Fallon is the Nevada town most Americans have seen without knowing it — the real "Top Gun" is here, because Naval Air Station Fallon runs the Navy's Strike and Air Warfare Center and every carrier air wing in the Pacific cycles through its ranges. But drive past the flight line and Fallon reveals its second identity: the "Oasis of Nevada," a genuinely green agricultural valley of alfalfa fields, dairy operations, and the Lahontan Reservoir's irrigation water in the middle of the high desert. I have helped families relocate all across Northern Nevada, and Fallon is the market where a Navy PCS order and a working hayfield sit inside the same MLS.
That combination makes Fallon a different relocation math than Reno or Carson City. It is smaller, it is more affordable, and its demand engine is federal rather than tech. This guide gives you the full picture for a 2026 move: live pricing from Nevada Real Estate Group's Northern Nevada MLS feed, the BAH-and-VA-loan playbook for NAS Fallon buyers, the honest in-town-versus-rural tradeoff, Churchill County schools, the water-rights realities of buying acreage in a desert, healthcare, the commute geography, and exactly who thrives here.
Fallon — the seat of Churchill County and home of Naval Air Station Fallon — offers small-town living, no state income tax, and Oasis-of-Nevada farmland an hour east of Reno. As of July 13, 2026, our live NNRMLS feed shows 204 active homes at a $379,950 median list and a $378,000 median sold price year-to-date — about $220,000 under Reno. VA-loan buying power is why the base drives the market. Call (775) 277-2120.
- Fallon's $379,950 median list sits about $220,000 below Reno and $235,000 below Carson City.
- NAS Fallon anchors demand — VA loans allow $0 down, and BAH often covers most of a mortgage payment.
- The market is small and quick: 204 active homes, 163 closed in 2026, and a 60-day median time on market.
- Ag and large-lot living is mainstream — verify water rights, well, and septic before buying acreage.
- Churchill County schools, Banner Churchill hospital, and an hour-to-Reno commute cover the essentials.
Why Does NAS Fallon Drive the Fallon Housing Market?
Start with the single fact that shapes everything else: Fallon is a Navy town, and the base is the economy's spine. According to the U.S. Navy, Naval Air Station Fallon is home to the Naval Aviation Warfighting Development Center — the modern successor to the original TOPGUN mission — and the installation, its ranges, and its civilian and contractor workforce make it the largest single employer in Churchill County. That means a steady, cyclical stream of relocating sailors, officers, instructors, and defense-contractor families rotating in and out on Permanent Change of Station (PCS) orders.
For a housing market, a military anchor changes the rules in three ways. First, demand is durable — the base does not lay off during a tech downturn, so Fallon's buyer pool stays fed even when discretionary markets cool. Second, buyers arrive pre-qualified for VA financing, which reshapes what they can afford (more on that below). Third, timing runs on the PCS calendar — summer brings a wave of arriving families racing to close before a report date, which is exactly when inventory tightens.
Across the closings Nevada Real Estate Group has represented in Northern Nevada, the pattern is consistent: the well-priced, move-in-ready three-bedroom under $400,000 with a two-car garage and a fenced yard is the single most-competed property in Fallon, because it is what an arriving military family with kids and a BAH budget wants. If you are the seller of that home, you are in a strong position; if you are the PCS buyer chasing it, you need financing staged and an agent who knows the base timeline. Our Fallon homes for sale page runs off the same live feed so you can watch that inventory band in real time.
Where Is Fallon, and Is It Part of the Reno Metro?
This is the geography question I clear up on nearly every first call, because relocating buyers researching "Northern Nevada" often assume everything orbits Reno. It does not. Fallon is its own city — the seat of Churchill County — about 60 miles east of Reno via US-50 and Interstate 80, and it is not part of the Reno-Sparks metro. Fallon is a standalone small-city market with its own economy (the base plus agriculture), its own county government, and its own school district, according to Churchill County, Nevada.
The "Oasis of Nevada" nickname is literal. Fallon sits in the Lahontan Valley, where the Newlands Project — one of the first federal reclamation projects in the country — diverts Carson and Truckee River water into a network of canals and the Lahontan Reservoir, turning high desert into irrigated farmland. That is why you see green alfalfa fields, dairies, and the famous Hearts of Gold cantaloupe where you would otherwise expect sagebrush. It gives Fallon a genuinely agricultural character that Reno's suburbs simply do not have, and it is the reason large-lot and water-righted acreage are mainstream inventory here.
