Kelsey Park - Is it expensive? Why "Kelsey Park" actually means four different price tags in South Lubbock.
Is Kelsey Park Expensive? Why “Kelsey Park” Actually Means Four Different Price Tags in Lubbock
Quick answer: Kelsey Park in Lubbock has four sections with very different price points: the original section averages $441K, Eastwick averages $467K, Enclave averages $759K, and Estates averages $1.4 million, based on 32 closed sales in 2026.
If you’ve been searching “homes for sale in Kelsey Park Lubbock” and getting confused by the price range, you’re not losing your mind. Kelsey Park isn’t one neighborhood. It’s four, all stacked under the same name, and the price gap between them is bigger than most people realize.
I pulled the actual closed sales and active listings straight from MLS to break it down section by section. Here’s what’s really going on out there between the new "Outer Loop" and 146th Street.
- What is Kelsey Park in Lubbock?
Kelsey Park is a large master-planned development in south Lubbock in the Lubbock Cooper School District (Liberty High School zoned), between 133rd and 146th Street and the Quaker/Indiana corridor. Over the years it’s grown into four distinct sub-sections, each with its own price tier:
- Kelsey Park (original section) — the oldest part of the development
- Eastwick at Kelsey Park — the largest and most active section rightnow
- Enclave at Kelsey Park — a step up in size and price
- Estates of Kelsey Park — the luxury tier
- Kelsey Park Luxury Duplexes - Located on 133rd and great for a nice up-scale rental.
Builders and agents often just say “Kelsey Park” for all four, which is exactly why the price range looks so wide when you’re scrolling listings.
- How much do homes cost in Kelsey Park?
Based on 32 closed sales in Kelsey Park so far in 2026, pulled straightfrom MLS:
Kelsey Park (original section) is averaging $441,600 on closed sales,with a median of $460,000, roughly $181 a square foot. This is the most affordable entry point into the development, though it’s also the smallest sample (5 closings this year) and has taken a bit longer to move, averaging 53 days on market.
Eastwick at Kelsey Park is the volume section by far, 18 closed sales this year alone. It’s averaging $466,651 on closed sales, with a median of $475,000, at about $198 a square foot, and moving in 41 days on average.
Enclave at Kelsey Park steps up again, with 7 closed sales averaging $759,243 and a median of $699,900, around $213 a square foot. This section also moved the fastest of the four, 33 days on average.
Estates of Kelsey Park is the top tier. Only 2 closed sales so far in 2026, averaging $1.4 million with a median of $1.5 million, and price per square foot jumping to around $347, close to double the rest of the development. There’s currently a listing in this section asking $2.35 million.
Put plainly: the gap between the entry-level section of Kelsey Park and the Estates section is just over 3x based on this year’s actual closings. Same name, completely different market.
- Why does this matter if you’re buying or selling in Kelsey Park?
If you’re searching online or talking to an out-of-town lender about “Kelsey Park comps,” you need to know which section you’re actually comparing. A $450,000 home in Eastwick and a $1.5 million home in the Estates section will both show up under “Kelsey Park” on a casual search, and that’s going to throw off any quick comp you try to run yourself.
If you’re selling, this also means your pricing strategy needs to besection-specific, not just “Kelsey Park” broad strokes. A buyer’s agent unfamiliar with Lubbock might pull comps from the wrong section entirely and undervalue or overvalue a listing.
If you’re a first-time investor looking at Lubbock as an affordable alternative to coastal or Sun Belt markets, the original Kelsey Park section and Eastwick are where the volume and the value sit. The Estates section is a different conversation entirely, that’s competing with custom luxury builds, not entry-level rental comps.
- The bottom line
Kelsey Park isn’t a single price point, it’s a layered development with four real tiers hiding under one name. If you’re shopping by neighborhood name alone, you’re going to get a distorted picture of what things actually cost.
Want the comps pulled for your specific section or lot? Reach out and I’ll run the real numbers off current MLS data, not a Zillow estimate.
Justin Lowrey is a Realtor with The Lowrey Group, serving Lubbock and West Texas. Data pulled from 32 closed sales in Kelsey Park across all four sections, January through June 2026, sourced from Lubbock MLS.


