Premier Neighborhood Guide

Where to Live in
Enterprise CDP

From trendy downtown districts to quiet suburban enclaves, find the perfect Enterprise CDP neighborhood for your lifestyle.

Enterprise CDP Fast Facts

Home Price
$485k
Rent (1BR)
$1,314
Safety Score
54/100
Population
243,802

Top Neighborhoods

Enterprise CDP isn't a single place—it's a patchwork of distinct zones where your zip code defines your lifestyle, commute, and budget. Choosing wrong means either overpaying for a "quiet" street that's actually next to a 24-hour warehouse or getting stuck in traffic that will make you question your life choices.

Quick Compare: Top Neighborhoods in Enterprise CDP

Neighborhood Vibe Rent Range Best For Walk Score
Skylark Corridor Tech commuter hub $1,650-$2,100 Amazon/Strip workers ~55
Enterprise Hills Family suburban $1,500-$1,900 Families with kids ~35
Desert Bloom Budget-conscious $1,200-$1,550 Remote workers ~45
Nevada Trail Outdoor lifestyle $1,400-$1,750 Hikers & pet owners ~40
Millennial Mile Urban pocket $1,700-$2,200 Young professionals ~65

Skylark Corridor

Overview: This strip along Skye Canyon Park Drive has become Enterprise's de facto tech corridor. It's where Amazon fulfillment center workers and Strip employees crash after 12-hour shifts, and the traffic proves it.

The Numbers:

  • 🏠 Rent: $1,650 - $2,100/mo (1BR) | $2,000 - $2,600/mo (2BR)
  • 🏡 Buy: Median home $485k - $520k
  • 🚗 Commute: 18 min to Amazon FLG4 | 12 min to Strip corridor | 25 min to downtown Vegas
  • 🚶 Walk Score: ~55 (Car-dependent, but some sidewalk access)

Local Intel: The traffic on Skye Canyon Park Drive between 6:30-8:00 AM and 5:30-7:00 PM is brutal—add 10 minutes to any commute. Hidden gem: Skye Canyon Park has free Wi-Fi and is actually clean. Avoid the complex at the corner of Skye Canyon Park and Centennial after 10 PM—police calls are frequent.

Who Thrives Here: Amazon warehouse workers on night shifts who need quick I-15 access, and remote workers who want to be 15 minutes from Floyd Lamb Park but don't need walkability.

Pros & Cons:

  • ✅ 18-minute commute to FLG4 (Amazon) beats any other neighborhood
  • Skye Canyon Park is legitimately well-maintained with outdoor gym equipment
  • ❌ No true walkable dining—closest decent restaurant is Los Antojos (Mexican), 1.2 miles away
  • ❌ Weekend traffic to Lee Canyon ski area clogs Skye Canyon Park Drive

Schools: Clark County School District, average rating (6/10). Skylark Elementary is decent but overcrowded; Centennial Hills High is improving but still average.

The Verdict: Move here if you work at Amazon FLG4 or along the Strip and need to minimize commute. Avoid if you want walkable nightlife or have young kids needing top-tier schools.


Enterprise Hills

Overview: The older, established residential core centered around Craig Ranch Regional Park. This is where families buy when they want space over style, and the 1980s-1990s tract homes prove it.

The Numbers:

  • 🏠 Rent: $1,500 - $1,900/mo (1BR) | $1,850 - $2,300/mo (2BR)
  • 🏡 Buy: Median home $450k - $490k
  • 🚗 Commute: 22 min to downtown | 15 min to I-15 | 30 min to Strip
  • 🚶 Walk Score: ~35 (Very car-dependent)

Local Intel: Craig Ranch Regional Park is the anchor—go weekday mornings to avoid weekend soccer tournament crowds. The Enterprise Community Center offers surprisingly good senior programs. Traffic on Craig Road is a nightmare during school pickup (2:30-3:30 PM) near Enterprise Elementary.

Who Thrives Here: Families who want three bedrooms, a two-car garage, and proximity to parks without paying Summerlin prices.

Pros & Cons:

  • Craig Ranch Regional Park has 170 acres, disc golf, and actual shade trees
  • ✅ Home prices are 15% below median for Enterprise, giving budget room for renovations
  • ❌ Zero nightlife—everything closes by 9 PM
  • ❌ Aging infrastructure means sewer line issues in homes built before 1995

Schools: Clark County School District, average rating (5/10). Enterprise Elementary is adequate; Fremont Middle School struggles with test scores.

The Verdict: Perfect for first-time homebuyers with kids who prioritize square footage over school ratings. Young professionals and renters should look elsewhere.


Desert Bloom

Overview: The eastern pocket near Desert Breeze Park, where newer apartment complexes have sprung up to serve the budget-conscious. It's the "affordable" option, but with caveats.

The Numbers:

  • 🏠 Rent: $1,200 - $1,550/mo (1BR) | $1,500 - $1,900/mo (2BR)
  • 🏡 Buy: Median home $420k - $460k
  • 🚗 Commute: 25 min to downtown | 20 min to Strip | 15 min to I-15
  • 🚶 Walk Score: ~45 (Car-dependent, but some retail nearby)

Local Intel: The Desert Breeze Park splash pad is free and actually maintained. The area around Spring Mountain Road has a cluster of decent Asian markets (Seafood City) and late-night eateries. Avoid the complex at the corner of Desert Inn and Arville after dark—police activity is above average.

