browse list of realtors working in Ada County
Ada county has 5 usdaproperties.com realtors ready to help with your search!
July 2024 Featured Agents | |
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Julie Skogsberg | from Peterson |
Mike Barth | from Silvercreek Realty Group |
Lisa St Claire | from Boise Premier Real Estate |
Tom Turner | from Keller Williams Realty Boise |
Sarah Brown | from Redefined real estate |
Start your search for USDA loan eligible properties in the cities of Ada County, ID
* cities most likely to have USDA loan eligible properties for sale.
Barber • Beatty • Blacks Creek • Boise • Cloverdale • Eagle • Garden City • Hidden Springs • Hillcrest • *Kuna • Leone • Meridian • Mora • Orchard • Owyhee • Perkins • Pleasant Valley • Regina • Sonna • *Star • Ustick • Vernon
A USDA loan is a mortgage option available to eligible homebuyers that is sponsored by the United States Department of Agriculture to promote homeownership in rural communities. USDA Loans, sometimes called "RD Loans," offer 100% financing options on eligible rural properties. USDAProperties can help you find USDA properties in Ada County.
Ada County, located in the southwestern part of the great state of Idaho, was established on December 22, 1864. This county was named after Ada Riggs, the daughter of the co-founder of Boise, H.C. Riggs. Boise, the capital city of Idaho, serves as the county seat of Ada County.
The region was inhabited by Native American tribes such as the Shoshone and Bannock before European and American explorers arrived in the early 19th century. The Oregon Trail, which passed through Ada County, played a crucial role in the westward expansion of the United States during the mid-1800s.
With the discovery of gold in the Boise Basin in 1862, many prospectors established settlements in the area, leading to the development of Fort Boise by the U.S. Army in 1863 to protect the settlers from potential conflicts with the native tribes.
One interesting fact about Ada County is its connection to the 1971 invention of the snowboard by an Idaho man named Sherman Poppen. Poppen, who was from Muskegon, Michigan, but later moved to Ketchum, Idaho, combined his love for surfing and winter sports to create the "Snurfer," a precursor to today's snowboard. This invention helped to establish snowboarding as a popular winter sport in the region and around the world.