
DR Horton vs Bloomfield Homes in Midlothian TX: Which Builder Fits Your Buyer Profile
DR Horton vs Bloomfield Homes in Midlothian, TX: Which Builder Fits Your Buyer Profile
By Steven J. Thomas
If you have been touring model homes in Midlothian, you have probably noticed two names showing up at almost every stop sign: DR Horton and Bloomfield Homes. Both build in the $400K to $650K range that move-up buyers in southwest DFW care about, but the homes feel different the second you walk through the door. This is not a hype piece for either one. It is an honest side-by-side from someone who closes new construction every month in Ellis County, so you can pick the builder that actually fits your life, not the one with the loudest sign in the cul-de-sac.

Direct Answer
DR Horton in Midlothian is built for value, speed, and tech: lower starting prices, faster move-in timelines, and the America's Smart Home package standard. Bloomfield Homes leans the other way, with higher standard finishes, rotunda foyers, archways, and granite or quartz on most plans, at a slightly higher price point. If your priority is square footage and quick close, lean Horton. If you want more design pop without an upgrade list a mile long, lean Bloomfield. For a custom builder comparison on your specific scenario, you can chat with Steven directly.
Neighborhood Spotlights: Where Each Builder Is Active in Midlothian
Midlothian sits in northern Ellis County off Highway 287 and Highway 67, about 30 minutes south of downtown Dallas and 25 minutes from Mansfield. The city has grown fast, which is why both builders are competing for the same lots. Here is where they are showing up right now.
Mockingbird Heights by Bloomfield Homes
Mockingbird Heights sits on Mockingbird Lane near Midlothian Parkway with easy access to both Highway 67 and Highway 287. Prices currently start in the low $400,000s, which puts it right in the sweet spot for move-up buyers selling in DeSoto, Duncanville, or Cedar Hill. You will see the Bloomfield design signatures here: rotunda entries, stone-and-brick elevations, and standard tile and granite that other builders charge upgrade dollars for. Lot sizes feel a touch larger than the typical production neighborhood, and the community is close to Midlothian High and the new HEB. For a deeper look at how new construction stacks up against resale in this corridor, see Steven's DFW New Construction Homes guide.
Wind Ridge, Hayes Crossing, Parkside North, Ridgepoint, and The Grove
Bloomfield is active across roughly two dozen communities in Midlothian. Wind Ridge, Hayes Crossing, Parkside North, Ridgepoint, and The Grove each carry slightly different price bands and lot mixes. Most homes here run 1,800 to 3,800 square feet with four-side masonry, covered patios standard, and the rotunda or archway treatments Bloomfield is known for. Expect the bulk of inventory to fall between $430,000 and $620,000 depending on the plan, the lot, and how loaded the spec is. If you want to compare floor plans across multiple Bloomfield communities side-by-side, Steven keeps a working list in the New Construction Home Guide.
Windermere Estates and DR Horton's Midlothian Footprint
DR Horton is the largest production builder in the country, and Midlothian is one of their priority Texas markets. Windermere Estates is one of the active DR Horton communities here, with plans typically running 1,600 to 3,200 square feet. Pricing usually starts in the upper $300,000s on the smaller plans and climbs into the mid-$500s on the bigger Express or D.R. Horton series homes. DR Horton also runs Express Homes (entry-level brand) and the standard DR Horton brand side-by-side in some Ellis County communities, so two homes a block apart can have very different finish levels.
Pro Tip: Before you fall in love with a model, run your current home through the Home Selling Score so you know what equity you are actually working with.
Local Market Trends (Spring 2026)
Midlothian median list price: roughly $518,000 in May 2026, per Orchard market data
Midlothian median days on market: about 67 days, with some recent reports closer to 99 days depending on segment
Waxahachie median list price: roughly $494,000, with new construction trending slightly lower at $428,000 median
Mansfield new construction: 100 active new homes at a $530,000 median list price, per Redfin
Freddie Mac PMMS 30-year fixed: 6.37 percent as of May 7, 2026, up from 6.30 percent the prior week
What this means in plain English: Midlothian is no longer the bargain it was three years ago. You are paying close to Mansfield-level pricing for slightly more lot, slightly less traffic, and a shorter trip to the southern half of DFW. Days on market are stretched, which means builders have room to negotiate, and they know it. That is exactly why the rate buydowns and flex cash incentives are running heavier than they were even last fall.
For the latest neighborhood-level pricing across southwest DFW, Steven publishes a monthly DFW Market Statistics breakdown.