Practically, the distinction matters for your search. When you buy in Fallon, your property taxes, your schools, and your county services are all Churchill County — not Washoe (Reno) or Carson City. You can compare the whole region on our Northern Nevada communities directory, and if a Reno-metro commute is central to your job, our Reno hub covers that end of the corridor. But most people who move to Fallon do so precisely because it is not Reno — smaller, cheaper, quieter, and closer to the land.

What Does the Fallon Housing Market Look Like in July 2026?
Here are the live numbers, pulled from Nevada Real Estate Group's NNRMLS feed on July 13, 2026. Methodology: counts and medians reflect active for-sale residential listings in the Fallon market, plus year-to-date and trailing-12-month closed residential transactions from the same feed.
| Metric | Value | What it tells a buyer |
|---|---|---|
| Active listings | 204 | A small market — good homes do not linger |
| Median list price | $379,950 | Roughly $220,000 below Reno's $599,000 |
| Median sold price (2026 YTD) | $378,000 | Sellers are getting close to ask |
| Homes closed (2026 YTD) | 163 | Steady absorption for a town this size |
| Median days on market | 60 | Two months — brisk but not frantic |
| Median price per sq ft | $240 | A fraction of Reno or Tahoe per-foot pricing |
Two patterns deserve emphasis. First, this is a genuinely small market — 204 active residential listings is tiny, so the right move-in-ready home at the right price draws attention fast, especially during the summer PCS window. Second, note that the $379,950 median list is skewed upward by ranch and acreage product: the average list price is $591,274 because a handful of large working ranches (one at $25,000,000) pull the mean, while the everyday home that actually closes sits right at the $378,000 sold median. That gap between the headline average and the real transaction price is exactly where a local agent keeps a relocating buyer from overpaying — or from ignoring a well-priced listing that looks "too cheap." You can browse every current option on our Fallon homes for sale page, updated straight from the same feed.
How Should Military Buyers Use BAH and VA Loans in Fallon?
For a NAS Fallon family, the financing conversation is different from a civilian buyer's, and getting it right is the biggest lever you have. Two federal programs do the heavy lifting.
The VA home loan. According to the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, eligible service members and veterans can buy a primary residence with $0 down payment, no private mortgage insurance, and competitive rates — a structural advantage no civilian loan matches. On a $378,000 Fallon home, a conventional buyer might need $18,900 to $75,600 down; a VA buyer can close with none of it, preserving cash for the move itself. There is a one-time VA funding fee (often financed into the loan and waived for many disabled veterans), and the home must pass a VA appraisal, but for most PCS families the VA loan is the correct tool.
Basic Allowance for Housing (BAH). According to the Defense Travel Management Office, BAH is set by duty-station ZIP code, pay grade, and dependency status, and it is designed to cover housing costs in the local market. Because Fallon's home prices are low relative to metro Nevada, BAH frequently covers most — sometimes all — of a Fallon mortgage payment, which is a major reason buying often beats renting for stationed families who expect a multi-year tour. Run your specific rank and dependent status against current Fallon-area BAH tables before you shop, because that number is your true monthly budget ceiling.
The strategic question every PCS family should ask: buy or rent for this tour? My honest framing — with the caveat that everyone's orders and timeline differ — is that when BAH roughly covers a VA-financed payment and you expect to be at NAS Fallon two-plus years, buying builds equity that renting hands to a landlord. When your tour is short or uncertain, renting keeps you flexible. Our first-time buyer resources and full buyer team walk military families through the VA-loan, appraisal, and closing-timeline sequence around a report date.
What Do Homes Cost Across Fallon's Budget Bands in 2026?
