Sell your Texas land fast for cash

Sell Land in Texas | Land for Cash Texas Land Buyer

  • Fair written offers - zero commissions, zero realtor fees
  • We review vacant land in Texas, any condition, as-is
  • Close in as little as 2 weeks, on your schedule
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📅 Close in as Little as 2 Weeks

We are Texas land buyers serving owners across the state. Whether your land is outside Houston in Harris County, near Dallas in Dallas County, around Fort Worth and the western valleys, or on wide-open ground across Texas, we make it simple. Just a written offer and a fast closing with no realtor fees, no commissions, and no hassle.

Sell Your Texas Land for Cash: No Fees, No Agents

  • 💰Fair cash offer for your Texas land, no lowball tactics
  • ✂️Zero commissions or agent fees
  • 📋We cover all Texas closing costs
  • 🌲Buy any Texas land, any condition, as-is
  • 📅Close in as little as 2 weeks
  • 🛡️No financing or appraisal contingencies

How Our Texas Land Buying Process Works

  1. Tell Us About Your Texas Property. Share the location, acreage, and any details you know. No obligation, no pressure. Just a quick conversation to get started.
  2. Receive Your Cash Offer. We evaluate your Texas land using parcel facts, current comparable sales, and a realistic closing path before sending a fair cash offer. No listing prep, no commissions, no lowball runaround.
  3. Close and Get Paid. Pick a closing date that works for you. We coordinate with the title company, handle the seller paperwork, and keep the closing straightforward even if you live out of state.

We Buy Land Across All of Texas

From Houston and Dallas to Fort Worth, San Antonio, Austin, McKinney, and the wider recreation and rural markets across all 254 Texas counties.

Map of Texas State showing major cities

Ready to Get a Cash Offer for Your Texas Land?

No fees. No commissions. No repairs required. We close in as little as 2 weeks, on your schedule.

Get My Free Cash Offer →

Selling Texas Land: Us vs. a Traditional Realtor

We Buy Texas LandTraditional Realtor
Fair cash offer, no haggling
Zero commissions or agent fees
We cover all closing costs
Buy as-is, no repairs or cleanup
Close in as little as 2 weeks
No showings or open houses
No financing or appraisal contingencies
No lender delays or fall-through risk

What Texas Landowners Say

David C., Texas landowner
★★★★★

I bought a small tract years ago and kept saying I would use it someday. The property tax bill kept coming and I finally wanted out. I had a real offer from We Buy Texas Land within 24 hours and closed before the next tax payment was due.

David C. | Fort Worth, TX

$31,800 cash - 11 days to close

Angela F., Texas landowner
★★★★★

The land near Conroe was not a fit for the agent I called. She wanted a perfect retail listing and I just wanted a practical sale. We Buy Texas Land looked at the access, taxes, and title notes, then closed through a title company without making me clean up the parcel.

Angela F. | Conroe, TX

$47,200 cash - 12 days to close

Steven R., Texas landowner
★★★★★

I moved out of Texas and kept putting off the Travis County property because I thought selling land remotely would be a hassle. It was simpler than renewing the insurance. I signed from home, the title company coordinated the documents, and the money arrived right on schedule.

Steven R. | Austin, TX

$68,300 cash - 14 days to close

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Get Your Free Cash Offer. No Obligation

Tell us about your land and we'll respond within 24 hours with a cash offer. No fees, no commissions, no pressure.

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Texas Counties We Serve - All 254 Counties

We purchase land across Texas. Select a county below if you are selling land without a traditional listing and want area-specific guidance.

