From Raleigh to Utah —
and Completely Hooked
I grew up in Raleigh, NC, enrolled at Utah State in 2019, and graduated with a Business & Communication degree in December 2023 — but I'd already been working in real estate since 2021, learning how properties are valued, how investors think, and how markets move.
"I once had a semester where I was planning my wedding, carrying 21 credits, and running a property management company. Real estate transactions have never felt chaotic since."
Why I Do It the Way I Do
My business degree taught me how to think about a deal — the numbers, the strategy, the negotiation. But what actually makes a real estate transaction work is understanding the person on the other side of it. People aren't buying square footage. They're making some of the biggest financial and emotional decisions of their lives, often both at once. I take that seriously.
I bring real marketing to every listing — professional photography, polished materials, a proper launch strategy — because I believe every home deserves to be shown at its absolute best, full stop. And for buyers, I bring patience, straight talk, and genuine investment in finding the right fit, not just the next available option.
A Little More About Me
I'm married and live in Utah County, and I've fully leaned into the Utah life in a way my Raleigh self never would have predicted. Here's a more honest version of what I'm actually like outside of work.
Converted Skier
My husband taught me to ski — which I deeply resented at first, having sworn after my first run that I'd never do it again. Now I have a season pass and try to get up to Deer Valley, Snow Basin, or Alta twice a week. He takes full credit.
Food Person
I take restaurants seriously. New spots, good atmospheres, interesting menus — ask me for a recommendation anywhere I've traveled and I'll give you a very specific answer.
Always Planning a Trip
My husband and I love to travel together — exploring new places, trying restaurants we've never heard of, and finding excuses to go somewhere neither of us has been. There's something about being somewhere unfamiliar that resets everything.