North Carolina Real Estate
Welcome to the America Real Estate Directory

North Carolina is bounded by Virginia on the north, Tennessee on the west, and South Carolina and Georgia on the south. The Atlantic Ocean forms its long irregular eastern boundary. Raleigh is the capital of North Carolina. Charlotte is the largest city and the center of the state’s most populous metropolitan region. The climate in the coastal and Piedmont regions of eastern and central North Carolina is similar to other southern states such as Georgia and South Carolina, while the climate in the western mountains is closer to that found in New England or the upper Midwest.

North Carolina is the nation's largest furniture, tobacco, brick, and textile producer. Metalworking, chemicals, and paper are also important industries. The state is also the country's leading producer of mica and lithium. Tourism and recreation is a very good source of revenues for the state. Sports include year-round golfing, skiing at mountain resorts, both fresh- and salt-water fishing, and hunting. A 2006 real estate survey has estimated the population of North Carolina at 8,856,242.

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Albemarle

Debbie Thorpe
Always Home Realty
Phone: 704-796-9090

Albemarle Real Estate
Specializing in Waterfront property- Lake Tillery and Badin.

Andrews

    Dottie Colestock
    Mountain Maid Property Services, Inc.
    Phone: 866-731-3733
    E-mail: mmps@webworkz.com
    Cherokee, Clay, and Graham Counties of North Carolina (Andrews, Murphy, Brasstown, Robbinsville).

Apex click here

Apex is located in Wake County, and it is part of the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill metro area.

Asheville

    David Clegg
    Beverly-Hanks & Associates, Realtors
    Phone: 828-215-5759

    Asheville Real Estate
    Asheville real estate agent serving Weaverville, Black Mountain, Fletcher, Arden, Mills River, Mars Hill, Hendersonville, and all of Buncombe County real estate needs. Private farms and estates, traditional and historical properties, investing and development, and exclusive downtown Asheville condominiums.

Atlantic Beach click here

Across Bogue Sound from mainland Carteret County lies Bogue Banks and thereon, Atlantic Beach. What began as a fledgling resort in the 1920s has continued to increase in popularity, complete with amusement parks and beach clubs mingling with hotels and condominiums. Thousands of sun-seekers flock to the area each summer.

Beaufort click here

Beaufort was established as a seaport with the right to collect customs, in 1722. In the 1970s, Beaufort became a major summer resort as the town and waterfront were restored.

Blowing Rock

    Bill Moffatt
    Moffatt Mountain Realty
    Phone: 888-237-2348
    E-mail: glowingheart@skybest.com
    Complete real estate services in Blowing Rock, Boone, Beech Mountain, Banner Elk, Valle Crucis, North Carolina and surrounding mountain communities in Ashe, Avery, and Watauga counties.

Burlington click here

Burlington is home to major industry, to growing retail and residential development. Textile employment remains heavy, but the largest single employer is now a medical diagnostic company.

Burnsville

Deborah Wilson
Carolina Mountain Realty, Inc.
Phone: 877-241-2450

Web Site
Heart of the Blue Ridge, Yancey (Burnsville) & Mitchell (Spruce Pine) Counties of Western NC.

Camp Lejeune / MCAS New River

    B. B. Cole
    CENTURY 21 Champion Real Estate
    Phone: (910)353-HOME
    E-mail: bbcole@onslowonline.net
    Orders to Camp Lejeune or MCAS New River? Welcome aboard! Let my years of "been there, done that" experience help your family.

Cary click here

Cary is a thriving community in the heart of the Triangle area of North Carolina, between Raleigh and renowned Research Triangle Park. The Triangle area repeatedly has ranked among the top regions in the country to live or work, to find a home or start a business, to raise a family or retire.

Chapel Hill click here

The Town of Chapel Hill is located principally in Orange County and slightly in Durham County in the north central portion of North Carolina on the Piedmont Plateau, approximately equidistant between Washington, DC, and Atlanta, Georgia.