Anderson CountyAndrews CountyAngelina CountyAransas CountyArcher CountyArmstrong CountyAtascosa CountyAustin CountyBailey CountyBandera CountyBastrop CountyBaylor CountyBee CountyBell CountyBexar CountyBlanco CountyBorden CountyBosque CountyBowie CountyBrazoria CountyBrazos CountyBrewster CountyBriscoe CountyBrooks CountyBrown CountyBurleson CountyBurnet CountyCaldwell CountyCalhoun CountyCallahan CountyCameron CountyCamp CountyCarson CountyCass CountyCastro CountyChambers CountyCherokee CountyChildress CountyClay CountyCochran CountyCoke CountyColeman CountyCollin CountyCollingsworth CountyColorado CountyComal CountyComanche CountyConcho CountyCooke CountyCoryell CountyCottle CountyCrane CountyCrockett CountyCrosby CountyCulberson CountyDallam CountyDallas CountyDawson CountyDeaf Smith CountyDelta CountyDenton CountyDeWitt CountyDickens CountyDimmit CountyDonley CountyDuval CountyEastland CountyEctor CountyEdwards CountyEl Paso CountyEllis CountyErath CountyFalls CountyFannin CountyFayette CountyFisher CountyFloyd CountyFoard CountyFort Bend CountyFranklin CountyFreestone CountyFrio CountyGaines CountyGalveston CountyGarza CountyGillespie CountyGlasscock CountyGoliad CountyGonzales CountyGray CountyGrayson CountyGregg CountyGrimes CountyGuadalupe CountyHale CountyHall CountyHamilton CountyHansford CountyHardeman CountyHardin CountyHarris CountyHarrison CountyHartley CountyHaskell CountyHays CountyHemphill CountyHenderson CountyHidalgo CountyHill CountyHockley CountyHood CountyHopkins CountyHouston CountyHoward CountyHudspeth CountyHunt CountyHutchinson CountyIrion CountyJack CountyJackson CountyJasper CountyJeff Davis CountyJefferson CountyJim Hogg CountyJim Wells CountyJohnson CountyJones CountyKarnes CountyKaufman CountyKendall CountyKenedy CountyKent CountyKerr CountyKimble CountyKing CountyKinney CountyKleberg CountyKnox CountyLa Salle CountyLamar CountyLamb CountyLampasas CountyLavaca CountyLee CountyLeon CountyLiberty CountyLimestone CountyLipscomb CountyLive Oak CountyLlano CountyLoving CountyLubbock CountyLynn CountyMadison CountyMarion CountyMartin CountyMason CountyMatagorda CountyMaverick CountyMcCulloch CountyMcLennan CountyMcMullen CountyMedina CountyMenard CountyMidland CountyMilam CountyMills CountyMitchell CountyMontague CountyMontgomery CountyMoore CountyMorris CountyMotley CountyNacogdoches CountyNavarro CountyNewton CountyNolan CountyNueces CountyOchiltree CountyOldham CountyOrange CountyPalo Pinto CountyPanola CountyParker CountyParmer CountyPecos CountyPolk CountyPotter CountyPresidio CountyRains CountyRandall CountyReagan CountyReal CountyRed River CountyReeves CountyRefugio CountyRoberts CountyRobertson CountyRockwall CountyRunnels CountyRusk CountySabine CountySan Augustine CountySan Jacinto CountySan Patricio CountySan Saba CountySchleicher CountyScurry CountyShackelford CountyShelby CountySherman CountySmith CountySomervell CountyStarr CountyStephens CountySterling CountyStonewall CountySutton CountySwisher CountyTarrant CountyTaylor CountyTerrell CountyTerry CountyThrockmorton CountyTitus CountyTom Green CountyTravis CountyTrinity CountyTyler CountyUpshur CountyUpton CountyUvalde CountyVal Verde CountyVan Zandt CountyVictoria CountyWalker CountyWaller CountyWard CountyWashington CountyWebb CountyWharton CountyWheeler CountyWichita CountyWilbarger CountyWillacy CountyWilliamson CountyWilson CountyWinkler CountyWise CountyWood CountyYoakum CountyYoung CountyZapata CountyZavala County

Texas Landowners Use This Page When They Want a Direct Sale

Texas owners use this guide when a parcel has become harder to carry than to keep. The property may be vacant, inherited, remote, behind on taxes, difficult to list, or tied up with relatives who need one clean plan. We review the county record, acreage, access, utilities, tax status, title notes, and likely closing path before we discuss numbers.

