
Richland Springs, TX 76871 (San Saba County)
About this property
Land & Grazing The terrain is flat to gently rolling with mixed brush throughout. Perimeter fencing is low fence and barbed wire, and the land is currently grazed as open pasture with moderate grazing quality. Cattle working pens are in place. Dirt roads provide internal access across the property. Neighboring properties on all sides are ranchland, keeping the surrounding character consistent. Wildlife & Hunting Native species include whitetail deer, turkey, and dove with coyotes, bobcats, foxes, and hogs also present. The mixed brush and rolling terrain offer natural cover and movement for deer and upland bird hunting alongside the agricultural use. House & Utilities A 1930s-era structure sits on the property and is considered a teardown, not livable. The value here is in the homesite itself — power through TXU and fiber internet through Central Texas Telecommunications are already in place. The property holds a Richland Springs SUD rural water meter, a meaningful asset in an area where RSUD no longer issues new meters. A propane tank is owned and on site. Water Water is provided through the Richland Springs SUD rural water connection. Two runoff-fed ponds are also on the property, adding livestock and wildlife water across the tract. De La Paz Ranch is a practical, ready-to-use piece of San Saba County with the infrastructure already sorted. The rural water meter alone sets this apart from comparable tracts in the area. It suits a buyer looking to run livestock, build a homesite, or both, in a part of Central Texas surrounded by working ranchland.
Property details
Location
About the Area
19815 Farm to Market 500 None is located in Richland Springs, Texas, in San Saba County. San Saba County is the Pecan Capital of the World, a designation backed by generations of native pecan cultivation along the San Saba River bottoms, where some of the finest native pecan trees in Texas have been harvested commercially for over a century. The county maintains an authentic agricultural character largely unchanged by the Hill Country tourism wave.
The San Saba River flows through the heart of the county, its limestone-bottomed course lined with massive native pecan trees and live oaks. The terrain transitions from the granite Central Mineral Region in the east to limestone hills and cedar brakes in the west. Colorado Bend State Park on the Colorado River offers spectacular waterfall and cave hiking.
Richland Springs had an estimated population of 189 as of 2023. The 76871 zip code has a median household income of $85,144, a median home value of $165,600, and a median age of 50.2. The average household size is 3.2 people.
Native pecan farming, cattle ranching, hunting leases, and agritourism centered on the pecan harvest define San Saba County's economy. Colorado Bend State Park draws hikers and paddlers. The county attracts buyers seeking river bottom pecan land and large ranch tracts at prices below the more developed Hill Country counties.
Demographic data sourced from the U.S. Census Bureau, American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates (2023).
Listing information © 2026 Unlock MLS (ACTRIS). All data provided AS IS. Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Listing courtesy of White Wing Realty.