Charlotte click here

Charlotte is located in the Piedmont Plateau region near the Catawba River. The largest city in the state, Charlotte lies at the heart of a growing metropolitan region that includes seven counties and extends into South Carolina. Charlotte is one of the principal banking centers of the nation and an important manufacturing, trade, transportation, and services center for the surrounding region.

Cherry Point click here

Cherry Point is located in Craven County and with more than 14,000 sailors, marines and civilians it is home of the world's largest Marine Corps air station.

Cornelius

    Estelle Brown
    Keller Williams
    Phone: 704-439-5236

    Cornelius Real Estate
    Cornelius Real Estate agent serving Lake Norman, Charlotte and other North Carolina real estate areas. Showings, home inspections and area information also included!

Duck

Lilias J Morrison
Real Escapes Properties
Phone: 800-261-2181

Duck Real Estate
Oceanfront, waterfront, luxury homes in Duck, Corolla, OBX and Coastal Carolina. Investment, retirement, commercial properties, lots, parcels and 2nd homes.

Dunn

    Ann Little
    James Little Real Estate, Inc./GMAC
    Phone: 910-892-6868
    E-mail: bhg@intrstar.net
    Harnett, Johnston, Sampson Counties. 2 Office Dunn & Smithfield. 21 Years Real Estate Experience.

Durham click here

Durham is located in central North Carolina on the Eno River and the Piedmont Plateau. Durham is an important center for medicine, education, and research; it is near Research Triangle Park, the nation’s largest university-related research park and home to numerous companies engaged in advanced scientific development.

Emerald Isle click here

Located between mileposts 15 & 21 at the western end of Bogue Banks, and overlooking Bogue Inlet and Sound, Emerald Isle is noted for its family-oriented beaches.

Franklin

    Hubert O. Hendrie
    Century 21 Moffitt Real Estate
    Phone: 828-524-2894
    E-mail: hohendrie@aol.com
    Serving Western North Carolina in the Smoky Mountains. Franklin, N.C. and all of Macon County.

Greensboro click here

Greensboro is a commercial, manufacturing, and distribution center for the surrounding agricultural area and a headquarters for the insurance industry. The main economic activity is the production of cotton textiles.

Greenville

    Keith Moore
    Moore Realty
    Phone: 252-752-2533
    E-mail: Keith@tkmoore.com
    Full Service Brokerage. Commercial & Residential Sales And Property Management. Buyer & Seller Representation.

Harkers Island

    Jeanette R. Holland
    Copeland & Holland Real Estate
    Phone: 252-504-2400
    E-mail: jeanette@chrealestate.com
    Web Site
    We serve the Crystal Coast of North Carolina with emphasis on customized service to clients and customers.

Havelock click here

Best known as the home to Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, the largest Marine Corps Air Station in the world, Havelock is a diverse city with much to offer visitors and residents.

Hickory

    Crystal Harwell
    L.D.Austin Company
    Phone: 828-328-4466
    E-mail: crystalhr@vol.com
    Web Site
    I have the Hickory Area's largest selection of new homes/town homes/condos & patio homes as well as a large selection of new homes.

Jacksonville click here

Jacksonville is located in Onslow County, northeast of Wilmington, on the banks of the New River. Jacksonville is the commercial hub of Onslow County and home to Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune and Marine Corps Air Station New River.

Mebane

    Lorie L. Chimera
    RE/MAX Diamond Realty
    Phone: 800-554-0712
    E-mail: lchimera@new-vista1.com
    I gladly service two regions, the Triangle region, Raleigh, Durham, & Chapel Hill.  I also service the Triad region, including Mebane, Burlington, Elon College.

Monroe

    Michael E Helms, Sr.
    Helms Security Consultants
    Phone: 704-283-5800
    E-mail: MickHelms@aol.com
    I would like to help the surrounding communities to make them safer.

Morehead City click here

Morehead City is Carteret County's other sound-side mainland seaport situated on the opposite bank of the Newport River from Beaufort. True to its maritime history, the city is home to several marine-research facilities such as the Institute of Marine Sciences and the North Carolina Division of Marine Fisheries.

