Hudspeth County, Texas

Your complete guide to West Texas desert living — where the mountains meet the Chihuahuan Desert and the sky goes on forever.

View Available Lots
4,572
Square Miles
3,432
Population (2020)
~90 mi
From El Paso
300+
Sunny Days / Year

County Overview & History

Hudspeth County sits in the far western reaches of Texas, tucked between the Rio Grande to the south and the rugged Guadalupe and Sierra Diablo mountain ranges to the north. It is one of nine counties that make up the Trans-Pecos region — one of America's last truly wild frontiers. Spanning 4,572 square miles with a population of just 3,432 people (2020 census), Hudspeth County offers something increasingly rare: genuine solitude, untouched land, and wide-open skies.

The county was created in 1917 and named for Claude Benton Hudspeth, a state senator and U.S. Representative from El Paso who was instrumental in the region's early development. Its county seat, Sierra Blanca, sits along Interstate 10 approximately 90 miles east of El Paso — a small, authentic West Texas town where the old ranch culture still runs deep.

Long before county lines existed, this land was home to the Jornada Mogollón people, who farmed the Rio Grande floodplain as early as 900–1350 AD, leaving behind pictographs still visible in the region today. The Mescalero Apache followed, using the area for generations until conflicts with U.S. Army forces in the late 1800s pushed them from the land. The 1858 establishment of Fort Quitman and the Butterfield Overland Mail route put Hudspeth on the map as a critical passage for travelers heading to California — setting the stage for the ranching culture that still defines the county today.

The county's rich mineral history is reflected in its soil: barite, copper, fluorspar, gold, gypsum, limestone, salt, silver, and zinc have all been extracted from Hudspeth's rugged terrain. The famous Salt Lakes — known as the Salt Flats — were so valuable they sparked the Salt War of 1877, one of the most dramatic conflicts of the Texas frontier era.

Historical Note: The San Antonio-El Paso Trail, surveyed in 1848 and later served by the Butterfield Overland Mail, ran directly through what is now Hudspeth County. Stagecoach passengers could cross this land in a mere day — today you can own 10 acres of it for less than $6,000.

Geography & Terrain

Hudspeth County is a landscape that commands attention. The southern portion along the Rio Grande is classic Chihuahuan Desert — vast, flat bajadas covered in creosote, ocotillo, and desert grasses, punctuated by dramatic volcanic formations. Moving north and east, the terrain rises into the sky island mountains: the Quitman Mountains, the Sierra Diablo range, and the southern flanks of the Guadalupe Mountains, which top out at Guadalupe Peak — the highest point in Texas at 8,751 feet.

Our lots sit in the Section 30 and Section 29, Block 45½ PSL (Public School Land) survey areas — 10 acres each of genuine West Texas desert landscape, positioned where the bajada opens up and mountain panoramas stretch in every direction. On a clear day (which is most days), you can see mountain ranges 40 to 60 miles away. The elevation in this area typically ranges from 3,500 to 4,200 feet above sea level, giving you cooler temperatures than the valley floor and spectacular visibility.

The terrain is relatively flat to gently rolling, making it workable for building, parking an RV, or setting up a camp. Native vegetation includes lechuguilla, sotol, creosote, desert grasses, and scrubby desert shrubs — the honest, spare beauty of the Chihuahuan Desert. You won't find crowds here. You will find silence, stars, and sunsets that make you forget everything else.

Climate & Weather

The climate in Hudspeth County is classified as subtropical, arid, warm, and dry — ideal for those who love sunshine and want to escape humidity. The Texas Almanac records an average minimum temperature of 29°F in January and an average high of 94°F in July. Spring and fall are spectacular: warm, clear days with comfortable evenings and almost no rain.

Season Avg High Avg Low Notes
Winter (Dec–Feb) 57–62°F 28–35°F Clear, crisp days; light freeze possible at night
Spring (Mar–May) 70–85°F 45–58°F Beautiful and mild; occasional wind
Summer (Jun–Aug) 90–96°F 65–72°F Hot days; monsoon rains July–August
Fall (Sep–Nov) 70–85°F 45–58°F Best time of year; crisp, sunny, stunning

Annual rainfall averages just 10–12 inches, most of which arrives during the summer monsoon season (July–September). The rest of the year is gloriously dry. Hudspeth County sits on Mountain Time — one of only two Texas counties that do — which means sunsets arrive late in summer, giving you long, golden evenings to enjoy the landscape.

