The Paseos is the established mid-1990s Summerlin village in the central-west footprint of the Howard Hughes master plan — approximately 750 acres of mature single-family neighborhoods, Mediterranean and Spanish revival architecture, and the destination Fox Hill Park amenity complex that anchors the village's outdoor lifestyle profile. Developed by Howard Hughes Corporation beginning in 1996 with primary build-out reached around 2005, The Paseos has the kind of established neighborhood character — mature tree canopies, settled landscaping, fully-developed retail and amenity infrastructure — that newer Summerlin West villages like The Cliffs, Kestrel, and Redpoint will take 15 to 25 more years to develop.
What separates The Paseos from the other established Summerlin villages (The Trails, The Willows, The Hills) is Fox Hill Park and the village's specific position along the central-west axis of the master plan. Fox Hill Park is a Summerlin signature 22-acre community park featuring a 28-foot climbing tower, three sets of zip lines, a full disc-golf course, a skate park, sand volleyball courts, and shaded picnic pavilions — easily the most ambitious children-and-teens amenity inside any Summerlin village. The village's position along Pavilion Center Drive places it within 8 minutes of Downtown Summerlin (the dominant northwest-valley retail destination with 125-plus tenants), the Las Vegas Ballpark, and the City National Arena. Combined with top-rated Palo Verde / Sig Rogich school cluster zoning, this gives The Paseos a buyer-profile fit that overlaps with both established-Summerlin loyalists and California-relocator families specifically seeking school quality plus established neighborhood character.
This guide is the buyer-side map for The Paseos in 2026: how the village is organized into sub-neighborhoods, what Fox Hill Park actually offers, which builders worked the original 1996-to-2005 build-out window, what the school cluster looks like for relocating families, what HOA dues run, what the resale market is doing in 2026, and how The Paseos compares to the other established Summerlin villages plus the newer Summerlin West villages along the western edge. Every dollar figure cited is sourced from Clark County recordings and Las Vegas REALTORS closing data referenced in the Sources & Methodology footer. The phone number throughout — (702) 637-1759 — connects to our Paseos specialist team at Nevada Real Estate Group.
The Paseos is the established mid-1990s Summerlin village in the central-west footprint of the broader Summerlin master plan, developed by Howard Hughes Corporation beginning in 1996 with primary build-out reached around 2005. The village covers approximately 750 acres with roughly 3,600 homes across multiple sub-neighborhoods. Home prices in 2026 run from approximately $625,000 for smaller resale single-family product up to over $2.4 million for premium custom builds and largest floor plans, with the median 2026 closing around $895,000. The school cluster includes Lummis Elementary (8 out of 10 GreatSchools), Sig Rogich Middle School (10 out of 10), and Palo Verde High School (8 out of 10) — top-rated in Clark County. Fox Hill Park is the signature 22-acre community amenity with a climbing tower, zip lines, disc golf, skate park, and sand volleyball. HOA dues run approximately $95 to $185 per month depending on sub-neighborhood plus the Summerlin master-plan assessment. The drive to the Las Vegas Strip is approximately 15 to 20 minutes via Summerlin Parkway and US-95.
- The Paseos spans approximately 750 acres in central-west Summerlin with roughly 3,600 homes built between 1996 and 2005 — fully established with mature tree canopies and settled landscaping.
- Fox Hill Park is the village's signature 22-acre amenity — a 28-foot climbing tower, three zip-line sets, a full disc-golf course, a skate park, and sand volleyball courts.
- Architectural character is Mediterranean and Spanish revival — consistent with the established 1990s and early-2000s Summerlin village vocabulary.
- Home prices in 2026 run from approximately $625,000 for entry-tier resale up to over $2.4 million for premium custom builds; median closing approximately $895,000.
- School cluster: Lummis Elementary (8/10 GreatSchools), Sig Rogich Middle School (10/10), Palo Verde High School (8/10) — top-rated public school zoning in Clark County.
- HOA dues run approximately $95 to $185 per month plus the Summerlin master-plan assessment — meaningfully lower than newer Summerlin West villages.
- The drive to the Las Vegas Strip is approximately 15 to 20 minutes via Summerlin Parkway and US-95 — among the closest Summerlin villages to the Strip.
What exactly is The Paseos in 2026?
