Century 21 Morrison Realty serves buyers and sellers across North Dakota, including those whose interests carry them to Underwood, the Lake Sakakawea corridor, and the communities along U.S. Highway 83.
Terry Stevahn, Inc. has operated continuously since January 2008. Terry's individual licensure in North Dakota extends back to May 1992.
The clients who return for their second and third transactions, and who send their adult children for their first, are the clearest evidence of a practice built on outcomes rather than volume. Ninety percent of the work that moves through this office comes from returning clients and direct referrals, a ratio that has held steady for fifteen years.
Real estate in North Dakota is not one market. It is a set of overlapping markets with different buyer profiles, different infrastructure realities, and different seasonal rhythms. Serving a client whose interests extend to Underwood, the Lake Sakakawea corridor, or other McLean County communities means applying the same standard of preparation, honesty, and professional judgment that has anchored this practice for thirty-four years, while being direct about where expertise runs deep and where trusted colleagues in other regions may be the right fit.
The credentials matter. The continuity matters more. When a client engages a practice with three decades of verifiable North Dakota transactional history, they are engaging a professional record that can be confirmed with the North Dakota Real Estate Commission at any time, backed by the institutional support of one of the most established brokerages in the region.
Underwood sits in McLean County, about 65 miles north of Bismarck on U.S. Highway 83, close enough to Lake Sakakawea and Garrison Dam to feel the pull of the water from almost anywhere in town. It is a community of roughly 700 people, shaped by coal, by agriculture, and by the seasonal rhythm of the lake that sits just beyond its doorstep.
The Coal Creek Station power plant, located between Underwood and Washburn along the Missouri River, is the largest power plant in North Dakota. Together with the Falkirk Mine and surrounding lignite operations, it forms the industrial backbone of the community, producing a steady base of skilled employment that has anchored local households for more than four decades. That industrial presence gives the Underwood economy a character most small North Dakota towns do not have: a paycheck rhythm that looks more like a mid-sized city than a rural farming community, overlaid on housing stock that still reflects its prairie-town origins.
Lake Sakakawea is the other defining presence. At 178 miles long with roughly 1,340 miles of shoreline, it is one of the largest reservoirs in the United States. The access points at Riverdale, Pick City, and Lake Sakakawea State Park are all within a short drive, and a meaningful segment of Underwood's housing demand comes from residents whose calendar is built around boat storage, walleye and chinook fishing, and the short but intense lake season that runs from late spring through early fall.
Underwood Public School District 8 serves the community with a single campus covering elementary through high school. Housing stock skews older, with most homes built in the 1960s and 1970s, and the market is characterized by high owner-occupancy, modest price points relative to Bismarck, and a buyer pool that is typically local, employment-anchored, or lake-motivated rather than speculative.
This is not a market that behaves like Bismarck. Thinner inventory, a more specialized buyer pool, and the combined influence of industrial employment and recreational demand mean that the standard playbook does not apply. Understanding those differences, and being honest about what deep transactional familiarity looks like in any specific North Dakota micromarket, is the foundation of competent representation for anyone with interests here.
The Coal Creek Station power plant, operated by Rainbow Energy Center, is the largest power plant in North Dakota, with two units rated at roughly 550 megawatts each. Combined with the Falkirk Mine and surrounding lignite operations, it provides a layer of steady, skilled employment that anchors household formation and housing demand in ways a purely agricultural community could not replicate.
Most homes in Underwood were built in the 1960s and 1970s. That matters for buyers. Older roofing, original mechanical systems, and seasonal ground movement are predictable evaluation areas, and insurance carriers now ask harder questions about roofs older than ten years, which is a statewide pattern that shows up consistently at closing.
The lake draws a lifestyle buyer evaluating water access, boat storage, and recreational fit as primary purchase criteria. Lake-adjacent and second-home properties operate on a fundamentally different calendar than standard residential real estate. Listing timing, photography season, and buyer-pool targeting all change when the property's value is tied to the water.
Properties outside Underwood city limits typically rely on private wells, septic systems, and propane rather than municipal utilities and natural gas. Those are not edge-case costs. They are predictable ownership obligations: periodic water quality testing, septic pumping every two to three years, propane purchased on contract with significant upfront annual cost. They belong in every budget calculation before an offer is written.
When a home enters the market above what buyers perceive as fair value, activity stalls, days on market accumulate, perception shifts, price reductions follow, and buyers gain negotiating leverage. Smaller markets amplify that pattern. Correct initial pricing is the single most consistent driver of outcomes clients feel good about long after the closing.
Three decades of verifiable North Dakota transactional history, with 1,873 verified closed transactions and a professional record that can be confirmed with the North Dakota Real Estate Commission. This is not a claim. It is a file.
Credentials include the Fine Home Specialist designation for properties above $600,000, the Commercial Specialist and CCN designations for commercial expertise, the CDPE designation covering distressed and complex transactions, and the Graduate REALTOR Institute credential from the early 1990s.
The Century 21 Quality Service program allows clients to formally evaluate their experience through a structured questionnaire after every transaction. Eight consecutive years of recognition reflects consistency across hundreds of closings at different price points and levels of complexity.
Ninety percent of business comes from returning clients and direct referrals, a ratio that has held steady for fifteen years. When a client engages this practice, they are engaging a professional standard that has proven durable across every market cycle this region has produced.
I am here for your long-term outcome, not your short-term transaction. Every recommendation, every concern I raise, every difficult conversation I initiate is an expression of that commitment.Terry Stevahn · From the 235 Manuscript