The honest answer: less than almost anywhere else in Northern Nevada. Here is how I translate the live-feed medians into what a budget actually buys in Fallon, anchored to the 204 active listings and their price distribution:
| Budget band | Active listings | Typical product | Best-fit buyer |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under $300,000 | 83 homes | Older in-town single-stories, smaller lots, some fixers | First-time and enlisted buyers, cash downsizers |
| $300,000–$400,000 | 33 homes | Move-in-ready 3-bed single-stories, two-car garage, fenced yards | PCS families — the heart of the market |
| $400,000–$500,000 | 35 homes | Newer builds, larger lots, some small-acreage parcels | Move-up buyers, officers, hobby-farm seekers |
| $500,000–$750,000 | 25 homes | Acreage homes, horse property, custom builds | Ranch-curious buyers, larger families |
| $750,000 and up | 28 homes | Working ranches, water-righted farmland, estate acreage | Agricultural buyers and land investors |
Notice the shape: 116 of the 204 active listings — well over half — sit under $400,000. That is the affordability story in one line. New construction is thin (only 3 active homes built 2023 or later, at a $455,000 median), so most Fallon buyers are buying resale, and much of the resale stock is 1990s-and-newer in-town product plus older ag homes on acreage. According to Freddie Mac, 30-year mortgage money in mid-2026 still prices in the mid-6% range nationally, which makes Fallon's low entry prices especially valuable — a lower loan balance blunts the rate. If a new build is a must-have, our new construction hub tracks builder activity across Northern Nevada.
How Does Fallon Compare on Affordability to Reno and Carson City?
This is the comparison that seals most decisions, so let me put the three Northern Nevada markets side by side. All three median list prices below are live from our NNRMLS feed on July 13, 2026 — this is not a national estimate, it is the real regional ladder.
| Dimension | Fallon | Reno | Carson City |
|---|---|---|---|
| Median list price (July 2026) | $379,950 | $599,000 | $615,000 |
| Character | Ag and Navy small town | Growing tech-and-gaming metro | State capital, mid-size |
| Primary demand driver | NAS Fallon + agriculture | Tesla, data centers, gaming | State government + retirees |
| Large-lot / acreage supply | Abundant and mainstream | Limited, priced high | Moderate on the edges |
| Commute to Reno | ~60 minutes east | In the metro | ~30 minutes south |
| Best fit | Military, ag buyers, budget-first families | Metro jobs, urban amenities | Government workers, capital-area buyers |
The math is stark: a Fallon buyer spends roughly $220,000 less than in Reno and $235,000 less than in Carson City for the median home. Even nearby Fernley — the fast-growing I-80 commuter town between Fallon and Reno — runs a $408,250 median, above Fallon. What you trade for that savings is metro amenity depth and job breadth: Fallon's economy is narrower, and if you are not tied to the base or agriculture, you will drive to Reno or Carson City for big-box shopping, an airport, and specialty services. For buyers whose income travels with them — remote workers, retirees, and stationed military — that trade is often a clear win. My deeper Carson City vs Reno breakdown frames how the capital-area markets ladder up from here.

What Are Property Taxes and Ownership Costs in Churchill County?
Fallon's carrying costs are a big part of its affordability, and they are layered, so a buyer coming from a single all-in California tax line needs to understand the stack. Nevada assesses property at 35% of taxable value, and owner-occupied primary residences get a 3% annual cap on tax-bill growth, per the Nevada Department of Taxation — a structural protection that keeps bills from spiking even as values rise. Your annual bill is rarely one number; it is the county rate plus any district overlays plus any HOA:
| Cost layer | What it funds | Who pays it |
|---|---|---|
| Churchill County base property tax | County services, roads, general fund — on 35% assessed value, 3% owner-occupied cap | Every property in the county |
| City of Fallon levy | City parks, streets, and services inside city limits | Homes within the incorporated City of Fallon |
| Irrigation / water district assessments | Newlands Project water rights, canal maintenance, irrigation delivery | Parcels carrying irrigation water rights |
| HOA dues (where they exist) | Amenities and common areas in newer subdivisions | Only homes in an HOA community; much of Fallon has none |
The good news for rural buyers: large swaths of Churchill County — especially older ag parcels and unincorporated acreage — carry no HOA at all, which is a major reason horse and hobby-farm owners choose here over an HOA-governed subdivision. But note the irrigation layer, which is unique to farming country: a parcel with Newlands Project water rights may carry a separate irrigation-district assessment, and those water rights are often the single most valuable feature of an ag property. According to the Churchill County Assessor, the county administers the assessment and the layered bill, and any district overlay shows as a separate line. Two properties a mile apart can carry meaningfully different total bills depending on city limits, district lines, and water rights — always pull the specific parcel's full tax and water-rights detail before you write an offer. A quick home value estimate is a useful first anchor, but the parcel-level detail is what matters.
What Is Rural, Ag, and Large-Lot Living Like Around Fallon?
This is the section that separates Fallon from a standard suburban market, and the one I make ranch-curious buyers read twice. The Lahontan Valley is working agricultural country — alfalfa, cattle, dairy, and horses are woven into the economy and the zoning — and buying rural property here means taking on systems a subdivision home never has.
