Comparison

Wayne County vs Catron County

Side-by-side discovery metrics for alternative housing research.

Comparison boundary

Compare Counties, Then Verify Parcels

Side-by-side scores can narrow your search, but parcel feasibility still depends on zoning, access, water, septic, covenants, permits, and current county review.

Read disclaimer
Freedom Score9088
Population2,6083,795
Density1.1 / sq mi0.5 / sq mi
Tiny Homes4/54/5
RV Living4/54/5
Off Grid5/55/5
Solar Potential10/1010/10
Broadband9/105/10
Public Land1,511,996 acres3,295,570 acres
Recreation Access5/55/5

Source confidence

Comparison Confidence Strip

Fast trust signals for this county pair: citation depth, land snapshot date, and whether both profiles include the major sourced layers used in comparisons.

coverage watch
Southeast Utah

Wayne County

Partially sourced
Citations
8
Land snapshot
Needed
Source coverage
4/5

One or more comparison layers need follow-up before launch-grade confidence.

Southwest New Mexico

Catron County

Verified
Citations
11
Land snapshot
Jun 4, 2026
Source coverage
5/5

Major comparison layers are present for county-level discovery.

Quick answers

Which County Looks Better?

Overall

Wayne County leads on Freedom Score

Wayne County has the stronger overall Freedom Score, making it the better broad discovery candidate before parcel-level review.

Tiny homes

Wayne County and Catron County are close on tiny home signal

Both counties have similar tiny home discovery scores. Compare zoning district, dwelling classification, utilities, and building-code requirements before choosing.

RV living

Wayne County and Catron County are close on RV living signal

RV living looks similar at the county level. The deciding factor will usually be duration limits, sanitation, water, septic, campground rules, and parcel zoning.

Off-grid living

Wayne County and Catron County are close on off-grid signal

Both counties are close for off-grid research. Solar, access, winter conditions, water rights, well feasibility, and septic will likely decide the better parcel.

Land cost

Land affordability is close

Catron County has the lower county-level price-per-acre snapshot at $2,737. Treat this as a market signal, not a parcel appraisal.

needs review

Partially sourced

Wayne County

Open profile

Best For

  • off-grid living research
  • large rural land searches
  • RV and camper-use due diligence
  • public-land access and recreation
  • solar-oriented homestead planning

Pros

  • Southeast Utah location gives this county a distinct Utah research profile
  • lower-density land patterns may support broader rural searches
  • strong early off-grid screening signal before rule verification

Cons

  • county-specific land-use rules still need source verification
  • land affordability, public land, climate, broadband, tax, and rule layers need state-specific source snapshots
  • remote parcels may involve meaningful water, road, utility, wildfire, and emergency-access tradeoffs

Red Flags

  • do not treat this draft score as legal or zoning advice
  • verify building permits, sanitation, driveway access, fire risk, covenants, water rights, and well feasibility before buying land
  • confirm whether rules differ inside municipalities, subdivisions, tribal lands, federal enclaves, or special districts

RV Living

Wayne County should be reviewed for RV occupancy limits, camping duration rules, subdivision covenants, sanitation, water, and utility requirements before relying on land for long-term RV living.

Off Grid

Wayne County appears worth deeper off-grid research because of low population density and rural acreage patterns, but water, septic, access, wildfire risk, winter access, and county permitting rules still need source verification.

Water and Septic

Water availability in Wayne County requires parcel-level due diligence, including well permits, water rights, groundwater conditions, hauled-water feasibility, and subdivision-specific limits.

Septic feasibility in Wayne County requires county or state review, site soils, setbacks, perc testing, and water-source separation requirements.

verified

Verified

Catron County

Open profile

Best For

  • very low density off grid research
  • large rural land searches
  • public land adjacent due diligence

Pros

  • Official county permit letter source provides a starting point for construction-related due diligence
  • County has very low density and high public land context

Cons

  • Official online planning detail is limited and needs deeper staff/source verification
  • Remote parcels may have major water access road fire and service constraints

Red Flags

  • Verify permit letter requirements state building path septic water access legal access fire response covenants and subdivision status before buying land

RV Living

RV living should be confirmed directly with Catron County because the sourced permit letter does not establish blanket long term RV occupancy rights.

Off Grid

Off grid projects should verify county permit letter requirements water septic access fire response road maintenance state building requirements and subdivision constraints before relying on remote acreage.

Water and Septic

Water supply is one of the central constraints in Catron County and should be confirmed before purchase.

Septic feasibility should be confirmed through New Mexico Environment Department requirements before purchase.

Compare next

Related County Comparisons