Tarrant County, Texas

Land for sale in Tarrant County, TX — the urban core where land is the rarest asset

2,167,390 (#3 in TX)
Population
Fort Worth
County Seat
$94,862
Median $/acre
$143,641
Rural Avg $/acre

Tarrant County is the third-most-populous county in Texas at 2,167,390 residents. Fort Worth, Arlington, Mansfield, and the Mid-Cities consume most of the county's 864 square miles. Genuine raw acreage is rare and expensive — true rural land buyers usually end up looking in Parker, Wise, Johnson, or Hood County. This page exists to tell that story honestly and direct you to where the land actually is.

Overview

About Tarrant County

Tarrant County is the urban core of the western DFW metroplex. Fort Worth is the county seat and the 12th-largest city in the United States. Arlington, Mansfield, Grand Prairie, Hurst, Euless, Bedford, North Richland Hills, Keller, Southlake, Colleyville, Grapevine, and Roanoke make up the bulk of the developed footprint. Tarrant County added roughly 26% of its population since 2010 to reach approximately 2.17 million today.

Land in Tarrant County is not what land looks like in surrounding counties. Most of what trades as "Tarrant land" is one of four things: small infill lots inside city limits priced for residential or commercial development; 1–5 acre estate tracts in Southlake, Westlake, Colleyville, Keller, or rural pockets of Fort Worth; equestrian properties on the western edge (Aledo direction); or Eagle Mountain Lake / Lake Worth waterfront. Average listings are $429,729 per acre when including improved properties; rural average is $143,641 per acre across just 85 active rural listings.

If you are looking for genuine acreage — 20+ acres of working pasture, ranch, recreational, or developable raw land — Tarrant is not where the inventory is. The land is in Parker (west), Wise (north), Johnson (south), and Hood (southwest). This page is honest about that.

Population
2,167,390 (#3 in TX)
County Seat
Fort Worth
Median $/acre
$94,862
Rural Avg $/acre
$143,641
County Size
902 sq mi
Active Rural Listings
85

Price Corridors

Where the money actually goes.

Tarrant County's land sub-markets are tightly bounded by the urban footprint — most are estate or lake-adjacent, not traditional acreage.

Corridor
Price Range
Character
Notes
Southlake / Colleyville / Westlake
$300K – $1M+/acre
Premium estate market; 1–5 acre lots in established luxury enclaves
Carroll ISD (Southlake) drives premium pricing; very limited inventory
Keller / Roanoke / Haslet
$150K – $500K/acre
North Tarrant estate and equestrian; 5–25 acre tracts
Growing equestrian community; bridge to Parker County estate market
Eagle Mountain Lake / Lake Worth
$150K – $750K+/acre on water
Waterfront and near-water lifestyle
Eagle Mountain Lake managed by Tarrant Regional Water District
West / Southwest Tarrant (Aledo-adjacent, Crowley)
$50K – $150K/acre
Rural and ranchette tracts on the Parker/Johnson border
Closest thing to genuine acreage inside Tarrant County
South Tarrant (Mansfield, Crowley, Burleson edge)
$80K – $300K/acre
Mixed commercial development pads, large residential lots
I-20 / US-287 corridor; commercial demand significant

Market Snapshot

Quarterly market trends.

Tarrant County's land market is structurally distinct from surrounding counties — driven by urban infill, estate lots, and lake demand rather than rural acreage.

Metric
Value
YoY
Source
Median $/acre
$94,862
+8.4%
Land.com (10+ acre listings, excluding commercial)
Rural Avg $/acre
$143,641
+9.2%
LandSearch
Commercial Avg $/acre
$322,505
N/A
LandSearch
Active Rural Listings
85
N/A
LandSearch

Tarrant County listing data is segmented heavily — commercial pads, residential infill, estate lots, and rural acreage trade as separate markets. Numbers above reflect rural-property listings only where available; commercial and improved-property pricing is dramatically higher.

