Live MLS® listing data · Optimum Realty Inc.
Emerald Park is what estate living looks like fifteen minutes from the city. Where its neighbour White City grew into a town, Emerald Park grew into an address: generous manicured lots bordered by mature trees, spacious bungalows and two-storeys spanning the 1980s to brand-new custom builds, room in the yard for the RV and the boat — and on the community's signature streets, backyards that open directly onto the golf course. It's the more uniformly upscale half of the corridor, and residents chose it precisely for that consistency.
The quiet advantage most first-time visitors miss: Emerald Park holds the corridor's commercial heart. The Great Plains Road and Highway 1 business district — grocery, gym, restaurants, building supply, hotel — means daily errands happen here, not in the city, for the whole White City–Emerald Park community. Schools are shared across that community too (Prairie Valley division, with high schoolers heading to Greenall in Balgonie), and since the Bypass opened, the drive to east Regina is a smooth fifteen-odd minutes. One structural note worth knowing before you shop: Emerald Park sits within the RM of Edenwold rather than an incorporated town — a municipal difference with real tax-and-services implications we break down honestly in our White City vs Emerald Park comparison.
Functionally they're one community — shared schools, shopping and daily life. Municipally they differ: White City is an incorporated town while Emerald Park sits within the RM of Edenwold, which can mean different tax rates and services for similar homes. Character differs too: Emerald Park skews estate-and-golf-course; White City carries more town infrastructure and new growth. The full honest breakdown is in our White City vs Emerald Park comparison.
Emerald Park shares the White City–Emerald Park school community in the Prairie Valley division, including the new school in neighbouring White City. For grades 9–12, students head to Greenall School in Balgonie, the eastern corridor's shared high school. Catholic and specialized programs generally mean travelling into Regina; we confirm the exact arrangement for any specific address as part of a purchase.
More than any of its neighbours — Emerald Park is the corridor's commercial hub. The Great Plains Road and Highway 1 district covers groceries, restaurants, a gym, building supplies and a hotel, so the weekly errands that other commuter towns send into Regina largely happen at home here. It's also home to the White Butte RCMP detachment serving the region.
The lot. Emerald Park's defining feature is space done properly — large landscaped yards with mature-tree privacy, room for the toys, and on the best streets, the golf course over the back fence. Buyers here are typically trading up from the city for estate character they can't get at any price inside Regina, without giving up a reasonable commute. If that's the brief but the budget's tighter, Balgonie and Pilot Butte offer the same corridor at friendlier entries.
Estate inventory here is limited by design — the right lot-and-home combination doesn't wait around. Set your criteria once and we'll flag every Emerald Park listing the moment it hits the MLS®.