer’s Agent Negotiates in a Carothers Contract

Carothers uses a proprietary contract — not the standard TREC One to Four Family Residential Contract. The buyer’s agent commission is paid by Carothers out of their margin; it does not add to your purchase price. Here’s what that representation actually gets you that you won’t get going in alone:

  • Additional closing cost credits beyond the published incentive. The published incentive package is the floor, not the ceiling. An agent who has closed Carothers deals before knows which credits are negotiable above the standard offer — particularly on spec homes that have been sitting for 60+ days.
  • Upgrade credits at design center vs. cash at close. Carothers sometimes offers upgrade credits in lieu of cash closing cost credits. An agent helps you run the math on whether $5,000 in design center credits is worth the same as $5,000 at close — it usually isn’t, because design center markups mean you get less product for the same dollar.
  • Pre-drywall inspection with an independent inspector. Carothers’ contract allows for an inspection, but the timing window matters. Getting an independent inspector in before drywall — while framing, plumbing rough-in, and electrical are exposed — is your best opportunity to identify issues that are invisible and expensive after walls are closed. This requires scheduling coordination and a contract with the right inspection timing clause.
  • Documentation of all verbal representations in writing. Sales representatives make commitments in conversation — about completion timelines, lot premiums, neighboring lot availability — that aren’t in the contract. An agent documents these and requests written addenda for anything material. Builder contracts have no obligation to honor verbal commitments.
  • Completion delay contingency planning. If you’re selling a home to fund the purchase, you need a bridge plan for the gap between your current home’s closing and the Carothers completion date. Delays of 30–60 days are common. An agent who knows your full financial picture can structure the timing and help you avoid a situation where you’re paying rent or extended hotel costs due to a build delay.
  • Final walkthrough punch list negotiation. The final walkthrough is your last formal opportunity to document incomplete or deficient items before closing. Experienced buyers compile a detailed punch list; unrepresented buyers often miss items that then become warranty claims — a slower, more contentious resolution path.

Frequently Asked Questions

By the metrics that matter in Bell County — structural quality, standard inclusion value, and longevity — yes. They carry an A+ BBB rating in Killeen and an A rating in Belton with minimal complaints across nearly five decades of operation. The post-tension foundation and spray foam insulation are genuine differentiators from national volume builders, not marketing language. Customer reviews consistently cite construction quality and responsive service. The legitimate criticisms: design center pricing is marked up (as it is at every production builder), completion timelines slip, and the proprietary contract removes protections you’d have in a standard TREC transaction. None of these are unique to Carothers — they’re standard new construction trade-offs.

Three Creeks and Bella Terra are the primary Carothers communities with Belton ISD zoning. Three Creeks carries Bell County MUD #1 (0.783% additional property tax); Bella Terra’s MUD status should be verified on each specific lot. Both communities are in Belton proper, approximately 10–12 minutes from BSW Main Campus. For buyers prioritizing Belton ISD without MUD tax, Lake Pointe — not a Carothers community — is worth investigating as a comparison: Temple city limits with Belton ISD zoning at a lower effective tax rate. See the BSW neighborhood guide → for the full breakdown.

Different products targeting different buyers. D.R. Horton’s Express and Freedom series start in the $240K–$280K range with conventional slab foundations, vinyl siding options, batt insulation, and a highly systematized build process geared toward speed and volume. Their DHI Mortgage 0.99% Year 1 rate buydown can produce very low entry-level monthly payments for first-time buyers. Carothers starts around $335K, builds slower (5–7 months vs. DR Horton’s 3–5 months for production homes), and delivers a structurally different product. If your budget is $240K–$330K, Carothers isn’t your builder. If your budget is $350K+, the comparison is worth making carefully — Carothers’ standard inclusion value is real, but so is DR Horton’s financing incentive.

Yes — you’re not contractually required to use their preferred lender. But as the math above shows, using your own lender means forfeiting $15,000–$20,000 in buydown subsidy and closing cost credits on a typical $450K purchase. The preferred lender route is the financially superior choice in most 2026 rate environment scenarios. The caveat: get a competing loan quote before you decide, specifically looking at the Year 3+ rate (after the buydown expires) and total origination costs. The incentive package is designed to be the right answer for most buyers — and it usually is — but you should confirm that for your specific credit profile and program rather than assuming it.

Spec homes (already built or under construction): 30–60 days to close. To-be-built production homes: 5–7 months estimated. Build-on-your-lot (Keith Carothers): 6–9+ months. No Carothers contract guarantees a closing date — the contract specifies an estimated completion date with builder-favorable delay provisions. In practice, 30–60 day delays are common, particularly on homes requiring design center customization or during periods of subcontractor congestion in Bell County. If you’re simultaneously selling your current home, plan your bridge financing or extended lease options around a completion date that is 45–60 days later than Carothers’ estimate.

Considering a Carothers Home?

I’ll Review the Contract and Run the Lender Math Before You Sign Anything

Buyer representation on new construction costs you nothing — Carothers pays the buyer’s agent commission. What you get is an independent contract review, a competing lender quote for comparison, and someone at the pre-drywall inspection who knows what to look for. That conversation starts before you set foot in the sales office.