Land Types

Four ways buyers use this county.

Estate Lots

1–5 acre residential estate lots in Southlake, Westlake, Colleyville, Keller, Roanoke, and other premium north Tarrant communities. Carroll ISD assignment drives Southlake pricing in particular.

Eagle Mountain Lake Waterfront

Lakefront, near-water, and lake-view tracts on Eagle Mountain Lake. Tarrant Regional Water District manages the reservoir; new dock and shoreline use requires TRWD coordination.

Equestrian / North Tarrant

Haslet, Roanoke, and west of Keller — 5–25 acre equestrian properties bridging to Parker County's cutting horse tradition. Improvements drive significant value above raw land.

Commercial / Infill

I-20, I-30, I-35W, and US-287 corridor commercial pads. Frontage in Mansfield, Arlington, north Fort Worth, and Roanoke is at structural premium given DFW logistics demand.

West Tarrant Rural (limited)

The Aledo-facing edge of Tarrant County still has small pockets of 10–50 acre tracts. Beyond a 5-mile band from the Parker County line, true rural acreage is essentially gone.

Zoning & ETJ

What governs the parcel.

Unlike most BuyDirtTX coverage counties, Tarrant County land is heavily zoned at the city level — Fort Worth, Arlington, and the Mid-Cities all maintain comprehensive zoning ordinances.

Every major Tarrant city has aggressive zoning and active ETJs. Fort Worth ETJ alone covers significant unincorporated areas to the north and west. Always confirm city zoning, ETJ status, and entitlement constraints before offering — Tarrant County land transactions are typically more entitlement-dependent than in surrounding rural counties.

Water & Utilities

The single most underestimated cost.

Tarrant County water service is essentially universal — Tarrant Regional Water District is the regional wholesale provider and almost all property is on municipal service.

Source
Cost Range
Notes
Municipal
Tap fees $5K – $20K
Tarrant Regional Water District is the wholesale provider; all major cities provide direct retail service
Well (Trinity Aquifer)
$30K – $65K all-in
Rare in Tarrant County; mainly relevant on the western edge where well-dependent tracts still exist
Eagle Mountain Lake / Lake Worth
TRWD managed
9,200-acre and 3,500-acre reservoirs respectively; primary water supply assets; recreational and shoreline access requires TRWD coordination

Ag Exemptions

Drop your tax bill by 80–90%.

Ag exemption is uncommon in Tarrant County because most land is inside city limits or aggressive ETJs. Where it exists, it is increasingly under pressure.

Tarrant Appraisal District requires the standard 5-of-7 years of qualifying use. Existing ag exemptions on remaining rural tracts in west and south Tarrant County are valuable but increasingly rare. Rollback exposure is severe — Tarrant County tracts with ag exemption can produce significant rollback on conversion. Calculate carefully.

Investment

The numbers, by segment.

Tarrant County land is a specialty market — estate, commercial, lakefront, and infill — not a development-thesis acreage market.

2.17M
Population
3rd-largest county in TX
~26%
10-yr Growth
2010 to 2024
~2,700
Rural Acres Listed
Across 85 listings (very tight)
$1.7B
Westside Village
Fort Worth mixed-use development
Segment
Median Price
YoY
DOM
West Tarrant rural (limited)
$75,000
+8%
145
Eagle Mountain Lake / waterfront
$285,000
+9%
115
North Tarrant estate (Keller, Roanoke)
$220,000
+10%
98
Southlake / Westlake / Colleyville
$485,000
+11%
85
  • Tarrant County is functionally built out — genuine raw acreage exists in narrow pockets along the Parker and Johnson borders only
  • Westside Village in Fort Worth ($1.7B mixed-use) signals continued urban investment and corporate growth
  • Eagle Mountain Lake and Lake Worth waterfront are permanently supply-constrained recreational assets
  • The Aledo-facing west edge of Tarrant remains the only meaningful pocket of transitional rural land in the county

If you are looking for traditional acreage — 20+ acres of working ranch, hunting, or developable raw land — your inventory is in Parker, Wise, Johnson, or Hood County, not Tarrant. Tarrant land trades are estate, commercial, lakefront, or infill. Different buyers, different underwriting, different exit profiles.

