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

All Active Listings Near
City Image
Norman
, Oklahoma in Cleveland County

Use the map and table links below to access listing details.
Red areas indicate USDA defined loan exclusion zones.

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

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

Corbett,   Etowah,   Lexington,   Maguire,   McKiddyville,   Moore,   Needmore,   Noble,   Slaughterville,   Spring Hill,   Willow View,  

 

Or have a look at other Oklahoma counties including:

Adair,   Alfalfa,   Atoka,   Beaver,   Beckham,   Blaine,   Bryan,   Caddo,   Canadian,   Carter,   Cherokee,   Choctaw,   Cimarron,   Coal,   Comanche,   Cotton,   Craig,   Creek,   Custer,   Delaware,   Dewey,   Ellis,   Garfield,   Garvin,   Grady,   Grant,   Greer,   Harmon,   Harper,   Haskell,   Hughes,   Jackson,   Jefferson,   Johnston,   Kay,   Kingfisher,   Kiowa,   Latimer,   Le Flore,   Lincoln,   Logan,   Love,   Major,   Marshall,   Mayes,   McClain,   McCurtain,   McIntosh,   Murray,   Muskogee,   Noble,   Nowata,   Okfuskee,   Oklahoma,   Okmulgee,   Osage,   Ottawa,   Pawnee,   Payne,   Pittsburg,   Pontotoc,   Pottawatomie,   Pushmataha,   Roger Mills,   Rogers,   Seminole,   Sequoyah,   Stephens,   Texas,   Tillman,   Tulsa,   Wagoner,   Washington,   Washita,   Woods,   Woodward,  

Interested in fun facts and the history of Norman, OK?
Then read on!

Here are a few facts about the area around the city of Norman, Oklahoma:

1. Norman is home to the University of Oklahoma, which was founded in 1890 and is the flagship institution of the Oklahoma state system of higher education.

2. The National Weather Center, located on the University of Oklahoma campus, is one of the largest weather research buildings in the world and provides real-time weather information to the public.

3. The Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, located in Norman, has one of the largest collections of Paleozoic fossils in the world, including a complete skeleton of a Pentaceratops dinosaur.

4. The town of Norman was originally settled during the Land Run of 1889, in which the U.S. government opened up unassigned lands in Indian Territory for settlement.

5. Norman has a diverse economy, with major employers in industries such as education, healthcare, manufacturing, and technology.