A normal house-focused listing does not always fit acreage, rural tracts, desert lots, ranch-edge parcels, or city-edge infill lots. Our process gives owners a written comparison point, so they can decide whether a direct purchase makes more sense than waiting on showings, financing, inspections, and repeated buyer questions.

What We Review Before Making a Texas Parcel Offer

We look at nearby parcel activity, road frontage, deed restrictions, floodplain, terrain, utility distance, tax balances, mineral or title notes, and the cost of reaching a title-company closing. That review helps separate a simple file from a parcel that needs extra time before anyone can close.

Frequently Asked Questions About Selling Texas Land

Do you buy land across all of Texas?

Yes. We review parcels across all 254 Texas counties, including land near Houston, Dallas, Fort Worth, San Antonio, Austin, El Paso, and rural counties throughout the state.

Can I sell Texas land if I live out of state?

Yes. Many sellers handle the process remotely. A title company can coordinate documents, notarization, payoff details, and closing instructions without requiring a trip back to Texas.

Do I need to clean up the land first?

No. We review many parcels as-is, including vacant lots, acreage with brush, inherited property, remote tracts, and land with access or tax complications.

How fast can a Texas land sale close?

When title is clear and both sides are ready, some sales can close in as little as 2 weeks. More complicated title, estate, or co-owner situations can take longer, and we explain that before you decide.

A cash offer from us explains price, closing timeline, title-company steps, and any parcel issue that affects certainty.

When comparing direct land buyers, ask how they handle all 254 Texas counties, deed records, taxes, and out-of-state signing.

Moving land in Texas fast works best when title is clean, seller authority is clear, and parcel details are ready.

Owners statewide who want to sell land for cash often compare a listing against taxes, cleanup, waiting time, and ranch acreage, vacant lots, inherited tracts, and remote parcels.

The choice to sell land in Texas is easier when the offer explains title work, seller documents, closing costs, and major metro edges and rural roads.

Before you sell your property, confirm who can sign, whether taxes are current, and how the title company will close.

Texas Hill Country parcels can involve slope, access, water questions, deed restrictions, and fast-changing demand.

The value of your land depends on location, access, terrain, utilities, taxes, title status, and ranch acreage, vacant lots, inherited tracts, and remote parcels.

Agricultural land may involve leases, fencing, water, access, crop history, or family ownership questions.

We buy land in Texas for sellers who want title-company paperwork, a written number, and no listing campaign.

We review parcels across counties in Texas, from major metro edges to rural roads where acreage can be hard to market.

Real expertise in land is practical: read the county file, check road frontage, confirm ownership, and price closing risk honestly.

People comparing land buyers Texas options should still review process, funding, title coordination, and the written purchase terms.

A clear land sale process covers parcel review, offer terms, title search, seller signing, funding, and recording.

Owners who need to sell land can start with the parcel number, acreage, ownership situation, access notes, and major metro edges and rural roads.

The sale of your land should include written terms, clear cost responsibilities, title-company handling, and a funded buyer.

Cash land buyers should focus on the parcel file, not a generic price per acre.

A cash offer today should not skip due diligence around title, access, taxes, utilities, and seller authority.

To get a cash offer, share the parcel ID, county, acreage, access notes, tax status, and any title concerns.

If you market your land publicly, compare the likely wait against direct closing certainty, holding costs, and all 254 Texas counties.

Owners can sell vacant land directly when the file fits and the buyer can close through a title company.

If you want to sell your vacant parcel, share the county record, acreage, access notes, and tax status first.

A serious buyer should explain valuation, title review, funding, and closing costs before asking for a signature.

Undeveloped land usually needs a buyer who understands access, utilities, floodplain, terrain, and title timing.

The best way to sell land depends on your timeline, the parcel condition, access, taxes, title status, and buyer demand.