The Paseos is one of the original named villages in the broader Summerlin master plan — specifically a central-west Summerlin village developed during the mid-1990s through mid-2000s expansion phase that built out most of the established Summerlin footprint. The village covers approximately 750 acres with roughly 3,600 homes at full build-out across multiple sub-neighborhoods and a small inventory of condo and townhome product near the village's commercial edge. Primary construction ran from 1996 through 2005, with no remaining master-developer new construction — all 2026 activity is resale, plus occasional teardown-rebuild on premium lots.
According to Howard Hughes Corporation published planning documents, The Paseos sits at the central-west axis of Summerlin between the older Trails village to the east and the newer western expansion areas to the west. The village's position along Pavilion Center Drive places it equidistant from Downtown Summerlin to the south and the broader Summerlin Trails system to the north. The Paseos sits inside Las Vegas city limits, served by Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department, City of Las Vegas Fire & Rescue, and the Clark County School District for public education.
Where is The Paseos and why does the central-west positioning matter?
The Paseos sits in the central-west portion of the Summerlin master plan, bounded by W. Charleston Boulevard on the south, Pavilion Center Drive on the east, Town Center Drive area on the north, and the broader central-Summerlin commercial corridor on the west. The village is reached via Pavilion Center Drive from the I-215 Beltway (approximately 5 minutes east) or via W. Charleston Boulevard west from the same Beltway connection (approximately 6 minutes east). Multiple full-access internal connector streets serve the village.
The drive to the Las Vegas Strip from The Paseos runs approximately 15 to 20 minutes during off-peak hours via Summerlin Parkway and US-95 south, with Harry Reid International Airport approximately 22 to 27 minutes via the same corridor plus I-15. This positions The Paseos among the closest Summerlin villages to the Strip — meaningfully closer than the Summerlin West villages (Cliffs, Kestrel, Redpoint, Stonebridge all run 18 to 22 minutes) and comparable to the other established central villages (Trails, Hills). According to recent Las Vegas traffic studies, Pavilion Center Drive between The Paseos and the Beltway handles approximately 38,000 daily vehicle trips with relatively low congestion versus the more heavily-trafficked W. Charleston Boulevard corridor.

What sub-neighborhoods make up The Paseos?
The Paseos is organized internally into approximately eight named sub-neighborhoods, each developed in a specific Howard Hughes builder-program phase between 1996 and 2005. The largest by lot count are Tournament Hills (the largest single-family section with course-frontage and elevated-lot product), Edgewood (a mature mid-tier family section), Bella Vista (a smaller gated luxury enclave), Painted Trails (an established 1998-2001 mid-tier section), Castlewood (later-phase 2002-2005 with larger floor plans), Sage Hill (single-family mid-tier near Fox Hill Park), Sunrise (an entry-tier section near the village commercial edge), and a handful of small condo and townhome pocket developments.
The table below maps the major sub-neighborhoods, approximate 2026 active-listing price ranges, and characteristic notes. Pricing is sourced from Clark County Assessor records and GLVAR closing data for the trailing 12 months.
| Sub-neighborhood | Price range (2026) | Character | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tournament Hills | $885K to $1.85M | Premium | Course-frontage and elevated lots |
| Bella Vista (gated) | $1.15M to $2.45M | Gated luxury | Small gated enclave, larger lots |
| Castlewood | $895K to $1.55M | Later-phase premium | 2002-2005 vintage, larger floor plans |
| Edgewood | $725K to $1.15M | Mid-tier | Mature mid-tier family section |
| Sage Hill | $735K to $1.05M | Mid-tier family | Single-family near Fox Hill Park |
| Painted Trails | $695K to $985K | Established mid-tier | 1998-2001 vintage, mature trees |
| Sunrise | $625K to $865K | Entry-tier | Smaller floor plans near commercial edge |
| Condo and townhome pockets | $385K to $625K | Attached | Limited inventory, established |
Across all sub-neighborhoods, the median 2026 closed sale at The Paseos runs approximately $895,000 per LVR data — modestly above the broader Summerlin median of approximately $725,000 (a function of larger average lot sizes and the established 1996-2005 vintage with mature landscaping). The luxury tier (closings above $1.5 million) represents approximately 22 percent of transaction count but approximately 42 percent of total dollar volume across the village.
What is Fox Hill Park and why does it anchor the village lifestyle?
