Stark County, North Dakota Land For Sale (30 results)
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AcreValue offers multiple types of land for sale in Stark County, so if you’re looking for a new ranch, farm, recreational property, hunting ground, developmental property, or land investment you’ve come to the right place. Regardless of what your needs or objectives are for your land, we have a large inventory of available parcels that are updated regularly. Therefore, it’s very likely that we have the perfect parcel that meets all the search criteria & specifications that you’ve been searching for. Additionally, because our land for sale listings are always being updated due to the frequency of land being sold or new land listings being put on the market, make sure that you are checking back with AcreValue regularly for updates. When you find the perfect land parcel and you are ready to take the next steps you can easily connect directly with the listing agent to help you facilitate your land purchase. Browse AcreValue's North Dakota land for sale page to find more potential opportunities in North Dakota that fit your needs. We wish you the best of luck in finding your next ranch, farm, recreational property, hunting ground, developmental property, or land investment.
10/15/2024
$7,000,000
60 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - S State Ave, Dickinson, ND
Located on the edge of Dickinson, North Dakota, Rosas Cantina Ranch has been the base of operations for a select horse breeding program for many years. Encompassing approximately 60 acres loaded with mature cottonwood, fir, and ash trees, its privacy and solitude are unparalleled for such a large property on the edge of a busy community. The Heart River meanders along and through the ranch for over a mile. The ranch features a 4,300 sq. ft. six bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom home with an attached two-car garage. Other improvements on the Rosas Cantina Ranch include a 150 x 300 outdoor arena with barn and stall area, 36 x 60 stall barn with runs and automatic waterers, 11 pipe corrals, 50 round pen, and a 60 hot walker. A log cabin bunkhouse is in front of the stall barn with a kitchen and bathroom. Plus, there is an enclosed 40 x 60 hay barn, and a large shop with concrete floors and a work room. Equipment is included in the sale of the property. An equipment list will be made available to interested parties.
10/15/2024
$7,000,000
60 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - S State Ave, Dickinson, ND
Located on the edge of Dickinson, North Dakota, Rosas Cantina Ranch has been the base of operations for a select horse breeding program for many years. Encompassing approximately 60 acres loaded with mature cottonwood, fir, and ash trees, its privacy and solitude are unparalleled for such a large property on the edge of a busy community. The Heart River meanders along and through the ranch for over a mile. The ranch features a 4,300 sq. ft. six bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom home with an attached two-car garage. Other improvements on the Rosas Cantina Ranch include a 150 x 300 outdoor arena with barn and stall area, 36 x 60 stall barn with runs and automatic waterers, 11 pipe corrals, 50 round pen, and a 60 hot walker. A log cabin bunkhouse is in front of the stall barn with a kitchen and bathroom. Plus, there is an enclosed 40 x 60 hay barn, and a large shop with concrete floors and a work room. Equipment is included in the sale of the property. An equipment list will be made available to interested parties.
10/15/2024
$7,000,000
60 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - S State Ave, Dickinson, ND
Located on the edge of Dickinson, North Dakota, Rosas Cantina Ranch has been the base of operations for a select horse breeding program for many years. Encompassing approximately 60 acres loaded with mature cottonwood, fir, and ash trees, its privacy and solitude are unparalleled for such a large property on the edge of a busy community. The Heart River meanders along and through the ranch for over a mile. The ranch features a 4,300 sq. ft. six bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom home with an attached two-car garage. Other improvements on the Rosas Cantina Ranch include a 150 x 300 outdoor arena with barn and stall area, 36 x 60 stall barn with runs and automatic waterers, 11 pipe corrals, 50 round pen, and a 60 hot walker. A log cabin bunkhouse is in front of the stall barn with a kitchen and bathroom. Plus, there is an enclosed 40 x 60 hay barn, and a large shop with concrete floors and a work room. Equipment is included in the sale of the property. An equipment list will be made available to interested parties.
10/15/2024
$7,000,000
60 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - S State Ave, Dickinson, ND
Located on the edge of Dickinson, North Dakota, Rosas Cantina Ranch has been the base of operations for a select horse breeding program for many years. Encompassing approximately 60 acres loaded with mature cottonwood, fir, and ash trees, its privacy and solitude are unparalleled for such a large property on the edge of a busy community. The Heart River meanders along and through the ranch for over a mile. The ranch features a 4,300 sq. ft. six bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom home with an attached two-car garage. Other improvements on the Rosas Cantina Ranch include a 150 x 300 outdoor arena with barn and stall area, 36 x 60 stall barn with runs and automatic waterers, 11 pipe corrals, 50 round pen, and a 60 hot walker. A log cabin bunkhouse is in front of the stall barn with a kitchen and bathroom. Plus, there is an enclosed 40 x 60 hay barn, and a large shop with concrete floors and a work room. Equipment is included in the sale of the property. An equipment list will be made available to interested parties.
