Buying a Ranch in Burnet County, Texas

What Serious Buyers Need To Know

1. Water Is Everything

In Central Texas ranch property, water determines value.

Ask:

  • Is there a well? How deep?
  • What is the production rate (GPM)?
  • Are there stock tanks? Are they seasonal?
  • Is the property in a groundwater district?

A ranch without dependable water isn’t a ranch — it’s scenery.


2. Understand the Ag Exemption

Most ranch land for sale in Burnet County carries an agricultural exemption.

You need to know:

  • Is it currently qualified?
  • How many animal units are required?
  • Has the use been consistent for the past 5 years?

Losing an ag exemption can dramatically increase property taxes. That’s not a small detail.


3. Grazing and Carrying Capacity

This isn’t East Texas. Grass matters.

Burnet County properties vary from:

  • Improved pasture
  • Native grass
  • Heavy cedar cover
  • Rockier hill country terrain

Carrying capacity depends on:

  • Rainfall
  • Soil type
  • Brush management history

If you plan to run cattle, the land must support it.


4. Access and Improvements

Buyers often focus on acreage — but access drives long-term value.

Look for:

  • Paved frontage vs. deeded easement
  • Fencing condition
  • Working pens or barns
  • Power access

Good improvements save real money.


5. Know the Market

The market for Texas Hill Country ranch property is steady, but quality tracts move quickly.

Well-watered, well-located ranches near:

  • Burnet
  • Bertram
  • Lampasas line
  • Buchanan Lake area

… tend to draw strong buyer interest.


If you’re looking at ranch land for sale in Burnet County, don’t just buy acreage. Buy usability.

Lem Lewis

210-275-3551

lem@theranchbroker.com

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