For stargazers, Hudspeth County is a dream. With virtually no light pollution and low humidity, the Milky Way arches overhead with a clarity that city dwellers simply don't believe until they see it.

Nearby Towns & Amenities

Hudspeth County is remote — that's part of what makes it valuable. But it's not isolated. Here's what you'll find nearby:

Sierra Blanca (County Seat)

The county seat sits on I-10, about 90 miles east of El Paso. It has a county courthouse, post office, and basic services. The town retains the authentic character of old West Texas.

Fort Hancock (~55 mi from El Paso)

A small Rio Grande community with a post office, school, and convenience stores. The international bridge at Fort Hancock connects to Guadalupe Bravo, Mexico, and sees daily cross-border traffic.

El Paso (~90 miles west)

The nearest major city (pop. 700,000+). Full shopping, hospitals, airports, restaurants, and everything a city offers. About a 90-minute drive via I-10 — doable for supply runs.

Guadalupe Mountains NP

One of the least-visited national parks in the U.S. sits just north of Hudspeth County. Hiking, backcountry camping, and some of the best fossil reefs in the world — all within easy reach.

Dell City, a small agricultural community about 60 miles north, is known for its Guadalupe Valley irrigation district and provides another supply option. Van Horn (Culberson County, just east) offers a full-service truck stop, motels, restaurants, and basic hardware — and happens to be near Jeff Bezos's Blue Origin launch facility, if that tells you anything about who's quietly investing in this region.

Utilities: Power, Water & Septic

One of the biggest questions buyers ask about remote land is: can I actually build and live here? The answer in Hudspeth County is yes — with planning.

Electric Power

Power lines run near or along the lot sections, served by the El Paso Electric cooperative. Grid connection is possible, though rural service extension costs vary. Many buyers in this area choose to supplement or go fully off-grid with solar — with 300+ sunny days per year, a properly sized solar array with battery storage can power a comfortable off-grid home or cabin.

Water

There is no public water service to these lots. Water is typically sourced one of three ways: (1) a private water well, which requires drilling (depth varies by location, typically 200–500+ feet in this area), (2) hauling water and storing in a cistern or tank, or (3) rainwater collection combined with storage — viable given the monsoon season. Many off-grid landowners in West Texas use a combination approach.

Septic

Standard septic systems (tank and drain field) are the norm for rural West Texas. Hudspeth County has no strict septic requirements beyond basic Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) standards. The sandy, loamy desert soil drains well, making conventional septic systems generally feasible on these lots.

Property Taxes

Texas has no state income tax, which is a significant advantage for landowners and residents alike. Property taxes are assessed at the county level. In Hudspeth County, the effective property tax rate is approximately 1.77% of appraised value.

Here's what that means in practice: a 10-acre lot purchased for $5,800 would likely be appraised by the Hudspeth County Appraisal District at or near that purchase price. At 1.77%, the estimated annual property tax would be approximately $103 per year — less than $9 a month. For vacant rural land, annual taxes are genuinely minimal. The Hudspeth County Appraisal District can be reached at (915) 369-4118.

Additionally, agricultural and wildlife exemptions are available in Texas for qualifying properties, which can substantially reduce appraised values and tax obligations for eligible landowners who use their property for ranching, hunting, or wildlife management.

Wildlife & Recreation

For hunters, hikers, star-gazers, and anyone who simply wants to be outside in a landscape that hasn't been tamed, Hudspeth County is one of the most compelling destinations in Texas. The Chihuahuan Desert is far more biologically diverse than most people realize.

Wildlife You'll Encounter

  • Mule Deer — excellent population throughout the county
  • Pronghorn Antelope — the fastest animal in North America, common in open flats
  • Javelinas (Collared Peccary) — roam in small family groups
  • Coyotes — vocal and plentiful at dawn and dusk
  • Dove & Quail — excellent bird hunting in season
  • Golden Eagles & Hawks — spectacular raptors overhead
  • Roadrunners — the iconic West Texas bird, faster than you'd expect
  • Desert Tortoises & Lizards — fascinating reptile diversity

Recreational Activities

Your 10 acres is a launching pad, not a destination limit. From Hudspeth County lots, you're within easy reach of:

  • Guadalupe Mountains National Park — 86,000 acres of wilderness with 80+ miles of trails
  • Hueco Tanks State Park & Historic Site — world-class rock climbing and ancient pictographs
  • El Paso's cultural scene — art museums, the UTEP campus, world-class Mexican food just 90 minutes away
  • Off-road & ATV riding — vast open desert with no congestion
  • Stargazing & astronomy — among the darkest skies in the continental U.S.
  • Photography & painting — the light in West Texas is unlike anywhere else on earth

Why Buy Land in Hudspeth County?

