All-in$0± range
Parker County, Texas · real 2026 data

How much does a barndominium cost in Parker County?

A typical build is below — tap to make it yours
Add a shop / garage (the barndo classic)
All-in · build + land + utilities + soft costs
$0
$425,728 — $699,512 range
For a 3 bed / 2 bath barndo in Parker County · ≈ $277/sf
Rough estimate · we'll sharpen it
Build $302k 55%
Land $126k 23%
Site & utilities $74k 13%
Soft costs $6k 1%
Buffer $46k 8%
The steel kit + slab is only ~10% of your all-in — the rest is land, site work, utilities & finish. That gap is what blindsides people.
15% less ($98k saved) than the same home built traditional (~$652k)
Modeled from Parker County records + real owner build reports · updated 2026-06 · shown as low–median–high ranges, never a blind average.
$0 building permitno zoning#1 well county in TX
A few quick questions — we handle the rest
Do you have land yet?
Roughly where in Parker County?
How much land?
What are you picturing?
tile/LVP, mid-grade cabinets, a few custom touches — finish swings this build ~$150k from basic to high-end. It's where budgets quietly blow up.
Water
Sewer
Electric
Insulation
Contingency buffer
Your itemized all-in — exactly where every dollar goes
Know a real figure for any line — a well quote, your land price? Type it in the box and that line locks to your cost.
The build
Kit shell + slab
2,000 sf shell · $22–$35/sf · incl. engineered slab for clay
$56,000$44,000$70,000
Interior build-out
2,000 sf living · nice finish · $95–$145/sf
$240,000$190,000$290,000
Insulation — spray foam
Closed-cell foam — owners' #1 'don't skimp' item (it sets your power bill)
$6,000$4,000$9,000
The land
Land
~3 ac near the Weatherford area · $32k–$53k/ac
$126,000$96,000$159,000
Site & utilities
Site prep
Clearing, grading, driveway, building pad
$22,000$15,000$35,000
Water — drill a well
No city water at most the Weatherford area lots. Trinity, 350–550 ft.
$30,000$25,000$35,000
Septic — aerobic
Clay soil needs aerobic. Incl. $400 county permit.
$15,400$10,400$20,400
Electric service
Power's typically at the road here
$2,000$1,000$5,000
Propane tank & line
No natural gas — propane
$2,000$700$4,000
Water softener
Trinity well water is hard
$2,800$1,500$4,000
Soft costs & permits
Plans & engineering
Design + engineered-slab stamp
$4,500$2,000$8,000
Land survey
Required for septic, lender & build
$900$500$1,500
Soil & perc test
Before septic design
$500$300$700
Building permit
$0 — Parker County requires none
$0
Buffer & financing
Contingency (12%)
Cushion on build & site — every real build needs one
$45,852$35,328$57,912
All-in (median)$553,952
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Most “barndominium cost” pages give you a vague $/sq ft and a quote button. This one gives you a real, itemized all-in number for building in Parker County, Texas — including the lines nobody else accounts for: drilling a Trinity-aquifer well, the aerobic septic the clay soil usually forces, running power to a rural lot, the soil/perc test, the survey, plans and engineering, propane, and a contingency buffer. Tell us about you and your land in plain English; we translate it into Parker County costs.

What's actually under a Parker County barndo

CLAY SOIL — DOESN'T DRAINTRINITY AQUIFER · ~350550 FT DOWNENGINEERED SLAB1234
  1. Drilled wellTrinity aquifer, 350–550 ft down · $25k–$35k
  2. Aerobic septicthe clay won't perc, so it's required · $10k–$20k + $400 permit
  3. Power from the road$1k–$5k (much more on a long rural run)
  4. Engineered slabclay soil demands it, baked into the build
Not to scale — a 550-ft well is deeper than this whole page. That's the point: your number includes what's under the dirt, not just the building.

How we calculate this

  1. You pick a build (by bedrooms or by size) and tell us about your land in plain English — where, how big, what finish.
  2. We translate that into real Parker County costs: Trinity-aquifer well depth, the septic type the soil forces, permit rules, and how far power has to run.
  3. Every line shows a low–median–high range, not a blind average, so outliers don't distort your number.
  4. Know a real figure (a well quote, your land price)? Enter it and that line locks to your actual cost — the estimate converges on reality.

Frequently asked: barndominiums in Parker County

Do you need a building permit for a barndominium in Parker County?
No. Parker County does not issue building permits or certificates of occupancy and has no zoning in unincorporated areas. The county only regulates on-site septic (OSSF) and floodplain development. That saves both permit cost and time — a genuine reason barndos are popular out here.
How deep are wells in Parker County and what do they cost?
Parker County is the #1 well-drilling county in Texas. Most wells tap the Trinity Aquifer at roughly 350–550 ft, so a complete turnkey well typically runs $25,000–$35,000. Some shallower Paluxy zones come in lower, around $10,000–$20,000. Wells are registered with the Upper Trinity Groundwater Conservation District.
Conventional or aerobic septic in Parker County?
The clay soil here usually fails a standard perc test, so an aerobic system is most common — figure $10,000–$20,000 versus $6,300–$10,000 for conventional. The county septic (OSSF) permit is a flat $400. Single-family tracts of 10+ acres are generally exempt from the septic permit.
Is a barndominium cheaper than a regular house in Parker County?
Usually, yes. Barndo construction tends to run roughly $60–$160/sq ft versus $150–$400/sq ft for traditional stick-built — often 20–30% less for a comparable home — mostly because the steel/post-frame shell and engineered slab go up faster and cheaper than a conventional frame. Land and utilities cost the same either way.

What this estimate does not include

Where these numbers come from

These costs are modeled from public Parker County records and real, published build-cost reports from owners and builders — shown as low–median–high ranges, never a blind average, and updated 2026-06. Sources: Parker County OSSF (septic) fee schedule + 10-acre exemption; Upper Trinity Groundwater Conservation District (well depths); LandWatch / Land.com active land listings by acreage band; Published build-cost reports from owners & builders (forums, cost guides). Note: Texas is a non-disclosure state, so true land sale prices aren't public — land figures are modeled from active listings by acreage band, which is exactly why entering your own parcel price gives the most accurate result.