Murphy

    David C. Hilton
    David Hilton Realty
    Phone: 800-871-1910

    David Hilton Realty. Homes and Land. A full service real estate company serving the Mountains of Western North Carolina.

New Bern click here

New Bern is located in eastern North Carolina, a port at the confluence of the Neuse and Trent rivers, near Pamlico Sound. It is a commercial, manufacturing, and distribution center situated in an agricultural and summer-resort area.

Newport click here

Newport is located in Carteret County.

North Carolina Mountain

    Gainer Jernigan
    Keller Williams Realty Mtn Partners
    Phone: 828-290-1066

    North Carolina Mountain Real Estate
    Homes for Sale in North Carolina Mountain, Hendersonville Real Estate, Laurel Park properties. Search the FREE MLS, listings, community info and much more.

Outer Banks

    Rubert Wilson
    ERA Coastal Properties
    Phone: 252-255-0767

    Outer Banks Real Estate
    Your Outer Banks Real Estate and Corolla NC Real Estate specialist, Rubert Wilson III. Search vacation homes and other property listings also in Kitty Hawk, Southern Shores and all of Dare County. Check home values and contact me for custom information and personal service!

Pine Knoll Shores click here

Pine Knoll Shores is a resort village located in Carteret County between Atlantic Beach and Emerald Isle.

Raleigh click here

Raleigh is located near the Neuse River. Raleigh is a commercial and distribution hub for an extensive agricultural area. Major manufactures include electrical equipment, pharmaceuticals, and processed food. Federal, state, and local government activities, financial and educational institutions, and construction are also important to Raleigh’s economy.

Research Triangle Park click here

Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill form a region dubbed the Research Triangle, an area containing extensive facilities used for scientific and educational research and development.

Southport

Sarah Kirby
Copeland & Holland Real Estate
Phone: 910-443-0836

Web Site
Real Estate and homes for sale in Southport, Oak Island, Bald Head, Wilmington and Topsail Island on the NC coast.

Troy

Debbie Thorpe
Always Home Realty
Phone: 704-796-9090

Troy Real Estate
Specializing in Waterfront property- Lake Tillery and Badin.

Wake County click here

Wake County is considered to be in a transitional zone between the Piedmont uplands and the coastal plain and, therefore, within the fall zone. The Neuse River and its tributaries drain about 80% of the County, and the southwestern part is drained by tributaries of the Cape Fear River.

Wake Forest click here

Wake Forest is located in Wake County, just north of Raleigh, near Fall Lake Reservoir. Wake Forest is part of the Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill metro area.

Wilmington

    The Fine Coastal Living Team
    Keller Williams Realty
    Phone: 877-836-6906
    www.FineCoastalLiving.com
    The Fine Coastal Living Team is eager to introduce you to Wilmington NC real estate! With a focus on exceptional service, our goal is to help you get the most out of buying or selling Wilmington real estate. We love Wilmington North Carolina and would appreciate an opportunity to help you benefit from the strong real estate market.

    Paul Coffman
    Coastal Carolina Properties
    Phone: 910-262-1002

    Coastal Carolina Properties
    Buyers Specialist serving Wilmington NC Real Estate and surrounding areas, including Wrightsville Beach, Carolina/Kure Beach.

Wrightsville Beach

    Paul Coffman
    Coastal Carolina Properties
    Phone: 910-262-1002

    Coastal Carolina Properties
    Buyers Specialist serving Wilmington NC Real Estate and surrounding areas, including Wrightsville Beach, Carolina/Kure Beach.

More about North Carolina

Chickens and broilers and hogs outranked all other agricultural products as sources of farm income, accounting for three-fifths of total farm sales in 1997 and nine-tenths of all livestock sales. North Carolina ranked first among the states in production of turkeys, second in hogs, and fourth in broilers (young chickens used for meat). During the 1990s huge hog farm operations began to dominate the rural countryside of the inner Coastal Plain.

