Land for Sale in Cheshire
513 properties

- Price
- Offers in Excess of£160,000
- Size
- 11.8 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£60,000
- Size
- 4 acres

- Price
- POA
- Size
- 13.54 acres

- Price
- Offers Over£355,000
- Size
- 25.36 acres

- Price
- Sale by Tender
- Size
- 29.82 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£275,000
- Size
- 25.71 acres
Land adjacent to Mount View, Wrexham Road, Malpas, Cheshire, SY14

- Price
- POA
- Size
- 45.6 acres
Land At East Clifton, (Near Frodsham), Clifton Road, Weston, Runcorn, WA7 3FP

- Price
- Offers Over£200,000
- Size
- 9.5 acres

- Price
- £672,000
- Size
- 84 acres

- Price
- £760,000
- Size
- 52.48 acres

- Price
- £300,000
- Size
- 20.83 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£500,000
- Size
- 54.91 acres

- Price
- £600,000
- Size
- 74 acres

- Price
- £125,000
- Size
- 3.9 acres

- Price
- Offers in Excess of£450,000

- Price
- Guide Price£15,000
- Size
- 2.09 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£125,000

- Price
- POA
- Size
- 0.2 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£125,000
- Size
- 0.45 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£1,000
- Size
- 1.5 acres
Plot 1, Woodland East of Tunstall Road, Congleton, Cheshire CW12 3QA
1-20 of 513 properties
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Buying land in Cheshire
Find a wide range of properties and land for sale in Cheshire by acreage, price and features. Browse all of our listings and use our map to find and buy land, lots and properties.
There are currently 513 available properties to buy in Cheshire listed at £1,160,924 on average, with each acre priced at £119,930.
Market snapshot & prices in Cheshire
- Acreage for sale
- 3,447 acres
- Average listing age
- 30 days
- Average list price
- £1,160,924
- Median list price
- £795,000
- Average property size
- 9.7 acres
Cheshire, located in the North West of England, is considered a large, rural county, stretching more than 2,300 square kilometres and housing more than a million residents. As an ancient area, the streets are rippled with Tudor-style houses and distinctive town squares. Renowned for its production of Cheshire cheese, smaller towns and villages are dotted with traditional mills and canals, many of which have been converted into luxury living quarters or tourist resorts.
The land is mostly used for agriculture, particularly dairy farming and grazing animals, thanks to the rich, fertile soil found in the area. The area is considered a major food-producing county for Britain, creating vast and potentially lucrative opportunities for landowners. Land with mineral rights is widely available in Cheshire, with salt and silica sand being the prominent resources.