State sale guide

Sell my RV park in Texas

Texas valuation work should normalize utility costs, long-term site mix, expansion land, floodplain exposure, and whether infrastructure is private or municipal.

Working cap-rate range8.5%-10.5%

Texas parks often draw from long-term workforce housing, winter travel, lake and river recreation, and highway stopover demand. Buyers will separate durable monthly occupancy from transient seasonal spikes.

What buyers will underwrite first

Texas valuation work should normalize utility costs, long-term site mix, expansion land, floodplain exposure, and whether infrastructure is private or municipal.

Licensing, utilities, and transfer friction

Texas diligence often turns on wastewater, onsite sewage facilities, floodplain exposure, and local development approvals.

Brokered listing vs. private direct offer

A broker can create a wider auction, but a direct buyer may be better when the owner wants privacy, staff continuity, and less market gossip in a small town.

Tax planning before the LOI

A Texas sale can include real estate, operating assets, personal property, and goodwill. Sellers should separate price allocation from 1031 eligibility and tax advice before signing an LOI.

Confidential valuation

Estimate what your RV park may be worth

Start with revenue, site count, expenses, occupancy, and buyer cap-rate assumptions. The output is a working range, not an appraisal.

Amenities and value drivers

Private follow-up

Want a real direct-offer review?

Share the basics and we will review the range privately. This does not list the park, notify staff, or obligate you to sell.

Step 1 of 2

Get a private starting range

Start with the park name, rough pad count, and the best email. We will save this first, then ask for the details.

Private, no listing, no staff contact.

Sources reviewed