Land, zoning, and water rights. Multi-acre residential-agricultural parcels are mainstream, and the defining feature of Fallon-area land is water. According to the Nevada Division of Water Resources, Nevada is a prior-appropriation water-rights state, and in the Newlands Project a parcel's irrigation water rights (measured in acre-feet and tied to specific delivery) can be worth more than the dirt itself. A property "with water" versus one "without" is a night-and-day difference in value and in what you can grow or graze — verify the water rights, their status, and their transferability in writing before you fall in love with a listing.
Wells and septic. Rural homes outside city delivery typically run on a private domestic well and a septic system. That means well flow-rate and water-quality testing, septic inspection, and understanding your domestic well rights are non-negotiable due-diligence steps — not optional add-ons.
Real ag overhead. Fencing, irrigation ditches, outbuildings, propane heat, and equipment come with the lifestyle. In my experience the buyers who love Fallon's ag life go in eyes-open on the maintenance; the ones who struggle expected a suburban house that happened to sit on five acres. If a barn, pasture, and water rights are the dream, our Northern Nevada communities directory and a conversation with our team will point you to the right pockets — and neighborhoods like Lahontan Valley Estates and Stillwater show the range from subdivision to true acreage.

What Is the Fallon Climate Really Like — Do You Get Four Seasons?
Yes, and it is a genuine high-desert four-season climate. Fallon sits near 3,960 feet in the Lahontan Valley — lower and warmer than Carson Valley or Reno, but still high enough for real seasons in the Sierra's rain shadow, so it stays dry and sunny far more than the coastal West.
Winter brings cold nights, frost, and occasional snow that usually melts within days on the valley floor — you will own a snow scraper and want proper tires, but this is not a deep-snow mountain town. Spring greens the irrigated fields and can bring wind. Summer is hot and dry, with highs commonly in the 90s and cool nights thanks to elevation and low humidity — warm, but without the sustained brutality of Southern Nevada's 110-degree stretches. Fall is the local favorite: warm days, crisp mornings, and the valley's best light over the harvest. According to the National Weather Service Reno forecast office, which covers the region, the area averages abundant sunshine with four distinct seasons — the "real weather without the extremes" pattern that suits buyers who found California monotonous.
One honest planning note: Fallon's ag setting means seasonal farm dust and, at times, agricultural odors near dairies and feedlots — a non-issue for most rural buyers, but worth knowing if you are sensitive. And like all of Northern Nevada, wildfire-season air quality can arrive on summer smoke. Tour in more than one season if you can.
How Good Are Churchill County Schools and Healthcare?
Schools. Fallon students attend the Churchill County School District, a single county-wide district that runs the town's elementary and middle schools plus Churchill County High School and an alternative program. According to the Churchill County School District, the district serves the entire county, and its manageable size is a genuine draw for relocating military and ag families who want smaller, community-rooted schools rather than a sprawling metro district. As with any move, pull current school-rating and boundary data for the specific address, since assignment follows the parcel.
Healthcare. Fallon punches above its size here, which matters for retirees and families. Banner Churchill Community Hospital in Fallon is a full-service community hospital with a 24/7 emergency department, surgery, imaging, and clinics — meaning routine and emergency care stay in town rather than requiring an hour's drive. According to Banner Health, it anchors Fallon's role as Churchill County's medical hub, and NAS Fallon adds its own Branch Health Clinic for active-duty needs. For specialty and tertiary care, Reno (about an hour west) brings the region's largest hospital systems and academic medicine. For most relocating buyers — including retirees managing routine chronic care — that layered access is more than adequate; buyers with heavy specialty needs should map their specific providers against the Fallon–Reno corridor before committing.
What Is the Commute From Fallon to Reno and Carson City?
Fallon's geography is straightforward: it is a standalone town, not a bedroom suburb, so most residents work in Fallon — at the base, in agriculture, in local government, retail, and services. But the region's bigger hubs are a manageable drive when you need them:
- Reno and the Truckee Meadows job market sit about 60 minutes west via US-50 to I-80, putting the region's biggest employers, Reno-Tahoe International Airport, and full metro amenities within a long-but-doable commute. Some Fallon residents make the drive; more treat Reno as a periodic errand-and-airport trip. If a Reno-metro job is central, our Reno homes for sale inventory covers that end of the corridor.