We buy vacant land when the county record, access, title status, and title-company closings with no agent commissions support a clean closing path.

A fair written offer accounts for current taxes, title status, and likely title-company costs.

Owners looking to sell often compare a public listing against taxes, cleanup, waiting time, and ranch acreage, vacant lots, inherited tracts, and remote parcels.

Property owners can compare a direct purchase with listing costs, holding costs, taxes, and expected closing time.

Sellers choose to sell their land when the holding costs, taxes, or family coordination no longer justify keeping it.

A buyer in Texas should be able to explain title-company closing, seller signing, funding, and local parcel review.

Before you sell your land, confirm who can sign, whether taxes are current, and whether title-company closings with no agent commissions could slow the file.

Unwanted land can still have a clean exit if ownership is clear and the parcel fits a direct buyer's criteria.

Turning land to cash is easier when the seller has the parcel ID, county record, and known title notes ready.

We try to make selling simpler by keeping the review focused on parcel facts, written terms, and title-company closing.

A property tax issue can change the net result, so balances, exemptions, liens, and payoff timing need review.

Cash buyers still need to prove the deal can close, including earnest money, title coordination, and written terms.

A direct purchase works best when the seller understands title review, inspection timing, written terms, and closing costs.

Posting land online can create interest, but sellers still need a buyer who can verify title, access, taxes, and funding.

Rural land can be valuable, but distance, utilities, road frontage, and ranch acreage, vacant lots, inherited tracts, and remote parcels often decide how fast it can close.

West Texas parcels often need extra review for access, utility distance, survey history, and remote buyer demand.

Raw land often needs more explanation than a house because access, utilities, terrain, and records drive demand.

Land use regulations can significantly change a buyer pool when access, utilities, floodplain, or deed restrictions are involved.

The details of selling land in Texas encompass access, taxes, deed history, utility distance, title, and buyer demand.

A sale sign and neighbor letter can help in some areas, but they do not replace title review and funding.

Selling land through local outreach may help, but owners still need a buyer who can close cleanly.

When it comes to selling your land, the safest first step is checking title, taxes, access, utilities, and buyer funding.

Landowners looking to sell can send the parcel ID, county, acreage, tax status, and known access details for review.

Cash land buyers in Texas should explain valuation, title review, funding, and closing costs before asking for a signature.

We specialize in buying land only when the parcel facts support a direct close and the seller prefers certainty.

A written number should reflect tax status, title timing, and normal closing costs.

Experience in land sales matters because small access, tax, or deed issues can change whether a parcel closes smoothly.

Owners who want to sell can use a direct review to compare speed, certainty, and net proceeds without pressure.

If you plan to sell your land in Texas, start with the county record, parcel ID, access details, and tax status.

Selling fast for cash in Texas still requires clear title, seller authority, title-company scheduling, and buyer funding.

Receiving a cash offer is useful only when it explains the closing path, buyer funding, and who pays normal costs.

You can evaluate land in Texas without signing a listing agreement, paying commissions, or cleaning up the parcel first.

Before we send you a cash offer, we review the county record, acreage, access, taxes, title, and all 254 Texas counties.

Specializing in land means checking access, acreage, utilities, deed records, title issues, and local demand.

Vacant acreage should be reviewed alongside parcel records, access, utilities, taxes, title status, and local demand.

Zoning laws and land-use limits can affect timing, so the review checks recorded use, road access, utilities, and restrictions.

When comparing trusted land buyers, ask how they handle all 254 Texas counties, deed records, taxes, and out-of-state signing.

People trying to sell land often discover that access, utilities, title, and title-company closings with no agent commissions matter more than a simple price per acre.

Texas Parcel Sale Review Notes

Use these notes to compare title-company certainty, holding costs, property facts, and purchase timing before deciding how to move forward.

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Texas Land Selling Guides

Expert tips for landowners on selling land in Texas fast, handling inherited property, and navigating taxes and legal documents.

View all Texas land selling guides