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Raw land under $5,000 an acre still exists in 2026 — even in states you’ve actually heard of. The reason you rarely see it is simple: the land industry doesn’t profit from talking about it. In this video, we break down 10 counties across the United States where land prices are still surprisingly low — and more importantly, the real mechanisms behind those prices. From post-industrial regions that lost population, to remote high desert counties with almost no demand, to places where climate, geography, or infrastructure quietly filters out most buyers. We look at places like Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, rural Oregon, Pennsylvania’s post-coal counties, the Ozarks fringe in Missouri, remote areas of New Mexico, western New York, Amish country in Ohio, south Texas brush land, and wind-swept Wyoming. In some of these regions, you can still find acreage priced like it’s decades in the past. But cheap land is never random. Every low price comes with a reason: harsh winters, isolation, water rights complexity, flooding risk, wind, or long distances from services. Understanding why land stayed cheap is the difference between a smart long-term hold and buying a problem. Land doesn’t go on sale. There’s no Black Friday for acreage. If you miss the window, you miss the asset. The real question is simple: which catch could you live with?