Horse Property for Sale in Granbury, Texas

Granbury is the Hood County seat 30 miles southwest of Fort Worth — a historic lake-town community along the Brazos River with a preserved 1890s courthouse square, Lake Granbury recreation, and a working horse-and-cattle country that sits at the confluence of the Weatherford cutting corridor to the north and the Stephenville rodeo country to the southwest. Properties range from $550,000 ranchettes to $5 million-plus legacy estates, with sandy loam coastal pastures and established equestrian infrastructure defining the market.

Horse Property Opportunities in Granbury, TX

Granbury offers a range of horse property configurations from starter ranchettes to premier equestrian estates. The market typically presents properties in the following general categories.

Typical Horse Properties in Granbury

Hood County Starter Horse Properties

  • 5–10 acres
  • 3–4 bedroom homes or barndominiums
  • Small arenas and 3–4 stall barns
  • Sandy loam with coastal Bermuda pastures
Typical price range: $550K – $1M

Established Horse Properties

  • 10–30 acres
  • Covered arenas with roping boxes
  • 5–8 stall barns
  • Trinity aquifer wells, mineral rights inquiries standard
Typical price range: $950K – $2.5M

Legacy Ranches and Brazos-Adjacent Estates

  • 30–100+ acres
  • Brazos River or Lake Granbury frontage on select parcels
  • Full working infrastructure
  • Multiple homes, barns, and event-capable facilities
Typical price range: $2.5M – $5M+

Find Available Horse Property in Granbury

Inventory changes frequently in Granbury. For current available horse properties, connect with a local horse property agent who specializes in this market.

Where Horse Properties Are Located in Granbury

Granbury Town Square and Lake Corridor

The historic 1890s courthouse square anchors Granbury's downtown, with Lake Granbury extending south along the Brazos River. Properties near the lake command recreational-value premiums; properties a few miles out retain more rural character while remaining close to town services.

Brazos River Corridor (Northern Hood County)

The Brazos River runs through northern Hood County on its way toward Lake Granbury. Properties along the corridor — particularly in the Tin Top area at the Parker County line — support the most productive alluvial soils and riparian character in the market.

Paluxy Valley and Tolar

Southwest of Granbury, the Paluxy River valley runs through Tolar toward Dinosaur Valley State Park. Horse properties in this corridor offer distinct scenic character and meaningful rural-community feel at modestly lower per-acre pricing than the Lake Granbury corridor.

US-377 Corridor

Highway 377 runs through Granbury connecting Fort Worth (northeast) and Stephenville (southwest), with multiple equestrian facilities and commercial operations along the corridor. Properties with Hwy 377 visibility or proximity command commercial-adjacent premiums.

Market Insights: Granbury

Local context for buyers evaluating the Granbury equestrian market.

Location and Community Character

Granbury sits at the intersection of US Highway 377 (running northeast to Fort Worth and southwest to Stephenville) and State Highway 144, with Lake Granbury anchoring the community's recreational and cultural identity. The historic Granbury town square — preserved from the 1890s with the Hood County Courthouse as its centerpiece — remains the commercial and cultural heart of the community.

For horse property buyers, Granbury offers a distinct combination: practical 45-minute access to both Fort Worth (northeast via 377) and Stephenville (southwest via 377 and 67), lake-country character that the inland Weatherford and Stephenville markets lack, and a working-cowboy community organized around the cowboy church network and active roping and cutting operations throughout Hood County.

Land, Soils, and Water

Hood County's terrain transitions from the eastern Cross Timbers into more open prairie country as it runs west toward Palo Pinto County. Sandy loam soils predominate on established horse properties, supporting productive coastal Bermuda hay and pasture operations. Properties along the Brazos River corridor north of Granbury and the Paluxy River valley southwest toward Tolar have the best riparian character.

Water supply is mixed — municipal water serves properties within Granbury city limits and parts of the immediate surrounding area; outlying properties rely on private wells with Trinity aquifer yields typical for the region. Gas well production is present on some parcels, and mineral rights inquiries are a standard part of Hood County due diligence.

Equestrian Community and Infrastructure

Granbury's equestrian community includes the Iron Horse Ranch legacy (halter and performance horse breeding), Freedom Equestrian Center (45-acre eventing and sport-horse facility with Warmblood breeding), active cowboy church network, and a cluster of boarding and training operations. The Granbury area supports a broader mix of disciplines than the more narrowly focused Weatherford (cutting) and Stephenville (rodeo) markets — cutting, roping, eventing, dressage, and pleasure-riding all have active presence.

The historic Granbury town square provides a social anchor that the surrounding ranch-country markets don't offer — restaurants, galleries, and the Granbury Opera House create a community texture distinct from pure agricultural towns.

Price Ranges

Entry-level Hood County horse properties of 5 to 10 acres with a house and basic equestrian infrastructure typically range from $550,000 to $1 million. Quality 10 to 30 acre properties with covered arenas, multiple barns, and productive wells range from $950,000 to $2.5 million. Larger 30 to 100+ acre legacy ranches with full working infrastructure, lake views, or direct Brazos River frontage range from $2.5 million to $5 million with selective legacy properties trading above.

Per-acre pricing runs meaningfully below comparable Parker County (Weatherford) configurations — reflecting the greater distance from the NCHA cutting culture and the more diverse equestrian orientation.

Key Takeaways

Buy, Finance & Insure in Granbury

Find a Granbury Horse Property Agent

Brazos River corridor parcels, Paluxy Valley terrain, and the distinction between lake-adjacent and inland ranch country drive purchase outcomes. A Granbury specialist works Hood County and knows which parcels carry durable well water and genuine Brazos-frontage character.

Find a specialist agent --->

Financing Your Horse Property

Granbury horse property financing typically qualifies for conventional mortgages for residential-scale operations. Larger ranch operations with commercial infrastructure require farm-and-ranch lending with agricultural valuation.

Horse property financing guide --->

Insurance for Arizona Horse Properties

Hood County farm and ranch coverage should address riparian flood considerations along the Brazos and Paluxy corridors, wildfire exposure on outlying uplands, and specific mineral rights and gas well presence on some parcels.

Horse property guides --->

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does horse property cost in Granbury, Texas?

Entry-level 5 to 10 acre properties with a house and basic equestrian infrastructure run $550,000 to $1 million. Quality 10 to 30 acre operations with covered arenas range from $950,000 to $2.5 million. Larger 30 to 100+ acre legacy ranches range from $2.5 million to $5 million and selectively above. Per-acre pricing runs below comparable Weatherford configurations.

How far is Granbury from Fort Worth?

Roughly 30 miles southwest via US Highway 377 — about 45 minutes driving without traffic. Practical commute distance for Fort Worth employment and event trips to Will Rogers Memorial Center, with the lake-country character and lower land prices that Fort Worth metro markets don't offer.

Is Granbury better for cutting, roping, or English disciplines?

Granbury supports all three rather than specializing narrowly. Unlike Weatherford (cutting-dominated) or Stephenville (rodeo and roping-dominated), Granbury has a more diverse equestrian community — cutting, roping, eventing, dressage, and pleasure-riding all have active operations in Hood County. Buyers who prefer a generalist community over a narrow specialty culture often find Granbury suits them.

Do I need to worry about mineral rights in Hood County?

Yes — mineral rights inquiries are a standard part of Hood County due diligence. Some parcels have active or historical gas well production, and mineral rights may have been severed from surface rights in prior transactions. Verify mineral rights status, current production, and any surface use easements during contract review. A specialist agent or landman can advise on specific parcel status.

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