How to Sell a Vacant Lot Without Knowing Where to Start
A calm, step-by-step way to think about a land sale when you have never done one before.
Coming soon
Land Education Center
A vacant lot can look simple from the street, but zoning, utilities, access, wetlands, flood zones, protected species, easements, title, and builder demand can change everything.
Knowledge Hub
Educational articles for landowners, builders, and anyone trying to make an informed decision about a vacant lot.
Selling Land
A calm, step-by-step way to think about a land sale when you have never done one before.
Coming soonThe questions worth asking before you sign — price, contingencies, timeline, and closing costs.
Coming soonThe zoning, access, utility, and demand factors that quietly decide how long a lot takes to move.
Coming soonA practical first step: what to gather, who to call, and how to think about your options.
Coming soonHow unpaid taxes, liens, and county timelines can shape what a sale actually looks like.
Coming soonWhat infill lots are, why they can be valuable, and what to gather before you talk to anyone.
Read article Selling LandPermitted uses, density, setbacks, overlays, and variances — in plain English.
Read article Selling LandBundled lots, scattered parcels, and builder packages — how to think about selling more than one at a time.
Read articleBuilder Lot Criteria
Location, zoning, dimensions, utilities, access, setbacks, floodplain, wetlands, topography, and price.
Read article Builder Lot CriteriaSpeed, certainty, margin, zoning, utilities, comps, demand, and risk — from a builder's perspective.
Read article Builder Lot CriteriaWater, sewer, septic, power, gas, stormwater, tap fees, and capacity.
Read articleHow dimensions and setbacks decide which floor plans actually fit.
Coming soonLegal access, physical access, shared driveways, and why access affects value.
Read articleLand cost as a percentage of finished value, and why that math shapes offers.
Coming soonEnvironmental & Development
Delineations, buffers, and how wetlands can reshape the buildable area.
Read article Environmental & DevelopmentHow habitat overlays and protected species can trigger surveys and seasonal work windows.
Read article Environmental & DevelopmentFEMA designations, insurance, elevation requirements, and buyer perception.
Read articleRegional examples of species issues that quietly change land economics.
Coming soonNatural features that can be an asset, a constraint, or both — depending on the project.
Coming soonThe site conditions that turn a low sticker price into a costly surprise.
Read articleDue Diligence
A plain-English walkthrough of what a careful buyer verifies before closing.
Read articleWhere public information lives and how to pull it in a few minutes.
Coming soonUtility easements, access easements, and how they shape what can be built.
Coming soonCommon title exceptions and why a clean title review matters early.
Coming soonHow a survey turns a parcel into a real, measurable building envelope.
Coming soonA short list that surfaces most of the issues that derail land transactions.
Coming soonInfill Lots
A working definition and why the term shows up in almost every builder conversation.
Coming soonA calm guide to selling an infill lot — what to gather and what buyers look at.
Read articleAging utilities, non-conforming lots, and the paperwork that comes with them.
Coming soonHow tap fees, capacity, and connection points shape an infill deal.
Coming soonHow to think about what actually fits on a compact urban lot.
Coming soonThe demand drivers that make the right infill lot a priority buy.
Coming soonPut It Into Practice
Submit the property for review, or tell us what you're buying. We connect landowners with real demand and help builders find off-market lots that fit their criteria — subject to due diligence.
Disclaimer
Educational content is general information only. Land development rules vary by city, county, state, parcel, and project. Always consult qualified legal, title, engineering, surveying, environmental, and local permitting professionals before relying on any land decision.