Growth Outlook

Where this market goes next.

Tarrant County will continue to grow as Fort Worth's corporate base expands. Westside Village, Panther Island, and the ongoing downtown Fort Worth redevelopment are signals that Fort Worth itself is in a sustained growth phase distinct from being a Dallas suburb. That growth pulls demand into north Tarrant (Roanoke, Haslet, Keller) and west Tarrant (Aledo-adjacent).

For land buyers, the practical implication is that traditional acreage in Tarrant County will continue to be absorbed into estate and master-planned community use. The "release valves" — Parker, Wise, Johnson — will continue to absorb the spillover from buyers who cannot find inventory or pricing inside Tarrant.

Eagle Mountain Lake and Lake Worth waterfront remain permanently supply-constrained assets. As Fort Worth densifies, lake-adjacent acreage within 30 minutes of downtown becomes a more valuable lifestyle asset.

Buying Here

The buyer's playbook.

Tarrant County land transactions are typically entitlement-dependent — verify city zoning, ETJ status, and use constraints before offering.

Order a Category 1A survey — $1,500–$4,000 — non-negotiable.

For Eagle Mountain Lake or Lake Worth tracts, coordinate with Tarrant Regional Water District for shoreline use, dock permits, and setback requirements.

Verify floodplain mapping carefully — Trinity River and tributary floodplains affect significant portions of central Tarrant County.

For estate properties, separate underwriting of improvements (homes, equestrian facilities) from raw land value is essential.

If you want true rural acreage, expand your search to Parker (west), Wise (north), Johnson (south), or Hood (southwest).

County Facts

The numbers at a glance.

Area
902 sq mi (864 land, 38 water)
Aquifer
Trinity
Key Lakes
Eagle Mountain Lake, Lake Worth, Benbrook Lake
Population
2,167,390 (#3 in Texas)
County Seat
Fort Worth
Primary Highways
I-20, I-30, I-35W, US-287, SH-114, SH-121
Population Growth Since 2010
~26%

Land Buyer Index

Two numbers that matter.

% Ag-Exempt
8%
share of county acreage with active ag exemption

FAQ

Buyer questions, answered.

Is there any real rural land left in Tarrant County?+

A little, in narrow pockets on the western edge (Aledo-adjacent) and the southern edge (Crowley, near Johnson County). Beyond those pockets, genuine acreage is essentially gone. Most "Tarrant land" searches are looking for something Tarrant cannot provide.

Where should I look if I want true acreage near Fort Worth?+

Parker County (west, Aledo and Weatherford), Wise County (north, Decatur and Boyd), Johnson County (south, Burleson and Cleburne), or Hood County (southwest, Granbury). All are within 30–60 minutes of downtown Fort Worth and have inventory Tarrant does not.

What about Eagle Mountain Lake?+

Eagle Mountain Lake is a 9,200-acre reservoir on the northwest edge of Tarrant County, managed by Tarrant Regional Water District. Waterfront tracts are rare and expensive — typical pricing runs $150K–$750K+/acre for water frontage. Dock permits, shoreline easements, and TRWD setbacks all apply.

Why is Southlake land so expensive?+

Carroll ISD. It is one of the highest-ranked school districts in Texas and consistently among the top in the nation. Carroll ISD assignment can add 50–100% to land and home pricing within the district footprint. Westlake's Westlake Academy and Colleyville's GCISD also drive similar premium pricing.

Can I find development land in Tarrant County?+

Yes, but it is commercial pads, infill assemblages, or transition tracts inside ETJs, not raw acreage. Master-planned community land in north Tarrant (Alliance) and south Tarrant (Mansfield) trades through institutional channels and is typically not available to individual buyers.

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