Texas Ranch Loans: How to Finance Rural Land and Improvements

5 min read ·  Reviewed May 1, 2025

Talk to a Herring Bank Land Loan Specialist Herring Bank · NMLS #415783 · No obligation

Financing a Texas ranch involves loan products that differ meaningfully from standard home mortgages. Working farms and ranches with significant acreage are typically financed through agricultural lenders, Farm Credit institutions, or banks with rural lending experience – not through Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, which have strict acreage and agricultural income guidelines that exclude most working ranch properties.

The loan terms, down payment requirements, and qualification criteria for Texas ranch loans reflect the different risk profile of large rural parcels versus suburban homes. Understanding what lenders look for – and which type of lender is the right fit – prevents wasted time applying through channels that do not serve this property type.

Key Takeaways

  • Most working Texas ranches do not qualify for standard Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac residential financing.
  • Farm Credit institutions specialize in ranch and agricultural lending and offer 30-year terms on qualifying properties.
  • Down payment requirements for Texas ranch loans typically run 20-30% for improved land, 30-35% for raw land.
  • Ranch lenders evaluate property income (leases, hunting, mineral), water rights, and grazing capacity.
  • USDA FSA programs offer direct and guaranteed ranch loans for borrowers who cannot access conventional agricultural financing.
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What Makes Ranch Financing Different From Residential Mortgages

Ranch financing in Texas occupies the intersection of residential mortgage lending, agricultural lending, and commercial real estate lending — but it doesn’t fit neatly into any single category. The complexity comes from the combination of property types typically found on Texas ranches: a primary residence, agricultural land producing revenue (livestock, crops, timber, hunting leases), working improvements (barns, equipment sheds, loading facilities), and sometimes commercial-use structures. Standard residential mortgages don’t accommodate agricultural income or non-residential improvements. Pure agricultural lenders may not address the residential component. Ranch financing requires a lender with expertise in all three areas.

Texas ranches encompass enormous diversity: a 50-acre weekend ranching property outside Fredericksburg used primarily for recreation and deer hunting; a 500-acre working cattle operation in the Hill Country generating substantial livestock revenue; a 2,000-acre South Texas brush country quail-hunting operation; and a mixed-use ranchette in the San Antonio metro with horses and a custom home. Each has different financing needs, different income documentation requirements, and different collateral characteristics that lenders evaluate differently.

Lender Types for Texas Ranch Financing

Farm Credit institutions (AgTexas Farm Credit, Capital Farm Credit, Farm Credit Bank of Texas): The dominant specialized agricultural lenders in Texas. Farm Credit is a federally chartered government-sponsored enterprise created specifically to provide agricultural credit. Advantages: deep agricultural expertise, flexible income treatment for farm/ranch operations, competitive long-term fixed rates, and understanding of Texas land values that general residential lenders lack. Limitations: their primary focus is productive agricultural property — a recreational ranch or ranchette used primarily as a rural residence may not fit their underwriting profile. Farm Credit lenders evaluate both the borrower’s creditworthiness and the agricultural productivity potential of the land.

Texas-chartered community banks and regional banks: Many Texas community banks have portfolio agricultural and rural property lending departments that understand local land values, agricultural income, and ranch operations. These lenders can often accommodate the full range of Texas ranch types — working operations, recreational properties, ranchettes — with in-house underwriting decisions rather than centralized approval processes. Herring Bank, headquartered in Amarillo, has extensive experience with Panhandle agricultural lending and Texas ranch transactions. Our commercial lending team evaluates ranch and rural property financing with the Texas-specific agricultural market knowledge that national lenders lack.

USDA Farm Service Agency (FSA) programs: USDA FSA provides direct and guaranteed loans for agricultural operations under specific programs: the Farm Ownership Loan (up to $600,000 direct, $1,825,000 guaranteed) for purchasing farmland or making agricultural improvements; the Operating Loan for livestock, equipment, and operating expenses. FSA targets beginning farmers, socially disadvantaged farmers, and operations that don’t qualify for conventional commercial credit. Income-based underwriting with more flexibility than conventional lenders on credit history; extensive application process and documentation requirements.

USDA Rural Development (RD) Section 502 Single Family Housing: For properties that include a rural residence but are in USDA-eligible geographic areas, the standard USDA 502 guaranteed program provides zero-down residential financing on properties up to a maximum acreage limit. Maximum acreage for USDA 502 varies by state and area — in Texas, properties up to 5–30 acres may qualify depending on the specific rural development area. For ranchettes in the 2–20 acre range that are primarily residential with some agricultural character, USDA 502 may be the most accessible financing if the property and borrower meet program eligibility.