There's a reason people keep discovering West Texas. Hudspeth County offers something the modern world is running low on: space, silence, and sky. Here's why buyers choose it over more developed regions:

Unbeatable Price Per Acre

At $480–$580 per acre, Hudspeth County land is priced at a tiny fraction of comparable terrain in other states. You get 10 full acres — roughly 8.5 football fields — for less than the cost of a used car.

Land Appreciates

West Texas land values have been rising steadily. Remote, undeveloped land that seemed worthless a decade ago now commands serious interest as urban buyers seek escape routes and off-grid options.

No HOA, No Restrictions

No homeowners association. No deed restrictions limiting what you can build or how you can use your property. Park your RV, build a cabin, set up a solar array — it's your land.

No Credit Check Financing

We offer owner financing — no banks, no credit checks. A simple down payment and monthly installments make land ownership accessible to buyers who'd be turned away by traditional lenders.

The Bottom Line: For the price of a weekend vacation, you can make a down payment on 10 acres of West Texas. The payments are lower than a phone bill. And unlike a vacation, the land doesn't depreciate.

Available Lots

~30 lots available in two sections (Section 30 & Section 29, Block 45½ PSL)

Road Lots $5,800
Interior Lots $4,800

10 acres each
Power nearby
No credit check financing
No HOA or deed restrictions

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Hudspeth County Quick Facts

County SeatSierra Blanca
Founded1917
Population~3,432
Area4,572 sq mi
Time ZoneMountain (MT)
Nearest CityEl Paso (~90 mi)
Avg Rainfall~11 inches/yr
Property Tax~1.77%
State Income TaxNone

Frequently Asked Questions — Hudspeth County

Sierra Blanca, the county seat, is approximately 90 miles east of El Paso via Interstate 10 — about a 1-hour drive. Fort Hancock, the largest community in the county, is closer — roughly 55 miles east of downtown El Paso. The lots in Sections 30 and 29 are accessible from I-10, making El Paso a practical day-trip city for supplies, medical care, and entertainment.

Road Lots front on a county or section road and are the easiest to access — no special vehicle required. Interior Lots may require a high-clearance vehicle or truck for access via caliche or dirt roads, especially after rains. Before visiting, contact us for current access conditions and specific lot directions.

Yes. Hudspeth County has minimal zoning and few restrictions on land use. Many off-grid homesteaders, RV dwellers, and cabin builders choose exactly this type of remote West Texas land for permanent or part-time residence. You'll need to address water (well or cistern), power (grid connection or solar), and septic independently — but that's what makes the off-grid lifestyle achievable here.

Absolutely. As a landowner in Hudspeth County, you can hunt on your own property with a valid Texas hunting license. The county has excellent populations of mule deer, javelinas, pronghorn antelope, dove, and quail. Some buyers purchase multiple adjacent lots specifically to create a private hunting retreat.

We offer simple owner financing — no bank approval, no credit check. A down payment secures your lot, and the remaining balance is financed directly through us with monthly payments for up to 12 months. Contact us for current terms, or visit our financing page for more details. The process is straightforward: find your lot, make a down payment, and start enjoying your West Texas land.

Winter in Hudspeth County is mild compared to most of the U.S. Average daytime highs from December through February range from 57–63°F, with nighttime lows occasionally dipping to the upper 20s°F. Snowfall is rare and light when it occurs — usually melting by mid-morning. Many buyers use their land year-round as a winter escape from colder northern climates.

Yes! Visit our full FAQ page for more answers covering financing, deed transfer, access, utilities, and more. You can also contact us directly — we're happy to answer any specific questions about your lot of interest.

Ready to Own a Piece of West Texas?

~30 lots available in Hudspeth County starting at $4,800. Owner financing, no credit check. The land is waiting.