Tag: Development Land

  • Texas Development Land Estimate Hits $10,200 Per Acre in 2026

    Texas development-stage vacant land is averaging about $10,200 per acre in 2026, according to a private January estimate published by SellTheLandNow. But that figure should not be read as the official statewide average for all land in Texas. As of March 25, 2026, the latest broad statewide benchmark from the Texas Real Estate Research Center at Texas A&M put Texas rural land at $5,214 per acre at the end of 2025, while USDA says its state land values are published annually in August.

    That gap does not mean one number is wrong. It means the figures are measuring different slices of the market. The $10,200 estimate is aimed at development-stage vacant land, while Texas A&M’s rural land data covers a broader mix of farming, ranching, recreation, wildlife use, and mineral-related activity across the state.

    A Market Defined by Three Pricing Tiers

    Texas land values in 2026 fall into three distinct categories. Raw and farm land — agricultural, timber, and rural acreage with limited utility access, averages $4,850 per acre. Development-stage land, defined by proximity to growth corridors and rezoning potential, sits at the $10,200 statewide benchmark. Retail and build-ready parcels in established markets average $38,000 per acre.

    That $33,150 spread between the lowest and highest tiers is structural, not cyclical. Two parcels with identical acreage can sit at opposite ends of that range based on a handful of variables: proximity to major highway corridors, utility access, zoning flexibility, water availability, and whether mineral rights remain intact.

    Where the Growth Is Concentrated

    The strongest pricing activity in 2026 is concentrated along two corridors: North Texas and the Austin–San Antonio stretch along I-35. Land positioned near highway expansions, utility extensions, and subdivision-ready zoning continues to outperform the statewide average, with retail-ready tracts in these regions approaching or exceeding the $38,000 per acre benchmark.

    Outside those corridors, the picture shifts. West Texas and Panhandle markets remain more conservative, with pricing heavily tied to water rights, agricultural output, and energy market conditions. Where water access is constrained, valuations reflect that risk directly.

    The result is a market that analysts are characterizing as selective rather than broadly strong — active in specific corridors, stabilized in remote regions.

    What the Data Says About Value Drivers

    In Texas, two factors disproportionately influence land value beyond location. First, mineral rights: unsevered mineral rights materially increase buyer interest and negotiation leverage, and in some counties carry more value than the surface acreage itself. Second, water: proven wells, irrigation rights, and documented aquifer access affect underwriting directly, while water uncertainty introduces measurable pricing discounts.

    Functional improvements — fencing, internal roads, cleared access — also reduce buyer uncertainty and support stronger offers, according to market data. Documented improvements consistently correlate with faster transactions and higher bids.

    Texas vs. Neighboring Markets

    Texas commands a 96% premium over Oklahoma and a 50% premium over Louisiana on a per-acre basis. Unlike Florida, where pricing is heavily tied to migration patterns, Texas benefits from both corporate relocation activity and organic domestic growth — a dynamic that has supported sustained demand without the volatility seen in other Sun Belt land markets.

    Supply remains abundant across many Texas regions, which tempers significant appreciation in areas outside active growth corridors. That supply dynamic is one reason the 2026 outlook is described as uneven rather than simply bullish.

    For those tracking activity in the Texas land market, land buyers in Texas represent one segment of demand keeping corridor-adjacent parcels moving despite broader stabilization in rural regions.