
Reviewed June 2026 by the FrontierAcre team
What to check before you buy off grid land: water, septic, power, legal access, zoning and connectivity, the six things that decide whether the parcel is actually usable.
Off grid land is a parcel with no connection to public utilities. No municipal water, no sewer, often no power line at the road. People buy it for privacy, self sufficiency, hunting and recreation, or simply because it is cheap. It can be a great buy, but the price reflects what is not there, and a few checks decide whether the land is genuinely usable.
The first question on any off grid parcel. Can you drill a well, and how deep and expensive will it be? Ask neighbours and the county about well depths in the area. Rainwater catchment and hauling are fallbacks, but a viable well is what makes land livable.
With no sewer, you need a septic system, and that needs soil that drains. A perc test measures it. Land that fails a perc test may not be buildable for a conventional home, so confirm it before you count on building.
Either you connect to a power line, which can cost a lot per mile to run, or you go solar with batteries and a generator backup. Price both. Solar has gotten cheap, but the install is still a real number to budget.
The single most overlooked issue. Can you legally reach the parcel on a public road or a recorded easement, or is it landlocked behind someone else's land? No legal access can make a parcel nearly worthless and very hard to resell.
Check with the county what you are allowed to do: build, put a cabin or an RV, live full time, run livestock. Zoning and building rules vary widely, and some counties restrict full time off grid living.
Cell signal and internet matter if you will spend real time there or work remotely. So does whether the access road is maintained or a seasonal dirt track you cannot reach in winter.
It can be, when the water, access and septic check out and the price reflects the work involved. The cheapest land in the country is overwhelmingly remote off grid acreage in the West, which is exactly why it is cheap. See where in our cheapest counties to buy land data.
Off grid land is a parcel with no connection to public utilities: no municipal water or sewer and often no power line. You supply your own water, waste and power, usually through a well, septic system and solar.
Often yes, but it depends on a passing perc test for septic, legal road access, and the county's zoning and building rules. Confirm all three before assuming you can build a home.
Usually a drilled well. Ask the county and neighbours about typical well depths and cost in the area. Rainwater catchment and hauling water are fallbacks but a viable well is what makes a parcel livable.
Because the price reflects what is missing: no utilities, sometimes no easy access, and remote locations. The cheapest counties in America are overwhelmingly remote western land for exactly this reason.
Legal access. A landlocked parcel with no public road or recorded easement can be nearly impossible to use or resell. Always confirm legal access before you buy.
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