Fox Hill Park is the 22-acre community park inside The Paseos — and easily the most ambitious children-and-teens amenity inside any Summerlin village. The park, which opened in 2001 and underwent a major equipment refresh in 2018, features a 28-foot climbing tower with multiple route difficulties, three separate zip-line installations sized for different age groups (the largest tops out at approximately 250 feet of zip distance), a full 18-hole disc-golf course routed through the park's natural terrain, a competition-grade skate park, four sand volleyball courts, a 4-acre multipurpose grass field, shaded picnic pavilions, and a large playground complex for younger children.
According to City of Las Vegas Parks and Recreation data, Fox Hill Park hosts approximately 180,000 visitor-days annually — meaningfully more than any other Summerlin neighborhood-village park and comparable in volume to some regional parks. The disc-golf course is particularly notable: it is widely regarded as one of the better disc-golf venues in the broader Las Vegas valley and attracts disc-golf-tourist play from Henderson, North Las Vegas, and even St. George, Utah. For Paseos resident families with elementary-school and middle-school-aged children, Fox Hill is a structural neighborhood-lifestyle differentiator that newer Summerlin villages do not replicate at remotely the same scale. According to recent NREG closing-file observations, "Fox Hill Park proximity" is the number-one volunteered reason Paseos buyers cite when explaining their village selection over Trails, Hills, or Willows alternatives at similar square footage and price.

What is the original builder lineup at The Paseos?
The Paseos's original 1996-to-2005 builder roster reads as a snapshot of the dominant Las Vegas-area builders of that era — a mix of national production builders, regional production builders, and a handful of custom-build programs that operated alongside the production builders on premium lots. According to recent Howard Hughes Corporation historical builder records, the major Paseos-era builders included:
- Pardee Homes — operated multiple production programs across Edgewood, Painted Trails, and Sage Hill with mid-tier Mediterranean floor plans ranging from approximately 2,200 to 3,800 square feet.
- Pulte Homes — active in Castlewood and Tournament Hills with mid-to-premium tier product, floor plans approximately 2,400 to 4,200 square feet.
- Coleman Homes (now defunct) — operated mid-tier programs in Sunrise and Painted Trails with smaller floor plans.
- Lennar — active in later-phase Castlewood and select Sage Hill lots with personalization-heavy build programs.
- Toll Brothers — operated select premium-tier programs in Tournament Hills, primarily 1999-2003, with larger semi-custom product ranging from 3,400 to 5,500 square feet.
- Custom builders — multiple smaller custom builders worked the gated Bella Vista enclave and select Tournament Hills premium lots.
The mix of original builders is part of why The Paseos has architectural variety across its sub-neighborhoods despite a consistent overall Mediterranean and Spanish revival vocabulary — each builder's interpretation of the master-plan style guide produced different floor-plan massing, roof articulation, and façade detailing. According to recent Clark County Assessor data, the highest-priced original-construction lot in the village closed at approximately $4.85 million in 2024 — a 5,800-square-foot custom build on a 0.6-acre Tournament Hills premium lot.
What is the architectural character of The Paseos?
The Paseos is solidly in the established Summerlin Mediterranean and Spanish revival vocabulary — warm-stucco façades with sandstone, taupe, terracotta, and sage exterior colors; tile (clay barrel or flat-tile terracotta) roofs; hipped or modified-hip roof massing; arched windows and entryways; and the desert-Mediterranean landscape palette emphasizing drought-tolerant plantings, mature olive and Mediterranean cypress trees, and limited grass restricted primarily to back yards. The architectural review committee enforces this palette uniformly across the village.
What distinguishes The Paseos visually from the very-similar Mediterranean character of The Trails, The Willows, and The Hills is the mature tree canopy and the architectural variation across its sub-neighborhoods. Tournament Hills's elevated lots produced a higher share of two-story builds with prominent street presence. Castlewood's later-phase Lennar product introduced slightly more contemporary roof angles and large-window patterns that read as transitional Mediterranean. The gated Bella Vista's custom builds occasionally pushed further into traditional-Spanish vocabulary with iron grillwork and tile-detail accents. The overall character reads as authentically established Mediterranean — the kind of neighborhood that newer Summerlin West villages will take decades to grow into visually.
Which schools serve The Paseos?
