Buy land at the heart of the South. Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma offer an exceptional variety of land for sale, from sprawling cattle pastures and productive timberland to rich hunting grounds and prime development sites. This tri-state region is known for its diverse landscapes, including East Texas piney woods, the fertile river bottoms of Louisiana, and the wide-open plains of Oklahoma. Each area presents unique opportunities for landownership, shaped by distinct natural features, climates, and land uses.

Rural properties in Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma cater to a wide range of ownership goals. Many buyers are drawn to recreational land for hunting, fishing, and outdoor retreats, while others seek working farms, ranches, or timber investments. For those looking to build, the region also offers development-ready acreage near thriving communities and growing economic hubs. Whether you’re interested in a secluded hunting tract, an income-producing property, or a piece of land to build your dream home, the South has something to offer.

At Homeland Properties, we specialize in connecting buyers with land that fits their lifestyle and investment vision. Browse our land for sale across Texas, Louisiana, and Oklahoma, and let us help you find the perfect property.

Frequently Asked Questions

What kind of properties does Homeland Properties sell?

Homeland Properties covers a wide range of rural and semi-rural land across Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana. You can find:

  • Working cattle ranches
  • Hunting tracts and recreational land
  • Country homes and horse properties
  • Waterfront acreage and bare undeveloped lots
  • Commercial land, mineral rights, and live water farms

The three-state coverage is intentional. These markets sit right next to each other and buyers often want to compare what their money gets them in South Texas versus southern Oklahoma or northwest Louisiana before they commit.

For example, a good deer hunting ranch in Bryan County, Oklahoma costs considerably less per acre than a comparable setup in North Texas. Homeland Properties helps buyers understand that gap so they are not paying a “Texas address premium” when it does not matter to them. The agents know the local regulations, water law differences, and tax structures in each state rather than treating all three as the same market.

How do land prices compare across Texas, Oklahoma, and Louisiana?

  • Texas: This is the most expensive of the three states in almost every category, mostly because the demand is higher. The DFW, Austin, Houston, and San Antonio metro areas push millions of buyers into the rural land market, keeping prices elevated even on properties hours from the city.
  • Oklahoma: Offers noticeably lower prices. A 500-acre hunting and cattle property in the Cross Timbers of eastern Oklahoma might run 1.5 to 3 million dollars, while a functionally similar property in North Texas could be 2.5 to 5 million dollars.
  • Louisiana: Sits somewhere in between depending on the property type. Farmland in the northeast delta parishes is priced on productivity and competes favorably with Texas crop ground. Coastal marsh in Cameron or Vermilion Parish is a different product entirely, priced on waterfowl hunting quality and oil field proximity.

Buyers who are flexible on state often find the best value in Oklahoma or Louisiana when they step back from brand loyalty to the Texas label.

Does Homeland Properties handle off-market sales?

Yes, and it is a meaningful part of how they operate. A lot of rural landowners prefer not to put their property on public listing sites for several reasons:

  • Some want to avoid alerting neighbors that they are thinking about selling.
  • Others want to qualify buyers before showing the place.

Homeland Properties maintains relationships with landowners across all three states who are open to the right offer but not actively listing. Buyers who communicate their specific needs upfront give the agents something to work with when one of those opportunities comes up.

This is particularly useful in South Texas, where quality sendero ranches with documented deer genetics almost never sit on the open market long enough for most buyers to react, and in the Louisiana coastal parishes, where established duck hunting camp properties rarely advertise publicly.