Horse Property for Sale in McKinney, Texas

McKinney is the Collin County seat 30 miles north of Dallas — an upscale growth corridor where Texas's fastest-growing metro frontier meets preserved horse-country pockets in Fairview, Lucas, Celina, Parker, and the outlying Collin County corridors. Average horse property listings run $1.16 million at roughly $115,000 per acre, with larger parcels up to $8.5 million for 50-acre premier estates. McKinney ISD and Lovejoy ISD anchor the community's family-oriented market, and the Dallas North Tollway and US-75 corridors provide direct metro access.

Horse Property Opportunities in McKinney, TX

McKinney 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 McKinney

Collin County Starter Horse Properties

  • 2–5 acres
  • 3–4 bedroom homes
  • Small arenas and 3–4 stall barns
  • McKinney ISD or Celina ISD
Typical price range: $800K – $1.5M

Established Equestrian Properties

  • 5–15 acres
  • Covered arenas and professional barns
  • Premium finishes and full equestrian infrastructure
  • Fairview, Lucas, Parker, or Celina area
Typical price range: $1.4M – $3M

Premier Equestrian Estates

  • 15–50 acres
  • Training facility or luxury estate configuration
  • Custom home with guest quarters
  • Professional-grade infrastructure and Lovejoy ISD premiums
Typical price range: $3M – $8.5M+

Find Available Horse Property in McKinney

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

Where Horse Properties Are Located in McKinney

McKinney Proper

In-city McKinney horse property is limited, with remaining equestrian parcels concentrated on the city's outlying edges. McKinney ISD coverage and proximity to downtown McKinney retail and medical infrastructure support premium pricing on the parcels that remain.

Fairview

Known for spacious estates on 1 to 5 acre parcels with custom homes and preserved rural character. Fairview sits between McKinney and Plano and commands premiums for its preservation ethos alongside Collin County convenience.

Lucas and Lovejoy ISD

Lucas provides upscale horse-property character with Lovejoy ISD — which commands the highest school-district premiums in the county for equestrian estates. Custom barns, fenced paddocks, and premium finishes are standard. Buyers comparing Lucas often also consider Argyle, Bartonville, and Aubrey as comparable premium submarkets.

Celina and the Northern Growth Frontier

Celina, Anna, and Melissa represent the northern growth frontier where more acreage is available at modestly lower per-acre pricing. Development pressure is advancing steadily toward them; buyers should evaluate specific parcel position relative to planned infrastructure.

Market Insights: McKinney & North Collin County

Local context for buyers evaluating the McKinney & North Collin County equestrian market.

Fastest-Growing Metro Frontier

Collin County is one of the fastest-growing counties in the United States, and McKinney sits at the heart of that growth. The city has doubled in population over the past two decades, and the surrounding communities — Fairview, Lucas, Celina, Parker, Anna, Melissa — have grown even faster as residential development pushes north from the Plano-Frisco metro frontier toward the Grayson County line.

For horse property buyers, this dynamic creates a specific economic structure: limited horse-property inventory at premium pricing, driven by both the absolute value of Collin County land and the specific value of the few remaining acreage parcels within practical Dallas metro commute distance. The market rewards buyers who act decisively when the right parcel appears.

Submarkets: Fairview, Lucas, Celina, Parker

McKinney proper contains limited in-city horse property; most active equestrian inventory concentrates in the surrounding Collin County communities. Fairview is known for spacious estates on 1 to 5 acres. Lucas commands premiums for Lovejoy ISD access and preserved rural character. Celina offers more acreage at modestly lower per-acre prices along the northern growth frontier. Parker provides upscale country-club-adjacent estates with equestrian facilities.

Anna and Melissa to the north represent the newest growth frontier — more acreage, lower per-acre pricing, but with development pressure advancing steadily toward them. Buyers evaluating these markets should factor the 5-to-10-year growth trajectory into their purchase decisions.

