Current county contact
Confirm who handles planning, subdivision, rural addressing, floodplain, permitting, and enforcement for the parcel.
County profile
Partially sourcedLee County now has a manually reviewed Texas source anchor for county-office routing. Tiny home, RV, off-grid, container-home, ADU, water, septic, access, and building-permit feasibility still require county staff, municipal, ETJ, subdivision, groundwater district, covenant, and parcel-level review before purchase.
Profile boundary
This profile summarizes county-level signals. Before relying on a parcel, verify current rules with planning, zoning, building, environmental health, water, road, fire, title, and local professionals.
Verification queue
This profile has official source coverage for county-level discovery, but it still needs stronger current county-office confirmation before being promoted to verified. Treat it as a shortlist candidate, then confirm the exact parcel and intended use with local offices.
Confirm who handles planning, subdivision, rural addressing, floodplain, permitting, and enforcement for the parcel.
Ask about the specific structure, RV or camper occupancy plan, water source, septic path, access road, and development sequence.
At a glance
County-level discovery summary for alternative housing research. Use this as a shortlist signal, then verify the specific parcel and code path.
Lee County has a Freedom Score of 61. Its strongest profile signals are Off-grid living (4/5) and Tiny homes (3/5).
Best initial fit: Central Texas and Brazos Valley rural land screening, Texas county-office due diligence, parcel-level alternative living research. Check county planning materials before making parcel assumptions.
$18,679 per acre snapshot with 127 active land listings and a 4/5 availability signal.
Do not treat this Texas source pass as parcel approval
Lifestyle indexes
These indexes translate the county data into practical shortlisting signals for common alternative-living goals. They are discovery scores, not parcel approvals.
Tiny homes, RV living, ADUs, container homes, and land cost signals.
Off-grid score, solar, rural land availability, low density, and utility friction.
Land affordability, availability, growing season, density, and water-climate signals.
Price-per-acre snapshot, land availability, and county-level tax burden context.
Broadband proxy, wired access, cellular reliance, and remote-work suitability.
Trust strip
Fast source context for this county profile. Use the full source trail below for links, citations, and parcel-level verification reminders.
LandWatch
Census Reporter ACS 2024 5-year table B28002
USGS PAD-US Manager Type GIS layer
NASA POWER 2001-2020 solar irradiance climatology
Planning, zoning, building, and profile links
Verified county-level discovery scores
Lee County publishes a Development Services page for unincorporated-area development permits, residential and commercial structure permits, subdivision and development regulations, driveway/entrance permits, floodplain permits, and water-well regulations. Tiny homes still need direct confirmation for dwelling classification, utilities, sanitation, access, and city or ETJ controls.
RV or campground-style projects in Lee County should be reviewed through Development Services, including development permits, subdivision regulations, driveway/entrance requirements, floodplain review, wastewater, utilities, and any city ETJ overlap.
Off-grid projects in Lee County should use the Development Services route to confirm development permitting, water-well rules, OSSF, floodplain, driveway access, subdivision standards, and private restrictions before relying on rural land.
Container-home projects in Lee County should be reviewed as dwelling or structure proposals through county staff and any applicable municipality. Engineering, foundation, wind, flood, egress, insulation, utilities, sanitation, driveway access, and local code adoption may matter.
ADU feasibility in Lee County is parcel-specific. Confirm zoning or subdivision controls, primary-dwelling status, occupancy limits, building review, utilities, septic or sewer capacity, access, municipal jurisdiction, ETJ issues, and private covenants.
Sourced market snapshot
Source: LandWatch snapshot from June 11, 2026. LandWatch county page snapshot. Active listing count is from the county page title/metadata; medianAcrePrice is the median asking price per acre from visible page listing data (25 nonzero sampled listings), not a full-market median or appraisal.
Sourced Census estimate
Population uses 2024 U.S. Census county estimates. Density is computed from county land area in the imported GeoJSON boundary data.
Parcel-level verification needed
Water availability in Lee County is parcel-specific. Texas private-well due diligence should include TWDB/TGPC resources, groundwater conservation district rules where applicable, well yield, water quality, drought exposure, hauled-water feasibility, and public-water service availability.
Lee County development materials should be paired with OSSF review before occupancy. Septic feasibility remains parcel-specific and depends on soils, design, setbacks, water source, floodplain, and maintenance requirements.
Mixed sourced and derived layers
Public land source: USGS PAD-US Manager Type GIS layer snapshot from 2026. County-clipped GIS estimate using PAD-US 4.1 manager type records for Texas. Includes federal, state, local, and district-managed polygons; excludes tribal, NGO, and private-managed records. This is a discovery-level public/protected lands estimate, not a parcel-level access determination. Sample matched labels: City Golf Course; City Park; Lake Somerville State Park - Nails Creek Unit; Lake Somerville Trailway State Park; Lee County Fair Grounds; Lexington City Park; Simmang Northwest Park; Somerville Lake; Somerville Recreation Area.
Broadband source: Census Reporter ACS 2024 5-year table B28002 snapshot from 2024. Broadband score is a county-level ACS household broadband subscription proxy, not parcel-level service availability. Score is based on the percentage of households with broadband of any type.
Solar source: NASA POWER 2001-2020 solar irradiance climatology for 2001-2020. County-centroid solar proxy using NASA POWER ALLSKY_SFC_SW_DWN annual all-sky surface shortwave downward irradiance. This is a county-level solar resource estimate, not a parcel-level PV design study.
County office links, sourced data layers, and profile citations used to build this county-level research summary.
County-level profile reviewed; parcel-level confirmation still required
This profile is currently marked partially sourced. It is ready for county comparison and early research, but legal claims and parcel-specific decisions should still be verified against county code, planning offices, and local experts.
County FAQ
Lee County has a Freedom Score of 61, which makes it useful for county-level discovery. Treat that score as a shortlist signal, then verify zoning, building, water, septic, access, and covenant rules for the specific parcel.
Lee County has a tiny home score of 3/5. That score does not approve a tiny home by itself; it means the county is worth researching through planning, zoning, building code, sanitation, and parcel-specific rules.
Lee County has an RV living score of 3/5. RV rules often depend on duration, construction status, sanitation, water, zoning district, and whether the land is inside a subdivision or municipality.
Lee County has an off-grid score of 4/5. Off-grid feasibility still depends on legal access, septic or OWTS approval, water options, fire risk, winter access, and whether a lawful dwelling can be permitted.
Lee County has a land affordability score of 42/100 based on the current county-level dataset. Use this for comparison only, because actual parcel prices can vary by road access, utilities, terrain, water, covenants, and listing quality.
Based on the current profile, Lee County is best suited for Central Texas and Brazos Valley rural land screening, Texas county-office due diligence, parcel-level alternative living research. The best fit can change once you narrow from county-level research to a specific property.
Before buying, confirm zoning, building permits, legal access, road maintenance, water rights or well eligibility, septic feasibility, wildfire requirements, floodplain issues, mineral rights, and any HOA, POA, subdivision, or covenant restrictions.