Rio Grande river valley, world-famous Marfa, Big Bend's doorstep — and some of the most dramatic landscape in North America.
View Available LotsThere are counties in Texas, and then there is Presidio County — a place so cinematic, so layered with history and landscape, that it defies easy description. Covering 3,856 square miles of Trans-Pecos West Texas along the Rio Grande, Presidio County is home to fewer than 6,200 people spread across an area larger than some New England states. Its county seat, Marfa, has become internationally famous as an art destination and cultural landmark. Its largest city, Presidio, is a vibrant border town on the Rio Grande across from Ojinaga, Chihuahua.
The county was created in 1850 from Bexar County and organized in 1875. At its original organization, Presidio County was the largest county in the United States at 12,000 square miles — it has since been carved into several neighboring counties. It is named for Presidio del Norte, an eighteenth-century Spanish fort at the confluence of the Rio Grande and the Rio Conchos — a strategic crossing point known as La Junta de los Ríos that has been continuously inhabited for over a thousand years.
The history here is ancient and layered. Paleo-Indians were hunting and gathering in the Trans-Pecos thousands of years before European contact. The Suma-Jumano and various other tribes lived at La Junta, where Father Nicolás López celebrated the first Christmas Mass in Texas in 1683. In 1832, José Ygnacio Ronquillo established the county's first Anglo settlement on Cibolo Creek. By 1848, frontiersman Ben Leaton had built Fort Leaton — sometimes called the largest adobe structure in Texas — as a trading post and private fortress on the Rio Grande. That structure still stands today as Fort Leaton State Historic Site, a few miles east of Presidio.
In 1880, silver was discovered in the Chinati Mountains, leading to the opening of the Shafter Mine — which produced over 32.6 million ounces of silver between 1883 and 1942. Marfa was established in 1883 as a railroad water stop and became the county seat in 1885. The railroad brought ranchers, the 1910s brought Mexican Revolution refugees, and the 1970s brought Donald Judd, the minimalist artist who moved to Marfa and quietly transformed it into one of the most unusual art towns on earth. Today, the Chinati Foundation draws thousands of visitors annually — and has made Presidio County famous in ways its early ranchers never could have predicted.
Presidio County is defined by three distinct landscape zones, each dramatically different from the next. The first is the Rio Grande valley — a low, warm floodplain at roughly 2,591 feet elevation where the town of Presidio sits, where irrigated cotton and onion farming continues a tradition hundreds of years old, and where the river carves its way through volcanic rimrock and canyon walls. This is where our River Lots offer genuine Rio Grande frontage — one of the rarest and most sought-after landholding types in Texas.
Moving north from the river, the terrain rises into the Chinati Mountains and the high desert basin. The Chinati range tops out above 7,700 feet and forms one of the most dramatic skylines in the state — visible from dozens of miles away as a jagged, purple-hued wall above the desert floor. Between the mountains and the river lies a mix of bajada, volcanic mesa, and grassland that has supported cattle ranching for over 150 years.
Further north, Marfa sits on the Marfa Plateau at 4,688 feet — high enough that temperatures are significantly cooler than the valley and more pleasant in summer. The plateau is wide, flat, and windswept — classic high desert grassland under a genuinely enormous sky. This is where the famous Marfa Lights appear along Highway 90, an unexplained atmospheric phenomenon that has drawn curious visitors for generations.
Presidio County's climate varies significantly by elevation. The town of Presidio on the Rio Grande is one of the hottest spots in the United States in summer — regularly recording temperatures above 110°F on peak days in July and August. However, the elevation-cooled regions around Marfa and the mountain zones are dramatically different — summer highs in the 80s to low 90s with cool evenings.
For buyers considering the valley lots (River Lots and Road Lots near Presidio), the climate is best described as Chihuahuan Desert at low elevation: hot summers, mild winters, very low humidity, and minimal rainfall. The shoulder seasons — October through May — are stunning: warm, clear days with cool nights and almost no rain.
| Season | Presidio Valley | Marfa Plateau | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Winter (Dec–Feb) | 65°F / 38°F | 55°F / 26°F | Mild in valley; cool at elevation; rare freezes |
| Spring (Mar–May) | 80°F / 52°F | 70°F / 44°F | Beautiful and clear; Presidio heats up in May |
| Summer (Jun–Aug) | 100–110°F+ | 88°F / 58°F | Valley is hot; Marfa plateau stays comfortable |
| Fall (Sep–Nov) | 85°F / 55°F | 72°F / 40°F | Outstanding in both zones; monsoon ends Sept |
Annual rainfall is sparse across the county — roughly 9–12 inches in most areas — arriving primarily during the summer monsoon season from July through September. The rest of the year is reliably dry, with over 280 sunny days annually. For solar energy, this is near-ideal territory: excellent solar resource, low humidity, and high solar irradiance throughout the year.
Presidio County is remote, but it's connected — and the communities you'll find here are more interesting than most suburban towns ten times their size.
The largest city in the county (pop. ~4,000+) sits directly on the Rio Grande. It has a full-service grocery, gas stations, medical clinic, restaurants, schools, and a port of entry into Ojinaga, Mexico. Daily border crossings make Presidio a genuine bi-national community.
Internationally known art town and cultural destination. Home to the Chinati Foundation, Hotel Paisano, dozens of galleries, excellent restaurants, a farmers market, and a fiercely independent community. Marfa punches well above its population (~1,800) in every way imaginable.