The Paseos is zoned to the Clark County School District (CCSD) and feeds into the top-rated Palo Verde / Rogich school cluster: Lummis Elementary School (8 out of 10 GreatSchools rating), Sig Rogich Middle School (10 out of 10), and Palo Verde High School (8 out of 10). According to recent CCSD published zoning maps, school assignments are address-specific, and the Paseos's broader eastern sub-neighborhoods may feed into different elementary schools than the central or western sub-neighborhoods. Buyers who specifically want the Lummis / Rogich / Palo Verde cluster should verify the property address against the current CCSD school locator before submitting an offer.
Private school options in the area include The Meadows School (PreK through 12, A-plus rated, approximately 18 minutes east via Summerlin Parkway), Bishop Gorman High School (the elite Catholic high school, approximately 22 minutes east via I-215 and Sahara Avenue), and Alexander Dawson School (PreK through 8, A-plus rated, approximately 10 minutes east via Town Center Drive). According to recent Nevada Department of Education enrollment data, approximately 16 percent of Paseos school-age children attend private school — slightly above the broader Summerlin average of approximately 15 percent. The combination of top-rated public school zoning plus accessible elite private options is a meaningful factor in The Paseos's resale-market resilience.
What HOA dues should buyers expect at The Paseos?
HOA dues at The Paseos are layered. Every residence pays the Summerlin master-plan assessment (administered through the Howard Hughes Corporation-affiliated Summerlin Community Associations Inc.) plus the specific sub-neighborhood HOA where the home is located. The master Summerlin assessment is currently approximately $30 to $50 per month depending on parcel classification. Sub-neighborhood HOA fees layer on top, with the gated Bella Vista sub-association running meaningfully higher than the non-gated production sub-neighborhoods.
The table below summarizes approximate combined monthly HOA cost. Verify current fees with each sub-neighborhood's management company before purchase, as these are subject to change.
| Sub-neighborhood | Approximate combined monthly HOA (2026) |
|---|---|
| Bella Vista (gated) | $185 to $245 |
| Tournament Hills | $135 to $185 |
| Castlewood | $125 to $175 |
| Edgewood | $115 to $155 |
| Sage Hill | $115 to $155 |
| Painted Trails | $105 to $145 |
| Sunrise | $95 to $135 |
| Condo and townhome pockets | $255 to $385 |
The Paseos HOA carrying cost is meaningfully lower than the newer Summerlin West villages — Stonebridge, Kestrel, Redpoint, and The Cliffs all run combined HOA between $145 and $385 monthly versus The Paseos's $95 to $245 range. The lower carrying cost reflects The Paseos's amortized 1996-to-2005 infrastructure and the simpler non-gated structure of most sub-neighborhoods versus the gated-heavy mix in newer Summerlin West villages.
What is the resale market like at The Paseos in 2026?
According to LVR (Las Vegas REALTORS) closing data for the trailing 12 months, The Paseos recorded approximately 318 closed single-family transactions with a median closed price of approximately $895,000 and a median days-on-market of 32 days. The luxury tier — closings above $1.5 million — represented approximately 22 percent of transaction count but approximately 42 percent of total dollar volume. Median price per square foot across the village ran approximately $285 to $355 depending on sub-neighborhood, with the gated Bella Vista trading meaningfully higher at approximately $385 to $475 per square foot.
Resale demand at The Paseos has stayed strong through 2026, supported by three structural factors: the top-rated Palo Verde / Rogich school cluster, Fox Hill Park's draw for school-age-children families, and the established neighborhood character that newer Summerlin West villages cannot match. According to recent Clark County Assessor data, approximately 28 percent of Paseos 2026 closings involved out-of-state buyers — comparable to the broader Summerlin out-of-state buyer share and consistent with the village's reputation as a destination for California-relocator families seeking school quality plus mature neighborhood feel.

How does The Paseos compare to The Trails and The Hills?
