Install
openclaw skills install land-assessmentEvaluating and purchasing rural or semi-rural property. Use when someone is considering buying land, wants to homestead, is evaluating a property for food production potential, or needs to understand what to look for in rural real estate.
openclaw skills install land-assessmentBuying land is the biggest financial decision most people will ever make, and rural land has traps that suburban homebuyers never encounter. No municipal water means you need a well ($5,000-15,000). No sewer means septic ($10,000-25,000). No road means you might be landlocked. This skill is for people thinking about buying land — homesteading, building, farming, or just getting out of the city. It covers what to check before you sign anything: water, soil, access, zoning, utilities, flood risk, neighbors, and the full financial picture including the improvement costs that nobody mentions until you've already closed.
# Localization note — land purchase processes and regulations vary enormously by country.
# Agent must follow these rules when working with non-US users:
- Water rights systems are jurisdiction-specific:
US Western states: Prior appropriation doctrine (water rights separate from land)
US Eastern states: Riparian rights (tied to land ownership)
UK: Abstraction licences from Environment Agency
Australia: State-based water allocation systems
Canada: Provincial water licensing
- Soil survey equivalents:
US: USDA Web Soil Survey (websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov)
UK: Cranfield Soil and Agrifood Institute (LandIS)
Australia: ASRIS (Australian Soil Resource Information System)
Canada: Canadian Soil Information Service (CanSIS)
- Flood mapping:
US: FEMA flood maps (msc.fema.gov)
UK: Environment Agency flood maps (flood-map-for-planning.service.gov.uk)
Australia: State-based flood mapping services
EU: European Flood Awareness System
- Zoning and planning permission systems differ fundamentally:
US: County zoning ordinances
UK: Local planning authority permission system
Australia: State and local government planning schemes
- Septic/wastewater requirements are locally regulated everywhere.
Agent should direct user to local environmental health department.
- Title search and conveyancing processes vary by country.
Always recommend a local real estate attorney or conveyancer.
Agent action: Water is the single most important factor. Walk the user through every water question before anything else.
WATER ASSESSMENT — CHECK ALL OF THESE:
Well potential:
[ ] Check county well logs (often public record at county health
department or state geological survey)
[ ] Talk to neighbors — what depth are their wells?
Depth determines drilling cost ($15-50 per foot)
[ ] Typical well drilling cost: $5,000-15,000
(shallow wells 50-100 ft are cheaper; 300+ ft wells are expensive)
[ ] Well flow rate matters — 5 gallons per minute (GPM) is adequate
for a household; 1-3 GPM is marginal; below 1 GPM is a problem
[ ] Water quality testing: $100-300 for a comprehensive panel
(bacteria, minerals, heavy metals, nitrates)
Water rights (CRITICAL in western US states):
[ ] In western states, water rights are SEPARATE from land ownership
[ ] Prior appropriation doctrine: "first in time, first in right"
[ ] Buying land does NOT guarantee you can use the water on it
[ ] Check with state water resources department before purchasing
[ ] Verify what water rights convey with the sale
Surface water:
[ ] Creek or spring on property? Year-round or seasonal?
[ ] Springs can be developed for household use (testing required)
[ ] Seasonal creeks dry up when you need water most
[ ] Pond potential — useful for livestock, irrigation, fire suppression
Municipal water:
[ ] Is municipal water available? How far to the main?
[ ] Connection fees: $1,000-10,000+ depending on distance and utility
[ ] Monthly cost for rural water districts
BOTTOM LINE: No reliable water source = don't buy the land.
Everything else can be fixed. Water can't.
Agent action: Direct the user to the USDA Web Soil Survey and explain what the results mean. Cover the septic percolation test.
SOIL ASSESSMENT:
Before you visit the property:
[ ] Go to websoilsurvey.nrcs.usda.gov
[ ] Enter the property address or draw the boundaries on the map
[ ] The report tells you:
-> Soil type and composition
-> Drainage characteristics
-> Building suitability (load-bearing capacity)
-> Agricultural productivity rating
-> Septic suitability
-> Flooding frequency
This is free and available for nearly every parcel in the US.