- Carson City, the state capital, is roughly 50 minutes southwest via US-50, adding state-government employment, more shopping, and Carson Tahoe's regional medical center. Our Carson City hub covers the capital-area market.
- Fernley — the growing I-80 commuter town — sits about 30 minutes northwest, and many buyers weigh Fallon against Fernley as the two most affordable Northern Nevada entry points.
According to the Nevada Department of Transportation, US-50 (the "Loneliest Road in America" east of town) and the US-50/I-80 connection are Fallon's spine to the metro. The takeaway: Fallon works beautifully if your job is in Fallon — at the base or on the land — and works as a value play for remote workers and retirees who only need the metro occasionally. A daily Reno commute is possible but long, so weigh it honestly.

What Should PCS and Civilian Buyers Know Before Moving to Fallon?
A few honest realities I make sure every relocating client understands before they write an offer:
It is a small town. Retail depth, dining variety, and nightlife are thin compared with a metro — the big-box run is Reno (an hour) or Carson City (50 minutes). Buyers who need urban amenities inside their own town limits are happier in Reno; buyers who treat the metro as an occasional trip thrive.
The economy is narrow. Fallon runs on the base, agriculture, and local services. If your income does not travel with you (remote work, military, retirement) and you are not tied to those sectors, job breadth is limited — plan your employment before your address.
Inventory is small, so good listings move. With 204 active homes and the sub-$400,000 band the most competed, the well-priced move-in-ready home draws fast attention, especially in the summer PCS wave. Staged financing or proof of funds is not optional.
Rural systems are your responsibility. Wells, septic, water rights, propane, irrigation, and fencing come with acreage. Budget for inspections and ongoing maintenance the way a subdivision buyer never has to.
Water rights are make-or-break on ag land. An acreage parcel's Newlands Project water rights can be its most valuable feature — or its most consequential missing piece. Verify them in writing during due diligence.
How Should You Plan Your Move to Fallon?
Here is the sequence I run with relocating clients, refined across the 9,600-plus closings Nevada Real Estate Group has represented statewide:
- Confirm your budget with BAH and VA numbers first. For military buyers, run your rank and dependent status against current Fallon-area BAH and get VA pre-approval before you shop — that fixes your true monthly ceiling. Our buyer team handles the VA sequence.
- Decide in-town vs. acreage honestly. A move-in-ready home in Fallon proper and a five-acre water-righted parcel are different lives. If land is the goal, prioritize water rights, well, septic, and zoning from day one.
- Stage financing early — the PCS calendar is unforgiving. Small inventory plus a hard report date is a tough combination; the good sub-$400,000 homes draw multiple offers in summer. Get fully pre-approved before you tour.
- Set a saved search and let the market come to you. In a 204-home market, new listings are events. Build a saved search with your exact criteria and get same-hour alerts.
- Plan the domicile checklist in parallel. Driver's license, voter and vehicle registration, and Nevada residency establish the no-income-tax benefit — start the paperwork with the move.
- When you sell your current home, sequence both sides. Our statewide seller resources, a fast cash offer option, and the Fallon sell-my-house tools cover the other half of a relocation.
Nevada Real Estate Group is the #1-ranked real estate team in Nevada with $4.85B-plus in career sales volume, 9,600-plus closings, and a 150-plus agent team — and Fallon is a market where local pattern-recognition genuinely changes outcomes: which parcels carry clean water rights, which homes fit a BAH budget, which sellers will work with a PCS timeline. Call or text our Northern Nevada team at (775) 277-2120, or tell us your timeline and we will build the tour. For more on who to trust in the region, see who the best Reno-area real estate agent is, and our full Reno relocation guide covers the metro end of Northern Nevada.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Fallon a good place for a military family stationed at NAS Fallon?
Yes, for most PCS families. Fallon's median home price is $379,950 — roughly $220,000 below Reno — and BAH often covers most of a VA-financed mortgage payment, so buying frequently builds equity that renting would hand to a landlord on a multi-year tour. The town is small and quiet with Churchill County schools and Banner Churchill hospital in town. Run your rank's BAH and get VA pre-approval before you shop, and weigh buy-versus-rent against how long your orders keep you here.
How much do homes cost in Fallon, Nevada in 2026?