Tobacco growing was the dominant and best-known agricultural activity in the state for many years. It is still the leading crop, but in 1997 tobacco accounted for only one-seventh of total agricultural sales. Soybeans are the most widely grown crop in North Carolina, accounting for almost one-quarter of the harvested crop acreage, and corn is the second leading crop by acreage planted. Cotton, the state’s leading crop as late as 1952, went through a period of decline, but has become more important since the early 1980s. Greenhouse and nursery items are now the second most valuable crop group in the state’s agricultural economy.

The Atlantic Coastal Plain is North Carolina’s leading agricultural region. It has nearly three-fifths of the state’s cropland. About three-fifths of North Carolina’s tobacco acreage is in the Coastal Plain. In the inner Coastal Plain, where sandy well-drained soil is plentiful, the state’s tobacco crop is most abundant. Over wide areas it is grown on practically every farm. Tobacco acreage is rigidly controlled by a government quota system. Practically all Coastal Plain tobacco is the bright leaf flue-cured kind, which is used almost exclusively for cigarettes.

Nearly three-fourths of North Carolina’s corn acreage is in the Coastal Plain. Most of the state’s peanuts are raised in the northeastern part of the plain. This peanut-growing region extends into Virginia and is one of the leading peanut areas in the nation. Soybeans, sweet potatoes, Irish potatoes, and a wide variety of vegetables are much more important in the Coastal Plain than in other regions of North Carolina. Truck farming is significant in the Morehead City and Wilmington areas. Faison, in Duplin County, is one of the largest wholesale produce markets in the nation. The Sandhills is the state’s main peach-producing area.

The Piedmont is less important than the Atlantic Coastal Plain as a farming region. The heavily textured red clays and clay loams are adapted to a variety of grains, hay crops, and pasture, but they are not well suited to high-value cash crops. Soil erosion is a problem, but much of the hillier land that was badly eroded is now used for profitable livestock raising.

The Piedmont grows all the major crops found in the Coastal Plain, except peanuts. Tobacco, largely bright leaf but also some burley, is the leading money crop. The scale of production and acreage quotas are much smaller than in the Coastal Plain, but farming methods are similar. The Piedmont produces most of the state’s cotton crop, mainly in the southern Piedmont.

Corn leads all Piedmont crops in acreage. It is grown on most farms and is used mainly to feed stock. Among small grains, winter wheat is grown largely as a cash crop. The growing of oats is second and barley a distant third. Lespedeza leads all hay crops.

The Piedmont produces many of the state’s cattle, with about equal numbers of beef and dairy animals. High-quality Hereford, Angus, and other beef cattle are raised on many large livestock farms. However, small farms produce most of the beef.

The mountains contain the least important farming region. Most mountain farming is carried on in valleys, coves, and basins. Alluvial soils, covering narrow ribbons of floodplains along swift streams, are very restricted in total area. However, these soils are highly productive when they escape flooding. The largest and best-developed agricultural area of the region is the Asheville Basin. The Waynesville Basin and other smaller basins, coves, and valleys are also important.

As in the Atlantic Coastal Plain and in the Piedmont, tobacco is the leading cash crop of the mountains. Almost all of the tobacco is the air-cured burley kind. The crop is widely grown but on a small scale. In many areas it is the chief source of farm income. Corn is grown on practically all mountain farms. Most of it is fed to cattle and poultry, but the Asheville Basin grows a considerable amount of corn as a cash crop. Several varieties of hay crops are harvested in the region. The Asheville Basin grows vegetables and many flowers, particularly gladiolus. Apples are also widely grown. Orchards usually occupy slopes well above the valley floors. There are also vineyards, the most famous of which are at the Biltmore Estate near Asheville.

In addition to cattle raising, the mountain region produces most of the state’s sheep. Both broilers and laying hens give the mountains a significant poultry industry. Farms in the Asheville Basin produce hatching eggs, which are shipped out by air to markets in other states and overseas.

North Carolina’s long shoreline is washed by warm Atlantic waters that abound in fish. The area is high in shrimp production, and shrimp boats operate from many fishing ports. The most valuable shellfish catch is blue crabs. Other shellfish harvested include sea and bay scallops and oysters. By far the major part of the catch by weight, however, consists of finfish that are found in great variety. Food fish taken commercially include flounder, Atlantic menhaden (used in industrial processes), sea trout, tuna, grouper, shark, and Atlantic croaker.

