Construction-trained eyes on every property. Twelve years closing across ten counties.
Dominic Casey was born and raised on a Morgan County farm. He grew up walking fields, fixing fence lines, and learning how a building stands up the way you learn a second language as a kid — by living inside it. That foundation never left.
After graduating from Routt Catholic High School and MacMurray College, Dominic spent the bulk of his working career in Illinois state employment while building houses, additions, and remodels on the side. Thirty-five-plus years of carpentry, plumbing, and electrical work — most of it across the same towns he now sells homes in. When he retired from state service in 2014 and earned his Illinois real estate license, he didn't leave construction behind. He brought it with him.
That's the difference. Most agents walk a house and see the staging. Dominic walks a house and sees the bones — the roofline that's settled half an inch, the panel that hasn't been touched since the seventies, the soffit vent that was painted shut. He flags it before you write the offer, not after the inspector hands you a forty-page PDF you don't know how to read.
Outside of work, Dominic is a father of three and grandfather of five. He's a member of Our Saviour's Parish in Jacksonville, and the rest of his time goes to family, faith, and the kind of quiet community involvement that you'd never know about unless you'd lived next door to him for thirty years. Which, in Morgan County, plenty of people have.
See Dominic's active listingsTwelve years of closings and thirty-five years on jobsites means Dominic brings a different lens to every property — and the families on both sides of the transaction.
Roof age, foundation movement, panel condition, plumbing material, HVAC lifespan — Dominic reads a house the way a mechanic reads an engine. You'll know what you're really buying before you write the offer.
Every inspector finds something. Dominic translates the report into plain English: what's a $300 fix, what's a $30,000 fix, what's cosmetic, and what's the seller's problem to address — not yours.
From the family touring their first house ever to the move-up buyer trading a starter ranch for acreage — Dominic adjusts the pace. He'll explain what a sump pump is. He'll also negotiate hard on a $400K offer. Same agent, same standard.
Growing up on a farm in Morgan County means Dominic knows what to look for outside the house too — fencing condition, drainage, easements, septic systems, well water. The things city-focused agents miss completely.
Pulled live from the RMLS Alliance MLS. Sortable by price, beds, city, or property type. Filter to listings represented by Dominic Casey.
Whether it's a quick question about a property you saw on Zillow, a request for a showing this weekend, or a long conversation about whether now is the right time to buy — Dominic answers his own phone.
The same Morgan County agent who's been walking jobsites for thirty-five years and writing contracts for twelve. No pressure, no obligation, no twenty-four hour callback queue — just an honest first conversation.