On-site soil testing:
[ ] Get a soil test through county extension office ($15-30)
[ ] Tests for: pH, organic matter, nutrients, contaminants
[ ] Tells you: what will grow, what amendments are needed,
whether soil is suitable for food production
SEPTIC PERCOLATION TEST (required before building):
If there's no municipal sewer, you need a septic system.
If the soil won't percolate, you CAN'T install a septic system.
If you can't install septic, the land may be UNBUILDABLE.
[ ] Hire a licensed soil evaluator or contact county health department
[ ] They dig test pits and measure how fast water drains
[ ] Perc test cost: $500-1,500
[ ] Failed perc test options:
-> Engineered septic system (mound system): $20,000-40,000
-> Composting toilet + greywater system (where legal)
-> Walk away from the property
Septic system cost (if soil passes):
- Conventional system: $10,000-20,000
- Mound or alternative system: $20,000-40,000
- Maintenance: pump every 3-5 years ($300-500)
GET THE PERC TEST DONE BEFORE YOU BUY.
Make your purchase offer contingent on passing the perc test.
Agent action: Check road access. This is where many rural land deals fall apart.
ACCESS ASSESSMENT:
Physical access:
[ ] Can you drive to the property year-round?
[ ] Is the road maintained? By whom? (County, private road
association, or nobody?)
[ ] Winter access — plowed? Passable in mud season?
[ ] Distance from paved road to property boundary
[ ] Condition and grade of the road (a sedan or a 4WD requirement?)
Legal access (this is where it gets dangerous):
[ ] DEEDED EASEMENT — best case. A legal, recorded right to cross
someone else's property to reach yours. Recorded at the county.
Permanent and transfers with the land.
[ ] PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT — you've been using it, but it's not
recorded. Legally defensible in some states but risky. Can be
challenged.
[ ] VERBAL AGREEMENT — worthless. Neighbor says "sure, drive
through." Neighbor dies, new owner says no. You're landlocked.
[ ] NO ACCESS — the property has no legal road access. This is
more common than you'd think. It makes the land nearly worthless
for building and extremely difficult to resell.
[ ] VERIFY: Get a title search that specifically confirms legal access
[ ] Ask the title company or attorney about all easements on
AND across the property (utility, access, drainage)
Driveway construction (if none exists):
- Gravel driveway: $2,000-10,000 depending on length and terrain
- Paved driveway: $10,000-30,000+
- Culverts for drainage crossings: $500-3,000 each
- Steep terrain or rock may require excavation: $5,000-20,000+
IF THE PROPERTY IS LANDLOCKED WITHOUT LEGAL ACCESS, DO NOT BUY IT.
Agent action: Help the user research what they're actually allowed to do on the land.
ZONING RESEARCH:
[ ] Contact county planning/zoning department (or check their website)
[ ] Determine the zoning classification:
-> Agricultural: usually fewest restrictions, allows farming,
livestock, outbuildings, sometimes home-based business
-> Residential: may restrict livestock, outbuildings, business
-> Mixed use: varies widely
-> Conservation/forest: may restrict clearing and building
Key questions to answer:
[ ] Can you build a residence? (Some parcels are restricted)
[ ] Minimum lot size for building permit?
[ ] Setback requirements (distance from property lines for structures)
[ ] How many structures allowed? (House, barn, shop, etc.)
[ ] Livestock allowed? Types and quantities?
[ ] Home-based business permitted?
[ ] Short-term rental (Airbnb) allowed?
[ ] Can you subdivide in the future?
[ ] Manufactured/mobile homes permitted?
Additional restrictions to check:
[ ] HOA or deed restrictions (yes, some rural properties have these)
[ ] Conservation easements on the property (limits development permanently)
[ ] Mineral rights — are they included? If not, someone can mine
under your land. Check county records.
[ ] Timber rights — same issue. Verify they convey with the sale.
[ ] Agricultural preservation district (may limit non-farm use)
COUNTY BUILDING DEPARTMENT:
[ ] Building permit requirements and costs
[ ] Inspection requirements
[ ] Code requirements (some rural areas have minimal codes,
others enforce full residential code)
Agent action: Check FEMA flood maps and environmental databases. These are free and take 10 minutes.
