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

All Active Listings Near
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Coosada
, Alabama in Elmore 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 Coosada.

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

Adkin Hill,   Blue Ridge,   Burlington,   Butts Mill,   Buyck,   Central,   Claud,   Cold Spring,   Coosa River,   Cotton,   Deatsville,   Dexter,   Eclectic,   Elmore,   Emerald Mountain,   Falkner,   Fays,   Floyd,   Holtville,   Kent,   Kowaliga,   Lightwood,   Millbrook,   Neman,   New Bingham,   North Elmore,   Old Bingham,   Redland,   Riddle,   Santuck,   Seman,   Tallassee,   Titus,   Wallsboro,   Ware,   Weoka,   Weoka Mills,   Wetumpka,   Willow Springs,  

 

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,   Escambia,   Etowah,   Fayette,   Franklin,   Geneva,   Greene,   Hale,   Henry,   Houston,   Jackson,   Jefferson,   Lamar,   Lauderdale,   Lawrence,   Lee,   Limestone,   Lowndes,   Macon,   Madison,   Marengo,   Marion,   Marshall,   Mobile,   Monroe,   Montgomery,   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 Coosada, AL?
Then read on!

- Coosada is a small town with a population of around 1,000 people, according to the United States Census Bureau.
- The town was incorporated in 1957 and named after the Coosa River and Alabama, the state where it is located.
- The area was once part of the Creek Indian Nation and was later settled by European Americans in the early 19th century.
- Coosada is home to the Coosada Baptist Church, a historic white wooden church building that was built in 1906 and still stands today as a symbol of the town's religious heritage.
- The town is also known for its proximity to the historic Nix-Webster-Orem plantation site, which was once a thriving antebellum plantation and trading center.
- Today, Coosada is a quiet bedroom community that offers a peaceful, rural atmosphere for its residents while being conveniently located near the larger cities of Montgomery and Wetumpka.