North Carolina is one of the leading states in lumber production. All areas of North Carolina produce lumber. The pine is by far the leading lumber tree. Many medium-sized sawmills and a few large ones operate on a permanent basis, turning out finished lumber for construction and other uses. However, much of the state’s lumber is rough sawn by the hundreds of small portable mills that operate in the midst of the woods. The mills spend only a few weeks in one place. Pine is also the leading wood cut for the state’s paper and pulp industry. Gums, soft maples, poplars, and some oaks are also cut for pulp. Tree growth is rapid in North Carolina’s mild rainy climate. Also, the forest area continues to expand with the abandonment of farmland.

A wide variety of metals and nonmetallic minerals occur in North Carolina, but in most instances they are produced on only a small scale. By value, the leading mineral products in the late 1990s were stone (mostly granite), phosphate rock, and sand and gravel. One of the largest known deposits of phosphate rock in the United States is located in Beaufort County. In the late 1990s the state ranked first in the nation in the production of feldspar, lithium ores, and mica, and third in phosphate rock.

North Carolina is the second largest industrial state in the South, behind only Texas, and one of the more important manufacturing states in the nation. About 856,000 workers were employed in industry in 1996. North Carolina produces more than two-fifths of the nation’s tobacco products and one-quarter of its textile manufactures. The world’s largest furniture mart, at High Point, attracts buyers from all over the United States. These traditional industries of the state have been joined by the manufacturing of chemicals, industrial machinery, and electrical equipment.

Textile manufacturing is the leading source of industrial jobs and wages. The state’s textile industry underwent a contraction in the 1980s, however, because of competition from new plants in foreign countries. From 1980 to 1986 some 43,000 textile manufacturing jobs in North Carolina disappeared. Important textile centers are Burlington, Charlotte, Durham, Gastonia, High Point, Kannapolis, and Winston-Salem.

The decline of the textile industry has lifted the chemical industry to first place in terms of total income generated, but this sector provides far fewer jobs than textile production. Leading employers are firms making pharmaceuticals, organic fibers, cleansers, toilet articles, and plastics and resins.

Industries centered on tobacco rank second behind chemicals in production value. Cigarettes are the main product. Pipe tobacco, cigars, and snuff are also manufactured. The entire tobacco products industry is located in the Piedmont, although most of the bright leaf cigarette tobacco is grown in the Atlantic Coastal Plain. Four regions, Durham, Greensboro, Reidsville, and Winston-Salem, are the centers of production.

Also important for the state are firms making electronic and electrical equipment, such as telephones, electric housewares, and industrial controls. Another large contributor to the state’s economy is the manufacture of industrial machinery, such as computers, power hand tools, machinery for the textile industry, engines, construction equipment, turbines, and pumps.

North Carolina has a large and diversified food processing industry. The biggest source of employment in this sector is the processing of poultry and eggs, much of it done in small factory operations.

Furniture manufacturing once ranked second, behind textile manufacturing, as a source of jobs, but since has declined in relative position. Many leading furniture firms have factories in the state, and they make all grades and kinds of wooden household furniture, as well as a relatively wide variety of office furniture. The furniture plants are widely distributed. Towns with large factories include High Point, Lenoir, Lexington, Hickory, Mount Airy, Statesville, and Thomasville, home of one of the world’s leading chair manufacturers.

Lumber and paper industries have developed as a result of North Carolina’s rich forest resources. Nearly 200 firms making pulp, paper, and paper products operate in the state. Large paper mills in the Coastal Plain are located in Plymouth, Roanoke Rapids, and Reigelwood. In the mountains, at Canton, a large mill makes paper from pines and other softwoods. Another large mill, located at Brevard, makes most of the state’s cigarette paper. There are plywood and veneer mills in the Piedmont.

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Real Estate: South Carolina - North Carolina Relocation

Vacation Rentals: North Carolina - Coastal Region - Heartland - Mountains Region - Outer Banks

Official Website for the State of North Carolina

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