*** No USDA eligible properties were found in Montgomery ***
To find a home that may be eligible for a USDA loan, have a look at the neighboring city Blue Ridge, AL. This city falls within a zone of USDA loan eligibility.

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Montgomery
, Alabama in Montgomery County

Use the map and table links below to access listing details.
Red areas indicate USDA defined loan exclusion zones.
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Also known as:
Capital of the South
The Cradle of the Confederacy
0 active listings near Montgomery
👍 USDA, * Price Change, * New, * Sale Pending

There are currently no properties eligible for USDA loans in Montgomery.

Please try searching another, possibly more rural and populated region. Other cities in Montgomery county include:

Ada,   Barachias,   Bethlehem,   Brassell,   Brassell Bottom,   Canaan,   Cantelous,   Canty,   Carters Hill,   Catoma,   Cecil,   Cooks,   Currys,   Davenport,   Davis Crossroads,   Dublin,   Flatwood,   Fleta,   Gibson,   Grady,   Hobbie Farm,   Hope Hull,   Hunter,   Kilby,   Lapine,   Le Grand,   Lynndale,   Mamie,   McDade,   Meadville,   Merry,   Mitylene,   Mount Carmel,   Mount Meigs,   Mount Meigs Station,   Naftel,   Perrys Mill,   Pike Road,   Pinedale,   Pintlala,   Ramer,   Sellers,   Shepherd Hill,   Snowdoun,   Sprague,   Strata,   Teasleys Mill,   Tharin,   Waugh,   Wiley,  

 

Or have a look at other Alabama counties including:

Autauga,   Baldwin,   Barbour,   Bibb,   Blount,   Bullock,   Butler,   Calhoun,   Chambers,   Cherokee,   Chilton,   Choctaw,   Clarke,   Clay,   Cleburne,   Coffee,   Colbert,   Conecuh,   Coosa,   Covington,   Crenshaw,   Cullman,   Dale,   Dallas,   DeKalb,   Elmore,   Escambia,   Etowah,   Fayette,   Franklin,   Geneva,   Greene,   Hale,   Henry,   Houston,   Jackson,   Jefferson,   Lamar,   Lauderdale,   Lawrence,   Lee,   Limestone,   Lowndes,   Macon,   Madison,   Marengo,   Marion,   Marshall,   Mobile,   Monroe,   Morgan,   Perry,   Pickens,   Pike,   Randolph,   Russell,   Saint Clair,   Shelby,   Sumter,   Talladega,   Tallapoosa,   Tuscaloosa,   Walker,   Washington,   Wilcox,   Winston,  

Interested in fun facts and the history of Montgomery, AL?
Then read on!

Montgomery, Alabama was an important center of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1950s and 1960s. Here are a couple of historical facts/anecdotes related to that:

1. In December 1955, civil rights activist Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus to a white passenger, sparking the Montgomery Bus Boycott. The boycott lasted for over a year and eventually led to the Supreme Court ruling that segregation on public buses was unconstitutional.

2. Montgomery was also the site of the Selma to Montgomery marches in 1965. These marches were a series of nonviolent protests led by civil rights leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr. and aimed at securing voting rights for African Americans. The marches were met with violence from state and local authorities, but ultimately helped to pressure Congress to pass the Voting Rights Act of 1965.