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QUILLUS FOR REAL ESTATE · SPRING, TX

Real estate farming in Spring starts with the street you just sold on.

119,602 homes carry a Spring mailing address — and every one of them will list someday, with whichever agent owned the street that year. Quillus mails the 100 homes nearest every closing, listing, or open house — within 24 hours, each card tracked to the house that scanned it.

Map your farmSee the Spring numbers

No card required · a free demo card, mailed to you

THE LOCAL NUMBERS

Spring, TX by the numbers.

Measured from the Quillus address map and U.S. Census data — the same numbers the product runs on.

119,602

Homes to farm

Across 277 Census block groups

≈430 ft

Typical 100-home farm

Median distance to the 100th-nearest home, sampled from real addresses

$349,900

Median home value

$8,700

GCI per median listing

At a 2.5% commission side — your split may vary

77.8%

Owner-occupied

Future sellers, not property managers

1,076

Homes per sq mi

Approximate — Census land area
Sources: Quillus address corpus (155M+ geo-located U.S. addresses) and U.S. Census Bureau ACS 5-year estimates, 2024 vintage. City-level aggregates; snapshot 2026-06-13.
WHAT THE DATA SAYS

Reading Spring like a listing agent.

The farm math

119,602 mailable homes carry a Spring address across 277 Census block groups. We measured it against our address map: a 100-home farm around a typical Spring address spans about 430 feet — wider streets, bigger lots. Where homes spread out, the mailbox is the neighborhood bulletin board — a card does the job a yard sign can't.

The equity picture

The median Spring home is valued at $349,900, per the latest ACS five-year estimates. One listing at that median is roughly $8,700 in gross commission at a 2.5% side — a 100-card farm touch costs about what you'd spend on a single boosted social post.

The listing supply

77.8% of occupied Spring homes are owner-occupied — nearly every mailbox in a farm here belongs to a potential future seller, not a property manager. Spring skews newer (median build 1999) — first-owner territory, where the move-up wave arrives on a schedule and the agent already in the mailbox catches it.

HOW IT WORKS

One closing. One hundred mailboxes. One name they remember.

See the full walkthrough on the real estate farming page — or try it with your last closing's address.

Drop the just-sold pin

Enter the sold property's address. Quillus pulls the 100 physically closest Spring homes from its address map — the actual street, not a ZIP-code list.

Cards mail within 24 hours

Each neighbor gets your just-sold announcement with a satellite view of their own home on the card — in mailboxes while the sign is still in the yard.

Know who's curious

Every card carries its own QR code tied to one address. A neighbor who scans a just-sold card is telling you something — follow up before they call anyone else.

COMMON QUESTIONS

Real estate farming in Spring, answered with numbers.

119,602 mailable residential addresses carry a Spring mailing address in the Quillus map, across 277 Census block groups. A productive farm is a slice of that — Quillus builds farms from the 100 homes physically nearest any address you pick (a closing, a listing, your own block), so every card lands where your name already means something.

The median Spring home is valued at $349,900. At a 2.5% commission side, one median listing is roughly $8,700 in gross commission — which is why a farm that produces even one extra listing a year pays for its postcards many times over.

Tighter than you'd think. Sampling real Spring addresses against our map, the 100 nearest homes around a typical address sit within about 430 feet (132 meters). That's a true neighborhood farm — the same streets, the same sight lines — not a ZIP-code mailing list. That distance is the farm's proximity radius — the working unit of proximity mail marketing.

Enter the sold property's address. Quillus finds the 100 nearest Spring homes, builds each neighbor a card — your branding, the sale announcement, and a satellite view of their own home — and has them in the mail stream within 24 hours, while the sign is still in the yard. Every card carries its own QR code, so you see exactly which neighbors scanned.

Yes — by construction. Quillus targets on geography and housing-market signals only: distance from your address, home counts, values, housing stock. It never selects recipients by race, national origin, religion, sex, familial status, disability, or any other protected characteristic, and the Spring figures on this page are aggregate housing-market statistics from the U.S. Census Bureau — not data about who lives in any home.

Two sources: the Quillus address map (155M+ geo-located U.S. addresses — the Spring home counts and farm-radius figures are measured from it directly) and the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey 5-year estimates (2024 vintage) for home values and occupancy. Figures are city-level aggregates, refreshed when new ACS data ships.

More city numbers

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Your next Spring listing is on a street you already know.

Try Quillus with your last closing's address. See the farm. Mail yourself a free demo card.

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