Land for Sale in Wales
365 properties

- Price
- Guide Price£80,000
- Size
- 5.06 acres

- Price
- Offers Over£70,000
- Size
- 15.8 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£65,000
- Size
- 6 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£69,500
- Size
- 10.5 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£120,000
- Size
- 15 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£60,000
- Size
- 10 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£65,000
- Size
- 6 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£120,000
- Size
- 13 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£110,000
- Size
- 14 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£120,000
- Size
- 12 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£65,000
- Size
- 5 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£165,000
- Size
- 130 acres

- Price
- Offers in Region of£375,000
- Size
- 56 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£135,000
- Size
- 22.5 acres
Land forming part of Golden Grove Estate, Golden Grove, Carmarthen, SA32 8LR

- Price
- Guide Price£120,000
- Size
- 5.29 acres

- Price
- Sale by Tender
- Size
- 5.21 acres

- Price
- Offers in Excess of£1,495,000
- Size
- 5 acres
Cathargoed Uchaf, Golden Grove, Carmarthen, SA32 8LY


- Price
- £545,000
- Size
- 99 acres

- Price
- Guide Price£850,000
- Size
- 24 acres
1-20 of 365 properties
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Buying land in Wales
Find a wide range of properties and land for sale in Wales 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 2,461 available properties to buy in Wales listed at £566,954 on average, with each acre priced at £34,072.
Market snapshot & prices in Wales
- Acreage for sale
- 29,977 acres
- Average listing age
- 62 days
- Average list price
- £566,954
- Median list price
- £485,000
- Average property size
- 16.6 acres
Wales is located west of England, its 20,782 square kilometres of land bordering the Irish Sea, Bristol Channel, and Celtic Sea. Celtic Welsh is still popularly spoken, with most public road signs translated into both languages. Landmarks scatter the country, from the famous Snowdonia peak to the 600 historically significant castles that date back to the Iron Age.
Over 90% of Welsh farmland is used for rearing livestock and commercial crop growing. Tourism is led by hikers and historians, creating vast opportunities for hotel resorts and holiday rentals, particularly in areas close to national parks and castles.