Income Documentation for Working Ranch Properties

Ranch income introduces complexity that residential underwriting processes weren’t designed to handle. The primary income sources and their documentation requirements:

Livestock income (cattle, sheep, goats, horses): Net income from livestock operations is documented through Schedule F (Profit or Loss from Farming) on the federal Form 1040, or through the ranch entity’s business return if the operation is structured in an LLC or corporation. Lenders typically use a two-year average of Schedule F income, with the caveat that Schedule F is often significantly reduced by depreciation and deductible expenses that don’t represent actual cash outflow. Lenders familiar with agricultural income add back depreciation and certain non-cash deductions to arrive at a more accurate “cash flow” figure for qualification purposes.

Hunting lease income: An increasingly important revenue source for Texas ranches — TPWD data suggests hunting lease income has become one of the top three revenue sources for Texas agricultural landowners. Lease income is documented through Schedule E (Supplemental Income) on the federal return or through the entity return. Lenders treat hunting lease income similarly to rental income: 75–100% of documented lease revenue may qualify depending on the lender and their classification of the income as passive or active.

Agricultural exemption and income interaction: Texas’s agricultural land appraisal under Texas Tax Code Chapter 23D (the ag exemption) values qualifying agricultural land at its productive use value rather than market value — dramatically reducing property tax burden. Lenders need to understand that a ranch with a $3,000/year tax bill might have a $2,000,000 market value; the ag exemption explains the disconnect. The appraisal and tax records will reflect the productive value and ag exemption status, not the market value.

Loan Structures for Texas Ranch Purchases

Land loan (raw land, agricultural land): Higher down payment (20–35% typical), shorter amortization (15–20 years, not 30), higher rate (0.5–1.5% above comparable residential). Raw land and agricultural land without a residence is the highest-risk collateral for lenders — if the borrower defaults, the liquidation market is narrower and slower than for residential properties. Lenders compensate with larger equity requirements and shorter loan terms.

Combined home and land loan: When the ranch includes a residential structure of sufficient value, the combination of residential and agricultural collateral can be financed with a conventional-style loan structure with amortization up to 30 years on the residential portion. The residential structure’s value provides the appraiser a residential comparable sales methodology anchor; the land value supplements the total collateral. Underwriting evaluates both the residence and the land component.

Texas VLB Veterans Land Program: The Texas Veterans Land Board operates a separate land loan program for Texas veterans — distinct from the home loan program. VLB land loans provide below-market rate financing specifically for Texas land purchases (5 acres minimum). The VLB land loan is a competitive option for veteran ranchers and rural land buyers in Texas who want the state’s rate subsidy on top of their financing.

Agricultural/commercial 10–25 year term loans: Working ranches with documented agricultural income may finance through agricultural lenders on 10–25 year balloon structures with fixed or adjustable rates, underwritten primarily on the operation’s cash flow rather than on residential appraisal comparables. The amortization is shorter than residential but longer than standard commercial real estate. This structure is the most appropriate for larger working operations where agricultural income is the primary qualification basis.

Ranch loan comparison – 500-acre Texas ranch, $1.5M purchase price: Farm Credit (Capital Farm Credit): 25% down ($375,000), 30-year amortization, rate approximately prime + 0.5% (~8.0%), monthly P&I on $1.125M: approximately $8,255. Community bank portfolio loan: 30% down ($450,000), 15-20 year amortization, rate approximately 7.75%, higher monthly but lower total interest. The right choice depends on cash available for down payment and whether annual income or long-term interest cost is the priority constraint.

Frequently Asked Questions

Depends on the size and use. Small rural properties with a residence and limited acreage can use conventional residential financing. Working ranches with significant acreage and agricultural income typically require Farm Credit, community bank portfolio loans, or USDA FSA programs.
20-30% for improved ranch land with a residence and established income. 30-35% for raw land or properties without improvements. Farm Credit institutions and community banks are the primary lenders and each sets their own requirements.
Property income from leases (grazing, hunting) and other agricultural uses, water availability and rights, property condition and improvements, borrower's farming or ranching experience, and financial strength of the operation.
Loans from the Farm Credit System - a network of federally chartered lending cooperatives (including Capital Farm Credit and AgTexas in Texas) that specialize in agricultural and rural real estate financing. They offer long-term (25-30 year) amortization and competitive rates for qualifying ranch and farm properties.
Yes. Texas hunting lease income is recognized by agricultural lenders and can strengthen the qualifying case. Properties valued primarily as recreational hunting land may be financed through portfolio lenders or Farm Credit with appropriate LTV and documentation of lease income.
Yes. Herring Bank originates rural land and ranch loans in our service area. Contact us to discuss your specific property, acreage, and use. We can help structure the right loan for your situation or connect you with appropriate Farm Credit partners for larger agricultural transactions.
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This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. It is not a commitment to lend. Loan programs, rates, and eligibility requirements are subject to change without notice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.