Pueblo residential lots, Pueblo West acreage, and rural Pueblo County parcels — we buy them cash. No listing, no commissions, no waiting for a retail buyer.
Pueblo is one of the most active small-lot markets in Colorado. Pueblo West alone has tens of thousands of 1-acre residential lots, most of them never built on. We buy them — whether you inherited one, bought it at a tax sale, or just got tired of the annual tax bill.
We also buy infill lots inside Pueblo city limits, rural acreage in Avondale and Vineland, and parcels with access or title issues that scare off retail buyers.
Pueblo West 1-acre lots typically sell for $18,000–$45,000 depending on utility access and location within the subdivision. Inside Pueblo city limits, residential infill lots range from $15,000 to $60,000+. Rural parcels in Avondale and Vineland trade lower per-acre. If you've seen Zillow "Zestimates" on your lot, understand those numbers are almost always inflated for vacant land — we track actual recorded sales.
Pueblo County's land market is anchored by the City of Pueblo on the Arkansas River, with extensive surrounding agricultural and rural-residential acreage. Parcel categories include: residential lots in Pueblo proper and Pueblo West (the large unincorporated planned community west of the city), agricultural parcels in the Avondale and St. Charles Mesa irrigation districts, recreational acreage south into the Wet Mountains, and east-county dryland parcels toward the Kansas line.
Pueblo County recording runs through the Pueblo County Clerk and Recorder. Common title considerations: Bessemer Ditch and St. Charles Mesa Ditch water shares on irrigated parcels, mineral severances on east-county dryland (legacy of historical exploration), and HOA layering in Pueblo West (multiple sub-HOAs across the original master plan). Pueblo West parcels are surprisingly common in our inventory — many were sold to military families during the Pueblo Army Depot era; subsequent moves out of state left thousands of small lots that owners never built on.
Pueblo County has a healthier buyer pool than smaller southern Colorado counties because of the steel-history population base, the Colorado State University–Pueblo presence, and Pueblo-area employment growth. Listings move at retail with reasonable cycles. Cash offers fit best when sellers have timing constraints (relocation, estate liquidation, divorce) or parcel-specific issues (back taxes, title complications, HOA arrears).
Get answers to common questions about selling your land
Yes. Many PW lots still don't have water or sewer stubbed — we buy them anyway, price reflects the situation.
We pay them at closing out of the purchase price.
Yes. Bundled closings save everyone money on title fees.
Typically 2–3 weeks from signed agreement.
No. Everything is remote per § 24-21-514.5 C.R.S. remote online notarization.
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970-478-1022
info@coloradowesternland.com
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