Vietnamese-speaking REALTOR® · Gwinnett County
Vietnamese real estate agent in Peachtree Corners
I’m Tien Nguyen — a Vietnamese-speaking REALTOR® serving Peachtree Corners. Calls, showings, and contracts can all happen in Vietnamese. One real person from first call to closing — not a call-center handoff.

Real numbers from Tien’s own closings — not inflated marketing figures.
Why Vietnamese families choose Peachtree Corners
A tech-employer hub on the Chattahoochee, minutes from both Duluth’s Vietnamese shops and Buford Highway’s Asian restaurants.
The Town Center brings new walkable retail; housing ranges from 1970s–80s ranches in established neighborhoods to newer townhomes near Tech Park.
On schools: Gwinnett — Norcross High cluster, plus several private options nearby. Older ranch stock can be a smart first-time-buyer value if inspected well.
What working with Tien looks like
- Calls, showings, and contracts in Vietnamese — bilingual paperwork on request.
- I read every photo and disclosure before you drive across town — I screen out split-levels and visible exterior damage.
- Coming-soon and off-market Peachtree Corners homes most buyers see 7–14 days later than my catalog.
- Lender introductions that fit your situation.
Start your Peachtree Corners home search
Leave your name and number — I’ll text back within 5 minutes during business hours, in Vietnamese or English, your choice.
Common questions in Peachtree Corners
- Do you really work in Vietnamese in Peachtree Corners?
- Yes. Calls, texts, showings, and most paperwork can all happen in Vietnamese. The official contract is in English per Georgia law, but I walk you through every line in Vietnamese and provide a bilingual summary.
- What if I’m not ready to buy in Peachtree Corners yet?
- That’s normal. Most of my buyers join my list 3–12 months before they actually move. I send the right Peachtree Corners homes, you say yes or no — when you’re ready, we tour.
- What does this cost me as a buyer?
- Buyer-side compensation is negotiated upfront in writing, in plain language. Often the seller pays it; when they don’t, you’ll see the exact number before you sign anything.