Just across the county line to the east, Fort Davis is home to Fort Davis National Historic Site, McDonald Observatory (world-class stargazing programs), and Davis Mountains State Park. A charming, authentic Texas mountain town about 25 miles northeast of Marfa.
The largest state park in Texas (311,000+ acres) borders Presidio County directly to the east along the Rio Grande. Hiking, backpacking, river access, hot springs, and extraordinary canyon scenery — all within easy reach of Presidio County lots.
Alpine (Brewster County, ~26 miles east of Marfa) is the largest city in the Big Bend region, home to Sul Ross State University, a regional hospital, a growing restaurant and brewery scene, and a full range of shopping. It's the practical supply hub for Presidio County residents. El Paso is approximately 220 miles northwest — a longer drive, but manageable for major purchases and the international airport.
And then there's Ojinaga, Chihuahua — directly across the Rio Grande from Presidio. This Mexican city of 25,000+ offers affordable dining, shopping, dentistry, and an immersive cross-border experience that most American landowners never get to have. It's a remarkable cultural resource sitting at your doorstep.
Power lines run near the lot sections, served through the region's rural electric cooperative. Grid connection is feasible for lots close to road infrastructure. As with all remote West Texas properties, many buyers opt for off-grid solar systems — the solar resource in Presidio County is exceptional, with extremely high solar irradiance and minimal cloud cover for most of the year. A well-designed 5–10 kW system with battery storage can comfortably power a modern home or cabin.
Water sourcing varies by lot type and location. River Lots with Rio Grande frontage have access to surface water, though agricultural use requires state water rights. Most buyers in this area rely on one or more of these approaches: (1) private water well — depth varies, but the Rio Grande valley alluvial aquifer is accessible in many locations near the river; (2) hauled water stored in a cistern or tank; (3) rainwater harvesting, which is productive during the monsoon season. The town of Presidio has municipal water service for town lots; rural properties manage independently.
Conventional septic systems are standard for rural Presidio County properties. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) standards apply. Given the generally well-draining desert soils in the region, conventional tank-and-drain-field systems work well on most lots. Some buyers near the river use composting toilet systems to minimize water use and simplify waste management.
Texas's lack of a state income tax is one of the most significant financial advantages of owning land here. In Presidio County, the effective property tax rate is approximately 1.49% of appraised value — one of the lower rates in the Trans-Pecos region and well below the national median of 1.02%... wait, actually below many counties nationally.
In practical terms: a 10-acre River Lot purchased for $7,500 would be appraised at or near that value by the Presidio County Appraisal District. At 1.49%, the estimated annual property tax is approximately $112 per year — under $10 a month. For Road Lots at $5,600, annual taxes would be roughly $83. North Lots at $4,600 would generate approximately $68 per year in property taxes. These numbers are genuinely low by any measure.
Texas also offers an agricultural or wildlife exemption for qualifying properties. Landowners who use their property for grazing, hunting, or wildlife management — and meet the state's requirements — can have their land appraised at its productivity value rather than market value, which can dramatically reduce annual tax obligations. Many rural Presidio County landowners take advantage of this. Contact the Presidio County Appraisal District at (432) 729-3431 for specifics.
Presidio County is a birder's paradise, a hunter's destination, and a landscape photographer's dream. The combination of river corridor, desert scrub, and mountain terrain creates extraordinary habitat diversity — and wildlife to match.
People who discover Presidio County tend to be changed by it. There's something about this place — the scale of the landscape, the clarity of the light, the way the Rio Grande has carved through volcanic rock over millions of years — that gets under your skin. Here's why buyers choose Presidio County land:
River Lots provide direct access to one of North America's great rivers. Rio Grande frontage is rare, increasingly valuable, and deeply meaningful — few people in the world own land on this legendary river.
Presidio County isn't just desert. It's Marfa's art world, Big Bend's wild canyons, a living border culture, and one of the most distinct regional identities in America. This is a place with a soul.
With River Lots ($7,500), Road Lots ($5,600), and North Lots ($4,600), buyers can choose their budget and their landscape. There's an entry point for everyone who wants to own land here.
Presidio County land — especially near Marfa and along the Rio Grande — has been appreciating as urban buyers, artists, and remote workers discover the Big Bend region. The trend toward off-grid living and wide-open spaces is not slowing down.
And of course, there's the practical side: no credit check financing, owner-held notes, 10-acre parcels, power nearby, and annual property taxes well under $200. The barriers to owning land in Presidio County are lower than almost anywhere in Texas. The land itself is extraordinary. That combination doesn't last forever.
~25 lots available in Presidio County — three distinct types to fit every budget.
10 acres each
Power nearby
No credit check financing
Rio Grande frontage on River Lots
No HOA or deed restrictions
| County Seat | Marfa |
| Largest City | Presidio |
| Founded | 1850 |
| Population | ~6,131 |
| Area | 3,856 sq mi |
| Time Zone | Central (CT) |
| Marfa Elevation | 4,688 ft |
| Presidio Elevation | 2,591 ft |
| Property Tax | ~1.49% |
| State Income Tax | None |
Marfa has been called "the most unlikely art town in America." It's a county seat with 1,800 residents, world-class restaurants, galleries showing internationally recognized artists, and visitors from New York, London, and Tokyo. Owning land in Presidio County puts you in the orbit of something genuinely unusual.
~25 lots available in Presidio County starting at $4,600. River Lots, Road Lots, and North Lots — all 10 acres, all with owner financing and no credit check.