Who Thrives Here: Remote workers who need cheap rent to save for a house, and service workers who want reasonable access to the Strip without paying tourist premiums.

Pros & Cons:

  • ✅ Cheapest rent in Enterprise—$300-$500 less than Skylark
  • Seafood City grocery has legit cheap produce and seafood
  • ❌ Higher property crime rates near Desert Inn Road (check specific complex crime maps)
  • ❌ Noisy—air traffic from McCarran is audible, and traffic on Desert Inn is constant

Schools: Clark County School District, below average (4/10). Desert Bloom Elementary is struggling; consider private if you have school-age kids.

The Verdict: Move here if you're aggressively saving money and don't mind trade-offs. Skip it if you have kids or value quiet.


Nevada Trail

Overview: The western edge where Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area access meets suburban living. This is Enterprise's "outdoor enthusiast" zone, though it's still very much a driving community.

The Numbers:

  • 🏠 Rent: $1,400 - $1,750/mo (1BR) | $1,750 - $2,100/mo (2BR)
  • 🏡 Buy: Median home $470k - $510k
  • 🚗 Commute: 30 min to downtown | 20 min to Strip | 12 min to Red Rock
  • 🚶 Walk Score: ~40 (Car-dependent, but trail access is key)

Local Intel: Red Rock Canyon scenic drive traffic starts backing up by 8 AM on weekends—go after 3 PM or before 7 AM. The Nevada Trails Park is a hidden gem for dog owners with actual agility equipment. The Blue Diamond intersection is a nightmare during peak climbing season (October-April).

Who Thrives Here: Climbers, hikers, and mountain bikers who want to be 12 minutes from Red Rock but still have a suburban home base.

Pros & Cons:

  • Red Rock Canyon access is genuinely 12-15 minutes from most complexes
  • Nevada Trails Park has separate dog areas and actual trails, not just sidewalks
  • ❌ Commute to downtown/Strip is painful—Charleston Boulevard gridlock is real
  • ❌ No true walkable coffee shop or brewery; you drive to Summerlin for that

Schools: Clark County School District, average (6/10). Nevada Trail Elementary is decent; Palo Verde High is above average for the area.

The Verdict: Move here if your weekends are planned around hiking grades and you own a reliable car. Avoid if you work downtown or want walkable amenities.


Millennial Mile

Overview: The small urban pocket near Enterprise's unofficial "downtown"—the stretch of Spring Mountain Road between Decatur and Arville. This is where younger renters cluster for actual walkability.

The Numbers:

  • 🏠 Rent: $1,700 - $2,200/mo (1BR) | $2,100 - $2,600/mo (2BR)
  • 🏡 Buy: Median home $500k - $550k (condos only)
  • 🚗 Commute: 15 min to downtown | 8 min to Strip | 20 min to Amazon FLG4
  • 🚶 Walk Score: ~65 (Most walkable in Enterprise)

Local Intel: The Modern coffee shop opens at 6:30 AM and is where remote workers camp out. Echo & Rig butcher/restaurant is overpriced but has the best happy hour (4-6 PM, $8 burgers). The Spring Mountain Ranch State Park entrance is 10 minutes away for weekend escapes. Parking is a nightmare—most complexes charge $50-$75/month for a spot.

Who Thrives Here: Young professionals who want to walk to 5+ restaurants and don't mind 700 sq ft for $1,800.

Pros & Cons:

  • ✅ Only neighborhood with real walkability—The Modern, Echo & Rig, Lotus of Siam (best Thai in Vegas) all within 0.5 miles
  • ✅ 8-minute commute to Strip jobs; 15 minutes to downtown
  • ❌ Smallest units—1BRs are often 600-700 sq ft
  • ❌ Noise from Spring Mountain Road traffic and late-night restaurant crowds

Schools: Not applicable—mostly young professionals and renters. If you have kids, this is the wrong zone.

The Verdict: Move here if you're under 35, rent, and want to walk to dinner. Avoid if you need space, quiet, or have a family.


Final Advice

For young professionals: Millennial Mile wins for walkability and Strip access, but you'll pay $400/month more for 200 fewer square feet than Skylark Corridor. If you work at Amazon, Skylark is the no-brainer.

For families: Enterprise Hills gives you the most house for your money, but you're trading school quality and nightlife for square footage. If schools are priority #1, you're in the wrong CDP—look at Summerlin or Henderson.

For remote workers on a budget: Desert Bloom saves you $400/month, but check the crime map for your specific complex. Nevada Trail is worth the extra $200/month if you value outdoor access.

Traffic reality check: Everyone in Enterprise thinks their commute is "15 minutes to the Strip." It's not. Friday at 5 PM from Nevada Trail to the Bellagio is 45 minutes minimum. From Millennial Mile, it's 20 minutes. Plan accordingly.

Counterintuitive pick: Don't sleep on the small condos in the Enterprise Commons area (near Desert Breeze Park). They're older but well-maintained, sell for $380k-$420k, and you get access to the park without the Desert Bloom crime concerns.

Housing Market

Median Listing $485k
Price / SqFt $0
Rent (1BR) $1314
Rent (2BR) $1642