Costilla County
- Citations
- 2
- Land snapshot
- Jun 3, 2026
- Source coverage
- 5/5
Major comparison layers are present for county-level discovery.
Comparison
Side-by-side discovery metrics for alternative housing research.
Comparison boundary
Side-by-side scores can narrow your search, but parcel feasibility still depends on zoning, access, water, septic, covenants, permits, and current county review.
Source confidence
Fast trust signals for this county pair: citation depth, land snapshot date, and whether both profiles include the major sourced layers used in comparisons.
Major comparison layers are present for county-level discovery.
Major comparison layers are present for county-level discovery.
Quick answers
Costilla County has the stronger overall Freedom Score, making it the better broad discovery candidate before parcel-level review.
Costilla County has the stronger tiny home discovery score. Still verify whether the structure is treated as a dwelling, modular/manufactured home, ADU, or RV-like unit.
Costilla County is the better RV-living research lead, but full-time occupancy still needs county confirmation and parcel-specific sanitation review.
Both counties are close for off-grid research. Solar, access, winter conditions, water rights, well feasibility, and septic will likely decide the better parcel.
Las Animas County has the lower county-level price-per-acre snapshot at $3,931. Treat this as a market signal, not a parcel appraisal.
Costilla County lists a Temporary RV Occupancy During Home Construction permit and a Mobile Home Park and RV Park checklist. Score this as permit-based temporary/construction RV use, not confirmed full-time RV living on raw land.
Off-grid projects are plausible but compliance-heavy. The county permit list highlights OWTS, physical addressing, road access, utility, site plan, inspection, floodplain, and building-code requirements that can determine whether rural land is actually occupiable.
Verify well, cistern, hauled water, and soil evaluation requirements with county and state water authorities before purchase. A physical address is not issued to vacant land according to the county planning page.
Planning resources include OWTS permit and occupancy inspection materials. Septic/OWTS should be treated as a core prerequisite for occupancy research.
Las Animas County treats tents, campers, and recreational vehicles used for human occupation as temporary residences. Occupancy for more than seven days within a thirty-day period requires a temporary use permit, and permits are limited to thirty days in A/RR districts and fifteen days in UR districts, subject to renewal rules. Score RV living as temporary-permit based, not permanent RV-on-land friendly.
Las Animas remains a good off-grid research candidate because of rural acreage, solar, and affordability, but projects must navigate land-use review, building permits, address issuance, septic, state plumbing/electrical permits, water supply, setbacks, and temporary-use limits.
Water rules need parcel-specific research. Start with Land Use/Building requirements, then verify well rights, hauled water/cistern rules, and state water limitations.
The county building page links to Septic Permit Health Department resources; septic should be treated as a required research item before occupancy assumptions.
Source context
This comparison uses verified county profile research plus sourced land, population, broadband, solar, public land, and scoring layers. Treat it as a county-level shortlist before parcel-level review.
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