Areas We Serve — Mississippi Gulf Coast
From Bay St. Louis on the western edge of Hancock County to Pascagoula at the eastern edge of Jackson County — the full Gulf Coast, broker-known street by street.
We work the Mississippi Gulf Coast end-to-end, across Harrison, Hancock, and Jackson counties. Every closing we’ve ever done has been within a couple hours of where we live. That’s not a marketing line — it’s how we know the streets, the school zones, the flood maps, the post-Katrina rebuilds, and which Coast neighborhoods actually hold value through hurricane season. Below is the full list of communities we serve, grouped by county, with drive-time context from Gulfport (our central operating point) and a paragraph on each.
Map of our Mississippi Gulf Coast service area
Drive times from Gulfport
A quick reference if you’re scouting where to live versus where to work. All times approximate, non-rush-hour, from downtown Gulfport.
| City | Distance | Drive time |
|---|---|---|
| Long Beach | 5 mi west | ~10 min |
| Pass Christian | 10 mi west | ~15 min |
| Biloxi | 13 mi east | ~15 min |
| D’Iberville | 14 mi northeast | ~15 min |
| Saucier | 18 mi north | ~25 min |
| Ocean Springs | 20 mi east | ~25 min |
| Bay St. Louis | 25 mi west | ~30 min |
| Gautier | 28 mi east | ~35 min |
| Waveland | 28 mi west | ~35 min |
| Diamondhead | 30 mi west | ~35 min |
| Vancleave | 32 mi northeast | ~40 min |
| Pascagoula | 35 mi east | ~45 min |
Harrison County
The middle of the Coast. Most of our buyer and seller activity happens here, anchored by Gulfport and Biloxi.
Gulfport
Gulfport is the largest city on the Mississippi Gulf Coast and our home base. It runs from the beach northward across two interstate corridors (I-10 and US-49), with a mix of waterfront homes, mid-century neighborhoods south of the railroad, and newer subdivisions north toward Saucier and Lyman. The Gulfport School District covers most of the city; the Harrison County School District covers areas at the city’s edges. Search Gulfport homes →
Biloxi
Biloxi sits on a peninsula east of Gulfport, with major military presence (Keesler AFB) and casinos along the south shore. Homes range from historic 19th-century cottages on the front beach to newer developments north of I-10. Biloxi Public School District serves the city. Heavy flood-zone exposure south of the railroad — most lenders require both windstorm and flood policies there. Search Biloxi homes →
Long Beach
A smaller, quieter waterfront community between Gulfport and Pass Christian. Known for its single-row of beachfront homes facing the Mississippi Sound, USM Gulf Coast campus, and a less-commercial feel than Gulfport. Long Beach School District is its own independent district. Strong demand from Coast retirees and second-home buyers. Search Long Beach homes →
Pass Christian
“The Pass” — the most architecturally distinct of the Coast cities, with restored historic homes along Scenic Drive and significant waterfront premium. Pass Christian Public Schools is small and tight-knit. Properties here typically command higher per-square-foot prices than Gulfport or Biloxi, especially anything south of US-90. Search Pass Christian homes →
D’Iberville
Just north of Biloxi across the Back Bay, D’Iberville has grown fast in the last 15 years with new retail (Promenade, Walmart hub) and family-oriented subdivisions. D’Iberville School District serves the city. Less flood exposure than Biloxi proper because it sits higher, making it popular with families who want Coast access without the south-side flood premiums. Search D’Iberville homes →
Saucier
North of Gulfport in the more rural part of Harrison County. Larger lots, more acreage, and Harrison County School District schools. Appeals to buyers wanting space — horse properties, hobby farms, longer driveways — while still being a 25-minute commute to downtown Gulfport or Keesler AFB. Search Saucier homes →
Hancock County
The western edge of the Coast — quieter than Harrison County, with a strong waterfront, historic-town character.
Bay St. Louis
A walkable historic downtown facing the Bay of St. Louis, with restored Victorian homes, an artist community, and significant post-Katrina rebuilds. Bay-Waveland School District serves both Bay St. Louis and Waveland. Bay St. Louis homes near the water command top-of-Coast prices; further inland the market is more affordable. Search Bay St. Louis homes →
Waveland
Adjacent to Bay St. Louis, Waveland was hit hardest of any Coast city by Katrina (essentially leveled). Most homes today are post-2005 builds, with newer construction standards and elevated foundations. Bay-Waveland School District. Smaller, quieter than Bay St. Louis but similar feel and shared market. Search Waveland homes →
Diamondhead
A planned community with its own golf course, country club, and master-planned street grid. Hancock County School District serves the area. Diamondhead has a distinct identity — almost a small private community feel — and homes hold value well because of the amenities and low-density layout. Search Diamondhead homes →
Jackson County
The eastern edge of the Coast — most family-oriented school zones plus the industrial backbone of Ingalls Shipbuilding in Pascagoula.
Ocean Springs
Ocean Springs has the most-talked-about school district on the Coast — Ocean Springs School District (independent, with Ocean Springs High consistently ranked among Mississippi’s best public high schools). Historic walkable downtown, arts community (George Ohr influence), and strong demand from out-of-state families relocating. Prices reflect the school zone premium. Search Ocean Springs homes →
Gautier
A quieter, less-developed community between Ocean Springs and Pascagoula. Pascagoula School District serves most of Gautier. More affordable per square foot than Ocean Springs, with significant waterfront and bayou exposure (Pascagoula River, Mississippi Sound). Popular with first-time buyers and military families wanting Coast access on a tighter budget. Search Gautier homes →
Pascagoula
The far eastern Coast, anchored by Ingalls Shipbuilding (Mississippi’s largest private employer). Pascagoula School District covers the city. Strong demand from Ingalls workers and their families means a stable, year-round residential market — less seasonal swing than the western Coast tourist towns. Older housing stock plus newer subdivisions. Search Pascagoula homes →
Vancleave
North of Ocean Springs in rural Jackson County. Larger lots, more acreage, country setting. Jackson County School District. Appeals to buyers wanting horse property, hunting land, or a longer commute trade-off for more space. Less flood-zone exposure than Coast cities to the south. Search Vancleave homes →
Don’t see your area? Ask anyway.
We work the entire Mississippi Gulf Coast — Harrison, Hancock, and Jackson counties — and selectively take on properties in surrounding South Mississippi (Wiggins, Lucedale, Picayune, parts of Stone and Pearl River counties, and Hattiesburg). If you’re considering a town that isn’t listed above, contact us and tell us what you’re looking for — we’ll let you know honestly whether it’s an area we know cold or one where you’d be better off with a more local agent.