Cost Breakdown: What You Actually Pay With Each Builder
Sticker price is only the first number. Here is the move-up buyer math for a typical $500,000 home in Midlothian at the current 6.37 percent rate, 10 percent down, with average Ellis County tax and insurance:
Principal and interest: roughly $2,808 per month
Property tax: about $850 per month (Ellis County and Midlothian ISD)
Homeowners insurance: $175 to $250 per month
HOA: $40 to $90 per month, varies by community
Estimated total monthly payment: approximately $3,900 to $4,000
Where the builders separate is the finish-out cost. DR Horton tends to price the base home lower but charges more for the upgrades that get you to what the Bloomfield base home already includes. Bloomfield prices higher up front but you walk in with rotunda entries, archways, tile flooring in the wet areas, granite or quartz countertops, and stone-and-brick elevations as standard. On a like-for-like spec at $500,000, my buyers typically see DR Horton homes come in $15,000 to $35,000 below Bloomfield, but Bloomfield homes appraise tighter to list because the standard finish carries more value. That is not a knock on either one. It is just two different business models.
If you want the math run on a specific plan and lot, that is what the HomeSwap New Construction Plan call is for.
Builder and Community Insights: Know the Competition
Standard features are where this comparison gets real. Builders sell you on the model home, but the model is loaded with upgrades. Here is what each one gives you before you spend an upgrade dollar.
DR Horton standard features (Midlothian):
America's Smart Home tech package, which typically includes a smart thermostat, video doorbell, smart lock, touchscreen smart home hub, and Amazon Echo compatibility
Stainless steel appliance package in most plans
Granite kitchen counters on many plans (varies by series)
Brick-and-stone elevations, though the brick-to-stone ratio is leaner than Bloomfield
Two-car garage standard, three-car on select larger plans
Energy-efficient HVAC and Low-E windows
DR Horton Express Homes (entry-level brand) carries fewer standard upgrades than the DR Horton mainline brand
Bloomfield Homes standard features (Midlothian):
Rotunda foyers and archway transitions on most plans
Four-side masonry (brick or stone wrap)
Tile flooring in entry, kitchen, baths, and utility
Granite or quartz kitchen counters standard
8-foot front doors and 10-foot ceilings on many plans
Covered rear patios standard
Tankless water heater standard on most plans
Designer lighting package
Both builders are running incentives right now. DR Horton frequently advertises rate buydowns through DHI Mortgage, their in-house lender, plus closing cost credits when you use them. Bloomfield runs similar promotions through their preferred lenders. The specific numbers move every month, so I do not list them here. Instead, when you are ready, I pull the live incentive sheets directly from both builders and stack them against each other for your scenario.
One more thing the brochures will not tell you: as your buyer's agent, you can stack a Refind Realty new construction rebate on top of the builder's incentive. That is real cash back at closing, on top of the rate buydown or flex cash the builder is already offering.
Financing and Incentives That Attract Buyers
Here is the part where being both a Texas real estate broker and a licensed loan officer matters. DR Horton heavily steers buyers to DHI Mortgage because that is how they make the rate buydown work. Bloomfield does something similar with their preferred lender list. You are not required to use them, but you usually have to in order to get the full incentive.
The trick is comparing the full-cycle cost. A 2-1 buydown that drops your rate from 6.37 percent to 4.37 percent in year one looks amazing on the worksheet. But what is your rate in year three? What does that buydown cost you in builder concessions you could have taken as a price reduction instead? On a $500,000 home, the difference between taking a buydown and taking a price cut can be $8,000 to $15,000 over five years. Sometimes the builder lender is the right call. Sometimes it is not. I run both scenarios for every buyer through Envision Home Lenders before we sign anything.
Warranty matters too. DR Horton offers their well-known 1-2-10 warranty: one year on workmanship, two years on mechanical systems, and ten years on major structural components. Bloomfield offers a similar structural warranty program with comparable coverage windows. Both are reasonable. The bigger variable is how each builder handles the warranty calls in year two and year three, and that is where local reputation matters more than the brochure. Ask your agent who is actually responsive in Ellis County right now.
Build timeline is the last big variable. DR Horton inventory in Midlothian skews heavily toward spec homes, meaning the house is already framed or finished and you can close in 30 to 60 days. Bloomfield runs more build-to-order, which means 6 to 9 months from contract to keys on a dirt-start home, though they keep some inventory homes too. If you have already sold your DeSoto or Cedar Hill home and need to move fast, the spec inventory side of DR Horton is hard to beat. If you have time and want to pick your lot, your elevation, and your interior selections, Bloomfield gives you more room to do that.