FLOOD AND ENVIRONMENTAL CHECKS:
FEMA Flood Maps:
[ ] Go to msc.fema.gov
[ ] Enter the property address
[ ] Zone designations:
-> Zone X: minimal flood risk (good)
-> Zone A/AE: 100-year flood plain — lenders REQUIRE flood
insurance, and it's expensive ($1,000-3,000/year)
-> Zone V/VE: coastal high-hazard area
[ ] Even if not in a flood zone, ask neighbors about flooding history
[ ] Low-lying areas near rivers flood regardless of FEMA maps
Environmental contamination:
[ ] Check EPA Brownfields database (epa.gov/brownfields)
[ ] Check state environmental agency for known contaminated sites
[ ] Previous land use matters:
-> Former gas station = underground tank contamination risk
-> Former farm = possible pesticide residue
-> Former dump site = don't buy it
-> Near industrial facility = check groundwater contamination
[ ] Superfund site proximity — check EPA's Envirofacts database
Natural hazards:
[ ] Wildfire risk (check state forestry maps)
[ ] Erosion and landslide risk (steep slopes, clay soils)
[ ] Radon (check EPA radon zone map — testing is $15-150)
[ ] Earthquake fault lines (USGS hazard maps)
Agent action: Calculate the true cost of getting power, internet, and services to the property.
UTILITY COST CALCULATION:
ELECTRICITY:
[ ] How far to the nearest power pole?
[ ] Line extension costs: $15-25 per foot from nearest pole
-> A quarter mile (1,320 ft) = $20,000-33,000
-> A half mile = $40,000-66,000
[ ] Alternative: solar + battery system ($15,000-30,000 installed)
May be cheaper than line extension for remote properties
[ ] Confirm with the local utility — get a written estimate
INTERNET:
[ ] Check broadband availability maps for the address
[ ] Options by reliability:
-> Fiber: best, but rare in rural areas
-> Cable/DSL: decreasing availability with distance from town
-> Fixed wireless: available in some areas, variable quality
-> Starlink: $120/month + $599 hardware, works nearly everywhere
-> Cell hotspot: depends on coverage, data caps are limiting
[ ] Test cell service ON THE PROPERTY with your carrier before buying
PHONE:
[ ] Cell coverage (check all major carriers on-site)
[ ] Landline availability (copper lines being discontinued in many areas)
[ ] Emergency services — can 911 find the property?
THE 5-MILE RULE — how far to:
[ ] Hospital/urgent care: _____ miles
[ ] Grocery store: _____ miles
[ ] Fire department: _____ miles
[ ] Hardware store: _____ miles
[ ] Fuel station: _____ miles
These distances define your daily life. A beautiful property
45 minutes from the nearest grocery store gets old fast.
Agent action: Help the user build a realistic budget that includes all improvement costs.
FULL COST WORKSHEET:
PURCHASE:
Land price: $________
Closing costs (2-5% of purchase): $________
Survey (if not recent): $________ ($500-3,000)
Title insurance: $________
IMPROVEMENTS (raw land):
Well drilling: $________ ($5,000-15,000)
Septic system: $________ ($10,000-25,000)
Power connection/solar: $________ ($5,000-33,000+)
Driveway construction: $________ ($2,000-15,000)
Site clearing/grading: $________ ($2,000-10,000)
─────────
TOTAL IMPROVEMENT COST: $________
This is the number people forget. Raw land at $30,000
with $50,000 in improvements is really an $80,000 purchase.
ONGOING ANNUAL COSTS:
Property taxes: $________/year
Insurance (if structures): $________/year
Road maintenance (private road share):$________/year
Well/septic maintenance: $________/year
─────────
ANNUAL CARRYING COST: $________/year
FINANCING:
- Banks are reluctant to finance raw land (higher risk)
- Expect 20-50% down payment for raw land loans
- Interest rates 1-2% higher than residential mortgages
- Owner financing: common for land sales
-> Often more flexible terms
-> Typically higher interest rate
-> Shorter term (5-15 years vs 30)
-> Get a real estate attorney to review the contract
IMPROVED VS RAW LAND:
Improved land (has well, septic, power, driveway) costs more
per acre but avoids $30,000-60,000 in improvement costs and
months of permitting and construction delays.