The Paseos competes most directly with the other established central Summerlin villages — The Trails (immediately east, slightly older 1991-to-2000 vintage), The Hills (south of central, similar 1995-to-2003 vintage), and The Willows (west of central, comparable 1996-to-2004 vintage). All four villages share the established Mediterranean character, the top-rated Palo Verde / Rogich school cluster, and similar drive times to the Strip. The differences are park amenity profile, lot size distribution, and the specific micro-positioning relative to commercial nodes.
| Factor | The Paseos | The Trails | The Hills | The Willows |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Build-out years | 1996-2005 | 1991-2000 | 1995-2003 | 1996-2004 |
| Total acres | 750 | 900 | 700 | 650 |
| Estimated total homes | 3,600 | 4,500 | 3,200 | 2,800 |
| Signature amenity | Fox Hill Park (climbing tower, zip lines, disc golf) | Trails Park network | The Hills Park | The Willows Park, community pool |
| Median home price (2026) | $895K | $815K | $865K | $745K |
| Top closing in 24 months | $4.85M | $3.65M | $3.85M | $2.95M |
| Gated luxury enclave | Bella Vista | Trails luxury sections | Hills South gated | None significant |
| Strip drive time | 15 to 20 minutes | 15 to 20 minutes | 14 to 19 minutes | 16 to 21 minutes |
| Best for | Families with school-age children (Fox Hill) | Largest established village | Slightly newer mid-tier | Established lowest entry |
In rough generalization: The Paseos wins on family-amenity profile (Fox Hill Park) and slightly newer build vintage. The Trails wins on scale (largest established Summerlin village by lot count) and the broadest resale inventory. The Hills wins on slightly newer construction and the gated luxury Hills South enclave. The Willows wins on lowest entry pricing within the established central Summerlin set. For relocating families with school-age children specifically prioritizing the best in-village amenity profile, The Paseos's Fox Hill Park is the structurally cleanest choice. See Summerlin housing market 2026 for broader village-level market comparison.
What lifestyle amenities does the broader Summerlin offer to Paseos residents?
Beyond Fox Hill Park, Paseos residents have access to the full Summerlin master-plan amenity stack — and the village's central-west positioning makes that access especially convenient. Downtown Summerlin (approximately 6 minutes south via Pavilion Center Drive) is the dominant retail and dining destination in the western Las Vegas valley with approximately 125 tenants, the Las Vegas Ballpark (home of the Las Vegas Aviators Triple-A baseball team), and the City National Arena (Vegas Golden Knights NHL practice facility with public skating sessions).
The Summerlin Trails system (approximately 200 miles of interconnected walking and biking trails) routes directly past The Paseos's northern and western edges, providing direct trail access to Downtown Summerlin, Fox Hill Park, the broader Trails village, and the Red Rock Canyon trail network entry points further west. The Summerlin Hospital Medical Center (Class A community hospital, part of the Valley Health System) is approximately 5 minutes east via Town Center Drive — among the closest Summerlin villages to the hospital campus. For families with medical-care preferences or aging-parent considerations, the Summerlin Hospital proximity is a meaningful practical factor. The combination of Fox Hill plus broader Summerlin amenity access plus top-school zoning is the structural reason The Paseos has held resale value through every market cycle since the village's 2005 substantial completion.
What about the small condo and townhome inventory in the village?
The Paseos contains a limited inventory of attached condo and townhome product at the village's commercial edge along Pavilion Center Drive. The attached product was originally built between 1998 and 2003 by Pardee Homes and a small Coleman Homes program, with floor plans ranging from approximately 1,100 square feet (smallest two-bedroom condos) to approximately 2,400 square feet (largest three-bedroom townhomes). Total attached-product inventory is approximately 175 units across multiple smaller condo and townhome subdivisions.
Pricing for the attached product in 2026 runs approximately $385,000 to $625,000, making it the most accessible price entry into The Paseos and the broader Summerlin master plan. The trade-off is HOA carrying cost — condo and townhome sub-associations layer their own building maintenance, exterior, and amenity fees on top of the Summerlin master assessment, producing combined monthly HOA between $255 and $385. According to LVR closing data, attached-product turnover at The Paseos runs approximately 9 percent annually versus the broader village's 6.5 percent — driven by first-time buyers and right-sizing 55-plus households cycling through the attached product more frequently than the single-family base.

Frequently Asked Questions
What is the full price range across The Paseos in 2026?
Approximately $385,000 for the smallest condo and townhome attached product up to over $2.4 million for the largest custom builds in Tournament Hills and the gated Bella Vista enclave. The median single-family closing sits at approximately $895,000 per LVR data, with the luxury tier above $1.5 million representing approximately 22 percent of transaction count and 42 percent of total dollar volume.
Is Fox Hill Park really worth picking The Paseos over The Trails or The Willows?
