Land for sale in Rockwall County, TX — the smallest county in Texas, biggest premium per acre east of Dallas
Rockwall County is the smallest county in Texas by area — 148 square miles — and one of the densest, fastest-growing markets in DFW. Lake Ray Hubbard covers nearly 15% of the county. The remaining land trades at one of the highest per-acre averages in North Texas. If you can find acreage here, expect to pay for it.
Overview
Rockwall County sits directly east of Dallas County across Lake Ray Hubbard, with I-30 running through Rockwall (the county seat) and Royse City along the eastern edge. The county is unique in scale — Texas's smallest county by land area, with the lake itself covering 14.59% of total acreage.
The growth fundamentals are aggressive. Rockwall ranks among the top 25 fastest-growing U.S. counties. Average list price per acre is $127,631 — second only to Collin County in the BuyDirtTX coverage area. Median days on market across all segments is approximately 278 days, which sounds long but reflects how little inventory ever reaches the market.
Rockwall, Heath, Fate, and Royse City are the primary cities. Each has its own development profile: Rockwall and Heath are premium residential markets with lake-adjacent estate demand; Fate is the more accessible growth corridor along the I-30 spine; Royse City sits on the eastern edge and is the lowest-entry sub-market in the county.
Price Corridors
Rockwall County's small geography means sub-markets are tight — proximity to Lake Ray Hubbard and I-30 frontage are the dominant variables.
Market Snapshot
Rockwall is one of the highest-priced and highest-appreciating land markets in North Texas, with very tight inventory.
Average list price per acre from LandSearch active listing data (2,005 acres). Median price reflects Land.com sold-transaction data, which runs below list averages due to large-tract influence. Reflects parcels 2+ acres given the county's small footprint; excludes commercial pads and subdivided lots inside city limits.
Land Types
Lake Ray Hubbard Estate
Lakefront, lake-view, and Corps-adjacent lifestyle tracts on the 22,745-acre reservoir. Premium pricing reflects Heath's estate market and proximity to Dallas.
Master-Planned Community Development
Tracts along the I-30 corridor through Fate and west Rockwall in active builder pipelines. Toll Brothers, Highland Homes, and regional developers are visible.
Commercial / Mixed-Use
I-30 frontage between Rockwall and Royse City. Travel commercial, retail, and light industrial demand.
Estate / Ranchette
5–25 acre lifestyle tracts in Heath, north Rockwall, and the McLendon-Chisholm area. Custom home estates with significant ISD-driven pricing.
Royse City Transitional
East Rockwall County rural and transitional tracts at the Hunt County boundary. The most accessible entry price in the county for development-thesis buyers.
Zoning & ETJ
Rockwall County has no county-wide zoning, but the small footprint means almost everything is inside or adjacent to a city ETJ.
Water & Utilities
Rockwall County water service is more uniform than the typical North Texas county due to its small size and density.
Ag Exemptions
Ag exemption is harder to maintain in Rockwall County than larger rural counties — the small footprint and ETJ pressure mean most tracts are facing development pressure.
Investment
Rockwall County is a premium land market with tight inventory, fast appreciation, and very limited near-term opportunities for under-priced acquisitions.
Rockwall is the most supply-constrained land market in DFW. Heath estates and Lake Ray Hubbard-adjacent acreage are premium-priced for legitimate structural reasons — the supply will not grow. Patient capital should look at Royse City on the eastern edge where entry prices remain accessible.
Growth Outlook
Rockwall County is functionally built out at the Dallas-facing edge. Heath, Rockwall city, and the Lake Ray Hubbard south shore are mature markets where new supply comes from teardowns and edge subdivisions, not new acreage. Fate is the active master-planned community front. Royse City is the eastern release valve.
The structural ceiling on new supply — the lake plus the small county footprint — is what makes Rockwall fundamentals different from Kaufman or Collin. Demand keeps rising; the buildable inventory cannot. That dynamic supports long-term appreciation but means near-term acquisition opportunities are rare and competitive.
The Royse City corridor (eastern Rockwall into Hunt County) is the most interesting near-term opportunity for buyers willing to accept a longer commute to Dallas in exchange for materially lower entry prices.
Buying Here
Order a Category 1A survey — $1,500–$4,000 — non-negotiable in Rockwall County.
Pull the Rockwall CAD record and confirm current ag exemption status; rollback exposure is severe.
Verify ETJ status with Rockwall, Heath, Fate, Royse City, or McLendon-Chisholm as applicable — nearly all county land is inside an ETJ.
For Lake Ray Hubbard tracts — verify Dallas city boundary, shoreline easements, and allowable uses.
Confirm water provider — municipal service is the default for most parcels but verify capacity for new connections.
Get a current appraisal on lake-adjacent land; comparable sales are sparse and pricing is highly site-specific.
County Facts
Land Buyer Index
FAQ
Three structural reasons. The county is 148 square miles, the smallest in Texas. Lake Ray Hubbard covers 14.59% of total area, permanently removed from buildable inventory. Heath is one of the highest-income communities in North Texas, anchoring premium estate demand. Supply is constrained; demand is not.
Royse City and the eastern edge of the county toward the Hunt County line offer the most accessible entry prices, generally $30K–$70K/acre. The trade-off is a longer Dallas commute, but the thesis (DFW spillover, builder absorption) is the same as central Rockwall.
Lake Ray Hubbard is owned and operated by the City of Dallas. Waterfront access and any new dock or shoreline use requires Dallas approval. True waterfront tracts are rare; "lake-adjacent" or "lake-view" properties are more common and still command premium pricing.
Collin averages $161K/acre; Rockwall averages $127K/acre. Both are top-tier DFW markets. Collin has more inventory and more sub-markets at varying price points. Rockwall has less inventory but a permanent supply ceiling that supports long-term appreciation.
Heath and Rockwall are 20–25 miles east of downtown Dallas across Lake Ray Hubbard via I-30. Royse City is approximately 35 miles east.