
Reviewed June 2026 by the FrontierAcre team
A plain, step by step guide to selling raw or vacant land yourself: pricing it, the paperwork, the closing, and the scams to avoid. No email wall.
Not sure what your land is worth, or what it costs you to keep each year? Estimate both in a few seconds.
| Method | Time to close | Cost to you | Price you get | Certainty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct cash buyer | Days to about two weeks | No commission and no closing costs | Below full market, in exchange for speed | High, cash with no financing to fall through |
| Agent or MLS listing | Often three to six months | About 5 to 6 percent commission plus closing costs | Highest potential, with full market exposure | Lower, deals can fall through on financing |
| For sale by owner | Variable, often months | No listing commission, but often a buyer agent fee and attorney costs | Market if priced right, though FSBO sells for less on average | Lower, the work and the risk are yours |
| Auction | About 30 to 45 days | A marketing fee plus a buyer premium of 5 to 10 percent | Uncertain, set by the bidders on the day | Medium, a set date but no floor unless reserved |
Commission reflects the 2026 national average real estate commission of about 5.7 percent (Clever, from National Association of Realtors data). Auction premiums and timelines are from industry sources. A direct cash sale trades top price for speed, certainty, and no fees, which is why owners who want a parcel gone tend to choose it.
Selling land by owner is not hard, but it is different from selling a house, and the mistakes are different too. This guide walks the whole process, from pricing to a safe closing, so you can sell raw or vacant land yourself without losing money to commission or to a scam.
A house sells to retail buyers with mortgages, staged and photographed and listed on the MLS. Raw land has none of that. There are far fewer buyers, lenders rarely finance vacant land, and most agents put raw land at the bottom of the pile because the commission on a low priced lot is small. That is why land routinely sits on the market for six to eighteen months, and why selling it yourself, or to a direct cash buyer, is often the better route.
Pricing is where owners lose the most. Do not start from what you paid or what you wish it was worth. Start from recent sales of comparable parcels near yours, similar in size, access and zoning. Your county's property records and land sale data show what actually closed nearby.
Then adjust for the things that move land value the most: legal road access, available utilities, zoning and buildability, parcel size, and whether any of it is wetland or floodplain. National USDA averages, around $4,350 per acre for farm real estate, are only a rough baseline. Our per acre value guide breaks the figures down by state.
You do not need much to sell land by owner, but having these ready makes the sale smooth:
The recorded deed showing you own the parcel. The parcel number (APN) and legal description. Any survey or plat you have, though it is not required. Any prior title policy, and details of liens, back taxes or HOA dues.
You do not need to clear back taxes or liens before selling. They are normally settled at closing out of the sale proceeds. See selling land with back taxes for how that works.
You have two honest options. List it yourself on land marketplaces and for sale by owner sites, and handle the inquiries, the contract and the closing. Or sell directly to a cash land buyer, who makes a written offer and runs the closing for you. Listing yourself may fetch a higher headline price if you have the time and patience; selling direct is faster, costs nothing, and removes months of carrying costs. Our guide to selling land without a realtor goes deeper on the direct route.
However you find your buyer, always close through a licensed, independent title company or closing attorney. They run a title search to confirm clear ownership, hold the buyer's money in escrow, prepare the new deed, and record it. Your proceeds are released only when the deed is recorded. This single step is what makes a sale to a buyer you found online safe.
Land owners are targeted by a handful of predictable scams. Two rules defeat almost all of them:
Never pay an up front fee or wire money to release your sale proceeds. A real buyer pays you at closing. Money flows to you, never from you. Never skip the title company. Any buyer who wants to close privately, off the books, or refuses escrow is a buyer to walk away from.
Pricing, the direct route, and high value exits.
The questions owners ask most when selling land themselves.
Yes. No law requires an agent to sell land, and for vacant or rural parcels selling without one is often faster and cheaper. The one safeguard that matters is closing through a licensed, independent title company or closing attorney.
Start with recent sales of comparable parcels near yours from your county records or a land data source, then adjust for size, access, zoning and utilities. National USDA averages are only a baseline. The quickest way to test a number is to get a written cash offer.
At minimum the recorded deed and the parcel number, plus any survey, plat or prior title policy you have, and details of any liens or back taxes. The title company handles the fresh title search and the new deed.
A licensed title company or attorney runs a title search, holds the buyer's funds in escrow, prepares the deed, and records it. Your money is released only once the deed is recorded, which is what keeps the sale safe.
Never pay an up front fee or wire money to release your proceeds, and never deal with a buyer who refuses to use a licensed title company. A real buyer pays you at closing through escrow, not the other way around.
Answer a few quick questions, add a photo or plat if you have one, and we come back with a written, no obligation cash offer, usually within one working day.
A few quick steps. Parcel, size, location, a photo if you have one, then where to send the offer.