We offer a full range of property management services that are tailored to you as an investor, homeowner, landlord, or association.
We have an extensive portfolio of single family homes, townhomes, and condos in the greater Tomball area.
Each tenant is thoroughly screened with a background check and credit check, then the qualifying criteria is delivered to all applicants. We assure both qualified and quality tenants for your property.
We are so certain that our criteria provides quality tenants that we will split the late fees with the owner/landlord.
Full time contractor - get your property cared for immediately!
Having our own full time contractor means your property is attended to immediately!
Prepare your property to its fullest potential and bring the property to market immediately.
As a general contractor, we cover multiple job details in one visit.
We have a preferred list of trusted, licensed, insured, and registered contractors to ensure your property receives quality work at a fair price.
Contact us today to be considered as a vendor.
Tomball is a city in Harris County in the U.S. state of Texas, a part of the Houston metropolitan area. The population was 10,753 at the 2010 census. In 1907, the community of Peck was renamed Tomball for local congressman Thomas Henry Ball, who had a major role in the development of the Port of Houston.
Settlement began in the Tomball area in the early 19th century, where settlers found an open, fertile land that received adequate rainfall—perfect conditions for farming and raising cattle. It was on a land granted in 1838 to William Hurd's heirs. In 1906 the area began to boom. Railroad line engineers often noticed that the Tomball area was on the boundary between the low hills of Texas and the flat coastal plains of the Gulf, making it an ideal location for a train stop. The railroad could load more cargo on each car, because the topography gently sloped toward the Galveston ports and provided an easier downhill coast. Thomas Henry Ball, an attorney for the Trinity and Brazos Valley Railroad, convinced the railroad to run the line right through downtown Tomball. Soon after, people came in droves to this new train stop. Hotels, boarding houses, saloons, and mercantile stores all began to spring up in the area. At first, people called the area Peck, after a chief civil engineer of the railroad line. However, on December 2, 1907, the town was officially named Tom Ball, later to be shortened to one word, for Mr. Ball. Source From Wikipedia