McKinney ISD and Lovejoy ISD

School district matters significantly in the Collin County horse-property market. McKinney ISD serves much of central McKinney and commands solid premiums. Lovejoy ISD — covering Lucas and portions of Fairview and Allen — commands the highest premiums in the county, with equestrian estates in the district trading at meaningful markups over otherwise-comparable parcels in adjacent districts. Celina ISD covers the fast-growing northern corridor.

Verify specific parcel district boundaries during due diligence — district lines don't follow municipal boundaries and some parcels sit in unexpected districts.

Price Ranges

Entry-level Collin County horse properties of 2 to 5 acres with a house and basic equestrian infrastructure typically range from $800,000 to $1.5 million. Quality 5 to 15 acre properties with covered arenas, professional barns, and premium finishes range from $1.4 million to $3 million. Larger 15 to 50 acre equestrian estates with full infrastructure range from $3 million to $8.5 million, with legacy properties trading above.

Per-acre pricing runs $100,000 to $150,000 for most equestrian parcels — meaningfully higher than the broader North Texas Horse Country corridor, reflecting the Collin County growth premium and Dallas metro proximity.

Key Takeaways

Buy, Finance & Insure in McKinney

Find a McKinney Horse Property Agent

School district boundary verification, growth-frontier positioning, and the specific trade-offs between in-city McKinney convenience and the Fairview/Lucas/Celina acreage advantages drive purchase outcomes. A Collin County specialist works the upscale equestrian market and understands which parcels face the next wave of development.

Find a specialist agent --->

Financing Your Horse Property

McKinney-area horse property financing typically prices into jumbo loan territory. Equestrian estates with commercial features may require specialized farm-and-ranch lending. Ag-exemption documentation is worth preserving where applicable for favorable tax treatment.

Horse property financing guide --->

Insurance for Arizona Horse Properties

Collin County horse property insurance should address premium finish replacement costs, commercial boarding/training liability where applicable, and the specific risk profiles of equestrian facilities adjacent to residential subdivisions.

Horse property guides --->

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does horse property cost in McKinney, Texas?

Entry-level 2 to 5 acre properties with a house and basic equestrian infrastructure run $800,000 to $1.5 million. Quality 5 to 15 acre properties with covered arenas range from $1.4 million to $3 million. Larger 15 to 50 acre equestrian estates range from $3 million to $8.5 million. Per-acre pricing runs $100,000 to $150,000 — meaningfully higher than the broader North Texas Horse Country corridor.

Where is horse property in McKinney?

Most active horse property in the broader McKinney market sits in Fairview, Lucas, Celina, Parker, and the outlying Collin County corridors rather than McKinney proper. In-city McKinney horse property is limited. Anna and Melissa to the north represent the newest growth frontier with more acreage at slightly lower pricing.

Does McKinney ISD or Lovejoy ISD matter more for horse property?

Both command school-district premiums. Lovejoy ISD — covering Lucas and portions of Fairview and Allen — generally commands the highest premiums in the county for equestrian estates. McKinney ISD covers most of central McKinney with solid premiums. Celina ISD covers the fast-growing northern corridor. Verify specific parcel district boundaries during due diligence.

How does McKinney compare to Denton County horse markets?

Different markets for different buyers. McKinney offers Dallas North Tollway proximity, Collin County school district premiums, and upscale country-estate character at higher per-acre prices. Denton County (Aubrey, Pilot Point, Denton proper) offers deeper breeding and training infrastructure, North Texas Horse Country identity, and meaningfully lower per-acre pricing for comparable acreage. Many buyers cross-shop both corridors.

Horse Property Resources

Horse Property Agents

Find a specialized real estate agent who understands the unique demands of buying and selling horse property.

Horse Property Financing

Explore loan products and financing options designed specifically for equestrian and horse property purchases.

Wickenburg Horse Property

Browse horse properties for sale in Wickenburg, Arizona — the Horse Capital of the World.