Nevada Real Estate Group's live NNRMLS feed on July 13, 2026 shows a $379,950 median list price across 204 active homes and a $378,000 median sold price year-to-date across 163 closed sales, at about $240 per square foot with a 60-day median time on market. Over half of active inventory — 116 homes — sits under $400,000. The average list ($591,274) runs higher because a few large working ranches (up to $25,000,000) pull the mean, but the typical home closes right near the $378,000 median.
Is Fallon part of Reno or the Reno metro?
No. Fallon is a standalone city and the seat of Churchill County, about 60 miles east of Reno via US-50 and I-80 — outside the Reno-Sparks metro. It has its own economy (NAS Fallon plus agriculture), its own county government, and its own school district. Your property taxes, schools, and county services are all Churchill County, not Washoe County. Most people move to Fallon precisely because it is smaller, cheaper, and more rural than Reno.
Can I use a VA loan to buy a home in Fallon?
Yes, and it is usually the best tool for eligible buyers. The VA loan allows $0 down, no private mortgage insurance, and competitive rates on a primary residence, per the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs. On a $378,000 Fallon home that can mean closing with no down payment versus the $18,900 to $75,600 a conventional buyer might need. There is a one-time funding fee (often financed and waived for many disabled veterans) and a required VA appraisal, but for most NAS Fallon families the VA loan is the correct financing.
What do I need to know about buying acreage and water rights near Fallon?
Fallon is Newlands Project irrigation country, so a rural parcel's water rights — measured in acre-feet and tied to specific delivery — can be worth more than the land itself. Always verify water rights, their status, and their transferability in writing before you buy. Rural homes typically run on private well and septic, so budget for flow-rate and water-quality testing and a septic inspection. Confirm zoning and any agricultural designation on the specific parcel, and expect real ag overhead: fencing, irrigation, propane, and outbuildings.
How far is Fallon from Reno, Carson City, and the airport?
Reno and Reno-Tahoe International Airport are about 60 minutes west via US-50 to I-80; Carson City, the state capital, is roughly 50 minutes southwest via US-50; and Fernley is about 30 minutes northwest. Most Fallon residents work in town — at the base, in agriculture, or in local services — and treat the metro as an occasional trip. A daily Reno commute is possible but long, so weigh it honestly against Fallon's lower home prices.
Does Fallon have four seasons and snow?
Yes, a high-desert four-season climate. At about 3,960 feet, Fallon gets cold, occasionally snowy winters (snow usually melts within days on the valley floor), windy green springs, hot dry summers commonly in the 90s with cool nights, and a mild, pleasant fall. It stays sunnier and drier than the coastal West thanks to the Sierra rain shadow. Plan on a snow scraper and winter tires, but summers avoid the sustained triple-digit heat of Southern Nevada.
Which Sources Inform This Fallon Relocation Guide?
Live inventory, pricing, and closed-sale figures come from Nevada Real Estate Group's NNRMLS MLS feed, pulled July 13, 2026 (Fallon: 204 active listings at a $379,950 median list, 163 closed in 2026 at a $378,000 median sold price, $240 median per square foot, 60-day median time on market; regional comparison medians Reno $599,000, Carson City $615,000, Fernley $408,250). Military, civic, tax, climate, schools, and healthcare context draws on these authorities:
- U.S. Navy — Naval Air Station Fallon — the base, its mission, and its role as the county's largest employer
- U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs — VA Home Loans — $0-down VA financing eligibility and terms
- Defense Travel Management Office — BAH — Basic Allowance for Housing rates and rules
- Churchill County, Nevada — county government, jurisdiction, and services
- Churchill County Assessor — assessment ratios and property-tax administration
- Nevada Department of Taxation — no state income tax and the 3% owner-occupied property-tax cap
- U.S. Census Bureau — Churchill County QuickFacts — population, age, and housing baselines
- Churchill County School District — school assignment, boundaries, and outcomes
- Banner Churchill Community Hospital — the county's community hospital and clinics
- National Weather Service — Reno forecast office — regional climate and four-season data
- Nevada Division of Water Resources — Nevada water rights and the Newlands Project framework
- Nevada Department of Transportation — the US-50 / I-80 corridor and commute geography
- Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey — national mortgage-rate benchmarks
Ready to see Fallon in person? Call or text Nevada Real Estate Group's Northern Nevada team at (775) 277-2120 — we will line up the in-town PCS-ready homes and the water-righted acreage in one efficient trip, starting from the full Fallon homes for sale inventory. Explore the Fallon community hub and our Old Town Fallon guide for a closer look at where to land.




