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Turn every closing into an incredible moment for children.

Every real estate transaction is a milestone — new beginnings, new memories and new possibilities. With Children’s Health℠, you can make those moments even more meaningful by helping children across North Texas get the care they need to thrive.

The Children’s Health Real Estate Program offers a simple, powerful way for real estate professionals to give back: donate $25 for every closing and create an incredible moment that extends far beyond the closing table.

A Simple Way for Real Estate Agents to Give Back

Real estate agents are deeply connected to their communities — and this program makes it easy to reflect that commitment with every transaction you close.

By making a $25 donation at closing, you’re helping support world-class pediatric care at Children’s Health while showing clients that you prioritize more than just the sale — you prioritize people.

There’s no complicated setup and no disruption to your workflow. Just one small donation that helps fuel lifesaving care, innovative research and compassionate support for children and families when they need it most.

What Is an Honor Card?

As a thank-you for your donation, you’ll receive a Children’s Health Honor Card to share with your client.

A Personal Touch That Makes a Lasting Impression

Each honor card:

  • Features a Children’s Health patient ambassador on the cover

  • Includes a message from the patient inside and gratitude

  • Can be personalized by you with a note to your client

It’s a thoughtful, meaningful alternative to traditional closing gifts — and one your clients will remember long after move-in day.

Get Your Honor Cards

Real estate agent donations help kids like Amelia

AmeliaRealEstate

Throughout the year the real estate agents are giving back to support patients like Amelia through making tax deductible donations when transactions close.

Amelia, wants to be a doctor when she grows up. She wants to help people with illnesses and diseases, just like her physicians and nurses at Children’s Health℠ have helped her since she was a baby.

But first? She wants to play more soccer and explore nature a bit. Those are exciting plans for a 9-year-old who was diagnosed with cerebral palsy and told she would struggle to be physically active.

Amelia was 4 months old when her now adoptive mother, Robin, met her. She’d spent the first 11 weeks of her life in a local NICU because she was born prematurely.

The baby wasn’t the first child for Robin and her husband, Henk, to adopt or foster. But a note from Amelia’s birth mom worried Robin.

“It said that sometimes when Amelia ate, she stopped breathing,” Robin said.

Within 24 hours, Robin was on the phone with Elsa Alexander, RN, Clinical Coordinator at the Rees-Jones Center for Foster Care Excellence at Children's Health.

As Robin described Amelia's respiratory and feeding issues, Elsa recognized that something was drastically wrong. Robin soon received a call back from a physician at the foster care clinic who told her to bring Amelia to the emergency room (ER) as soon as she could.

Robin said the family didn’t know it at the time, but that intervention is what saved Amelia’s life.

Meet Amelia

Frequently Asked Questions

Get in contact!

For more information on this real estate program or other ways to get involved with Children’s Health please contact Development Officer, Corporate Partnerships, Sierra Lykins at email iconsierra.lykins@childrens.com, or 469-318-5198.

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