Buyer Profile Fit: Who Each Builder Is Actually Best For
DR Horton is the right fit if:
You need to close in 60 days or less
Your budget is tight at the lower end of the $400K to $650K range
You value tech and energy efficiency over high-end finishes
You are buying square footage first, finishes second
You are open to making upgrades over time rather than paying for them up front
Bloomfield is the right fit if:
You want the finished look to feel custom without paying custom prices
You are willing to wait 6 to 9 months for the right lot and plan
Rotunda entries, archways, and design detail matter to you
You want fewer upgrade decisions and more standard polish
You plan to stay in the home 7 years or more, where the standard finishes hold value better at resale
Neither builder is wrong. The wrong answer is matching the wrong builder to your timeline and your priorities.
Conclusion
Midlothian is one of the strongest move-up corridors in southwest DFW right now, and DR Horton and Bloomfield are both legitimate options for buyers in the $400K to $650K range. The choice comes down to honest tradeoffs: value and speed with DR Horton, or higher standard finishes and design detail with Bloomfield. Once you know which side of that fence you are on, the rest of the decision gets a lot easier. From my office in DeSoto, I sit on both sides of this every week. I handle the listing on your current home, I handle the new construction contract with the builder, and I handle the financing through Envision Home Lenders. One person. Both sides. Zero stress.
Ready to compare DR Horton vs Bloomfield against your actual numbers? Here is what to do next:
PLAN your move with Steven directly — book a 15-minute call to walk through your scenario
Download the New Construction Home Guide to see how the full process works step-by-step
See available inventory in Midlothian, Waxahachie, Mansfield, and Red Oak on the Lone Star Living App and book an appointment today when you are ready
You're Always Home with Steven J. Thomas.
Key Takeaways
DR Horton wins on price-per-square-foot and speed-to-close; Bloomfield wins on standard finish and design detail
Midlothian median list price is around $518,000 in May 2026 with about 67 days on market
The Freddie Mac PMMS 30-year fixed rate sits at 6.37 percent as of May 7, 2026, making builder rate buydowns more valuable right now
You can stack a Refind Realty new construction rebate on top of the builder's incentive — that is real cash back at closing
The right builder depends on your timeline, your finish priorities, and how long you plan to stay in the home
FAQ: DR Horton vs Bloomfield Homes in Midlothian TX
How long does it take to close on a DR Horton or Bloomfield home in Midlothian?
DR Horton spec homes in Midlothian typically close in 30 to 60 days because the home is already built or near completion. Bloomfield build-to-order homes typically take 6 to 9 months from contract to closing, though some inventory homes are available for faster close. Always confirm the current build timeline with the builder before you sign.
Can I use my own lender, or do I have to use DHI Mortgage or Bloomfield's preferred lender?
You are not legally required to use the builder's preferred lender, but most builder incentives like rate buydowns and closing cost credits are tied to using them. You can shop your own financing through Envision Home Lenders and compare the total cost both ways before deciding.
What happens if my current DeSoto or Cedar Hill home does not sell before my new build is ready?
This is exactly why a HomeSwap-style new construction plan matters. We can structure your listing timing to match the builder's close date, or use a bridge solution so you are not stuck with two mortgage payments. Every buyer's situation is different — that is what the planning call covers.
Which builder has better resale value in Ellis County?
On a like-for-like comparison, Bloomfield's higher standard finishes tend to hold appraised value tighter at resale because the home shows more finished than a comparable DR Horton home of the same age. That said, DR Horton's lower entry price can mean more upside if the area appreciates. Both are solid long-term holds in Midlothian.
How long should I expect my full new construction transaction to take from first tour to keys?
Budget 60 to 90 days for DR Horton spec inventory and 7 to 10 months for Bloomfield build-to-order. Add 30 to 45 days on either side for your current home sale if you are moving up.
Where can I see live inventory for both builders in Midlothian and nearby cities?
Both builders update their inventory daily on their own websites, but the cleanest single view is the Lone Star Living App — it pulls active new construction inventory across Midlothian, Waxahachie, Mansfield, Red Oak, and the rest of southwest DFW into one place you can save searches in.
Fair Housing Notice: Refind Realty DFW is committed to the letter and spirit of the U.S. policy for the achievement of equal housing opportunity. We do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin. Information deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Pricing, incentives, and build timelines subject to change without notice — verify directly with the builder.