Skip to main content

Texas has a fever. It’s not the pandemic. It’s land.

​​COLLEGE STATION – “A feverish demand for land, accompanied by a dearth of listings for sale, propelled Texas prices up a remarkable 16.29 percent in the second quarter,” says the land expert for the Texas Real Estate Research Center at Texas A&M University.

“The state’s land markets today are among the most active periods in Texas history,” says Dr. Charles Gilliland, who has been tracking land prices for 40 years.

Preliminary numbers show Texas had an annualized 8,561 second quarter land sales, up nearly 43.8 percent over the same quarter last year. The statewide average price hit $3,433 per acre. Total dollar volume totaled a record $2.35 billion, 93 percent higher than second quarter 2020.

Texas Statewide rural stats

A record annualized 685,585 acres changed hands in the second quarter. The typical transaction size fell 4.78 percent to 1,176 acres.

“The East Texas regions all had double-digit price increases with substantial increases in total acres transferred,” said Gilliland.

Only the Far West Texas Region bucked the Texas trend. Out west, land sales volume dropped 22.6 percent, which Gilliland attributes to a sudden halt in purchases from the oil and gas industry. Sales in the West Texas mountains, however, helped keep regional prices higher.

Official numbers will be available in August, but Gilliland says, “This explosion in sales volume shows the flight of buyers to rural environments continues in these uncertain times.”​​​ 

Texas logoThe Real Estate Center has a wealth of economic information online for free.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.