For first-time land buyers, improved land is usually the
smarter financial decision.
Agent action: One bad neighbor can ruin rural life. Help the user investigate.
NEIGHBOR AND COMMUNITY DUE DILIGENCE:
Before buying:
[ ] Visit the property at different times (morning, evening, weekend)
[ ] Walk the boundary lines — what's on the other side?
[ ] Talk to adjacent landowners (show up, introduce yourself,
ask about the area — people talk)
[ ] Ask about: flooding, road conditions, problem wildlife,
any ongoing disputes, what the previous owner was like
[ ] Check county court records for disputes involving the property
or adjacent properties
[ ] Check for nearby nuisances:
-> Shooting ranges, ATV trails, industrial operations
-> Confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) — smell carries miles
-> Future development plans (check county planning department)
Community assessment:
[ ] Local volunteer fire department? (Response time matters)
[ ] School quality (if applicable)
[ ] Community character — visit the local diner, gas station, post office
[ ] Political and cultural climate (rural communities vary enormously)
[ ] Any community organizations, churches, granges, co-ops?
[ ] How do locals feel about newcomers? (Some areas are welcoming,
others are not — this is worth knowing before you commit)
TIMBER VALUE:
[ ] If the property is wooded, get a timber cruise (assessment)
from a registered forester
[ ] Timber can be worth $1,000-10,000+ per acre depending on species,
age, and access
[ ] Selective harvesting can fund improvements
[ ] VERIFY timber rights convey with the sale
state:
property:
address: null
acreage: null
asking_price: null
zoning: null
current_use: null
water:
well_potential_confirmed: false
water_rights_checked: false
water_test_done: false
water_source_type: null
estimated_well_cost: null
soil:
web_soil_survey_checked: false
soil_test_done: false
perc_test_done: false
perc_test_passed: null
septic_estimated_cost: null
access:
legal_access_confirmed: false
access_type: null
road_maintained: null
driveway_exists: false
driveway_estimated_cost: null
zoning:
zoning_checked: false
building_permitted: null
livestock_permitted: null
restrictions_identified: []
hazards:
fema_flood_zone: null
environmental_check_done: false
contamination_found: false
utilities:
power_distance_to_pole: null
power_estimated_cost: null
internet_available: null
cell_service_tested: false
financial:
total_improvement_cost: null
annual_carrying_cost: null
financing_type: null
due_diligence:
neighbors_contacted: false
multiple_visits_done: false
attorney_engaged: false
title_search_done: false
survey_done: false
triggers:
- name: water_first
condition: "property.address IS SET AND water.well_potential_confirmed = false"
action: "You've identified a property but haven't checked water yet. Water is the single most important factor — let's check county well logs and water availability before anything else."
- name: perc_test_reminder
condition: "soil.web_soil_survey_checked = true AND soil.perc_test_done = false"
action: "Soil survey is done but you haven't scheduled a perc test. If the soil won't perc, you can't build a septic system and the land may be unbuildable. Make your purchase offer contingent on passing the perc test."
- name: access_check
condition: "property.address IS SET AND access.legal_access_confirmed = false"
action: "Have you confirmed legal road access? This needs to be verified through a title search — verbal agreements and dirt tracks don't count. Landlocked property is a financial disaster."
- name: full_cost_calculation
condition: "water.estimated_well_cost IS SET AND soil.septic_estimated_cost IS SET AND utilities.power_estimated_cost IS SET AND financial.total_improvement_cost IS NULL"
action: "You have individual cost estimates. Let's add them up with the land price to get the true total investment. Raw land costs are deceiving without the full improvement picture."
- name: attorney_recommendation
condition: "property.asking_price IS SET AND due_diligence.attorney_engaged = false"
action: "Before making an offer, engage a real estate attorney who handles rural land transactions. Not a title company — an attorney. They'll catch issues in the deed, easements, and restrictions that title companies miss."