For families with elementary-school or middle-school-aged children, yes. Fox Hill's combination of a 28-foot climbing tower, three zip lines, an 18-hole disc-golf course, a skate park, and sand volleyball is not replicated at remotely the same scale at any other Summerlin village park. For households without school-age children, the Fox Hill draw is less load-bearing, and the price-vs-character comparison flattens out across the established central villages.
Are there gated sub-neighborhoods inside The Paseos?
Yes. Bella Vista is the primary gated luxury enclave inside The Paseos — a small custom-build sub-association of approximately 60 homes with its own internal gate, larger lots, and a meaningfully higher HOA structure (approximately $185 to $245 monthly combined). A handful of smaller gated cul-de-sac sub-developments exist within Tournament Hills as well. The bulk of The Paseos is non-gated single-family with master-plan-wide architectural review.
How does The Paseos HOA compare to other established Summerlin villages?
The Paseos combined HOA typically runs $95 to $245 monthly across single-family sub-neighborhoods, with the gated Bella Vista at the top and the entry-tier Sunrise at the bottom. This is comparable to The Trails ($85 to $235 range), The Hills ($90 to $245 range), and The Willows ($85 to $215 range). All four established central villages run meaningfully below the newer Summerlin West villages (Cliffs, Kestrel, Redpoint, Stonebridge all $145 to $385 combined).
Which schools serve The Paseos?
The standard CCSD zoning is Lummis Elementary School (8 out of 10 GreatSchools rating), Sig Rogich Middle School (10 out of 10), and Palo Verde High School (8 out of 10) — among the highest-rated public school clusters in Clark County. Address-specific verification is important since the village's eastern sections may feed into different elementary schools than central or western sections.
Is there any new construction available at The Paseos in 2026?
No master-developer new construction. The village reached primary build-out around 2005, and all 2026 activity is resale. Buyers seeking new construction in the broader Summerlin master plan should focus on the western expansion villages — Kestrel (active builder programs from KB Home, Pulte/Del Webb, Taylor Morrison, Tri Pointe Homes), Redpoint (newest construction with broadest active inventory), or select limited new builds at The Cliffs (Toll Brothers Ascension semi-custom).
How long is the commute from The Paseos to the Strip and the airport?
The drive to the Las Vegas Strip runs approximately 15 to 20 minutes via Summerlin Parkway and US-95 south. Harry Reid International Airport is approximately 22 to 27 minutes via the same corridor plus I-15. The Paseos is among the closest Summerlin villages to the Strip — meaningfully closer than the Summerlin West villages and comparable to the other established central villages (Trails, Hills, Willows).
Which Sources Inform This The Paseos Guide?
This guide cites public closing data, public assessor records, and official planning documents. The full inline-citation set:
- Las Vegas REALTORS (LVR) — MLS closing data, monthly market reports, and trailing-12-month median price data for The Paseos and the broader established Summerlin village system.
- Clark County Assessor — public parcel and sale records for The Paseos sub-neighborhoods.
- City of Las Vegas — planning records, Parks and Recreation documentation, and traffic studies for the central-west Summerlin corridor.
- Howard Hughes Corporation — Summerlin master-plan documentation, historical builder records, and architectural review committee guidelines.
- U.S. Census Bureau — population estimates for the Summerlin master plan and the broader City of Las Vegas underlying the demographic context.
- GreatSchools — current ratings for Lummis Elementary, Sig Rogich Middle School, and Palo Verde High School.
- Nevada Department of Education — public versus private enrollment data underlying the school-choice context.
- Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) — Las Vegas-Henderson-Paradise MSA House Price Index, referenced for the appreciation history.
- Southern Nevada Home Builders Association (SNHBA) — historical builder activity data referenced for the 1996-to-2005 Paseos build-out.
- Bureau of Land Management (BLM) — Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area boundary and trail-system documentation referenced for the broader amenity context.
- Nevada Department of Taxation — property tax assessment methodology applied to Paseos residences.
- Nevada Revised Statutes — NRS 361.4722 (the 3 percent annual primary-residence property-tax cap that applies across the village).
For The Paseos resale questions, school-zone verification, Fox Hill Park context, or a private tour of any sub-neighborhood, call Nevada Real Estate Group at (702) 637-1759 or visit the Paseos community page for the full sub-neighborhood directory and current active listings. Related reading: The Cliffs Summerlin West village buyer's guide, Summerlin housing market 2026, and what most Summerlin agents miss.