10/15/2024
$7,000,000
60 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - S State Ave, Dickinson, ND
Located on the edge of Dickinson, North Dakota, Rosas Cantina Ranch has been the base of operations for a select horse breeding program for many years. Encompassing approximately 60 acres loaded with mature cottonwood, fir, and ash trees, its privacy and solitude are unparalleled for such a large property on the edge of a busy community. The Heart River meanders along and through the ranch for over a mile. The ranch features a 4,300 sq. ft. six bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom home with an attached two-car garage. Other improvements on the Rosas Cantina Ranch include a 150 x 300 outdoor arena with barn and stall area, 36 x 60 stall barn with runs and automatic waterers, 11 pipe corrals, 50 round pen, and a 60 hot walker. A log cabin bunkhouse is in front of the stall barn with a kitchen and bathroom. Plus, there is an enclosed 40 x 60 hay barn, and a large shop with concrete floors and a work room. Equipment is included in the sale of the property. An equipment list will be made available to interested parties.
10/15/2024
$7,000,000
60 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - S State Ave, Dickinson, ND
Located on the edge of Dickinson, North Dakota, Rosas Cantina Ranch has been the base of operations for a select horse breeding program for many years. Encompassing approximately 60 acres loaded with mature cottonwood, fir, and ash trees, its privacy and solitude are unparalleled for such a large property on the edge of a busy community. The Heart River meanders along and through the ranch for over a mile. The ranch features a 4,300 sq. ft. six bedroom, three-and-a-half-bathroom home with an attached two-car garage. Other improvements on the Rosas Cantina Ranch include a 150 x 300 outdoor arena with barn and stall area, 36 x 60 stall barn with runs and automatic waterers, 11 pipe corrals, 50 round pen, and a 60 hot walker. A log cabin bunkhouse is in front of the stall barn with a kitchen and bathroom. Plus, there is an enclosed 40 x 60 hay barn, and a large shop with concrete floors and a work room. Equipment is included in the sale of the property. An equipment list will be made available to interested parties.
10/10/2025
$4,950,000
32.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - Corner of 8th Street SE & 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
32.50 acres (1,415,700 sf) inside city limits, zoned R-3 High-Density Residential. R-3 uses a site-area formula: for townhomes/multifamily up to 4 units, 7,000 sf for the first unit + 3,000 sf each thereafter; beyond 4 units, 7,000 + 3,000 (next 3) + 1,000 per additional unit. Max building coverage 70%; typical front/side/rear yards apply. This framework supports efficient, phased multifamily development.
Dickinsons 2024 population est. 25,695 and Aug 2025 unemployment 2.5% indicate tight labor markets and steady household formation. Market-rate asks average ~$992/mo overall and ~$1,185 for 2BR; HUD FY2025 2-BR FMR = ~$1,020, a clear workforce price band that broadens demand.
North Dakota crude output has hovered near ~1.15 MMbpd (mid-2025), sustaining contractor, logistics, and services employment. Dickinson also sits ~86 miles from Watford City (core Bakken activity), letting workers live in town while accessing the fields.
A diversified basehealthcare (CHI St. Alexius, 2500 Fairway St), education (Dickinson State University), retail (Walmart), public schools, and manufacturingsupports demand even when drilling cycles soften. Recent employer lists and local profiles highlight this mix.
The corner is embedded in an established residential corridor with nearby multifamily (e.g., Dacotah Ridge, 560 8th St SE), close to Roosevelt Elementary (230 3rd Ave E), minutes to DSU and city services. The address grid and existing rooftops support absorption and everyday convenience.
DIK is ~6 miles from town and offers United nonstop to Denver (multiple weekly frequencies), facilitating crew change, corporate travel, and leasing velocity. Proximity to I-94 further links the site to regional employers.
A 2012 feasibility study for this 32.50-acre R-3 site concluded it can support ~525 apartments. While R-3s site-area rules could allow a higher theoretical count, real-world yield is driven by setbacks, parking ratios, utilities, stormwater, and open-space programming. Use ~525 units as the planning ceiling and size infrastructure accordingly. Recommend phased delivery (e.g.,150200 units per tranche) with amenities sequenced to absorption, preserving acreage for circulation, greenspace, and potential future add-ons.
MR. LANDMAN, LLC is a licensed real estate firm in the State of North Dakota under Lic#3369. Jonathan Fisher is a licensed broker in the State of North Dakota under Lic#10982.
Dickinson is a city in and the county seat of Stark County, North Dakota. The population was 25,679 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in North Dakota. Dickinson, founded in 1881, is also home to Dickinson State University.
Since the North Dakota oil boom the city has become one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. According to the 2020 census, the city is estimated to have a population of 25,679, however, other sources have estimates of the population at 33,646 or possibly exceeding 35,000. Dickinson is home to the Ukrainian Cultural Institute, which has a museum and holds events year round for the local Ukrainian community.
Dickinson is the principal city of the Dickinson Micropolitan Statistical Area, a micropolitan area that covers Billings and Stark counties and had a combined population of 34,591 at the 2020 census.
The median home cost in Dickinson is $254,900. Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 51.1%. Home Appreciation in Dickinson is up 10.5%.
Renters make up 30.5% of the Dickinson population.
4.2% of houses and apartments in Dickinson, are available to rent.
The average 1-bedroom unit rents for $890/month.
The average 2-bedroom unit rents for $1,010/month.
The average 3-bedroom unit rents for $1,430/month.
The average 4-bedroom unit rents for $1,710/month.
Dickinson has seen the job market decrease by -7.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 3.5%, which is lower than the US average of 33.5%.
The Median household income of a Dickinson resident is $64,806 a year. The US average is $69,021 a year.
Dickinson violent crime is 14.9. (The US average is 22.7)
Dickinson property crime is 37.3. (The US average is 35.4)
10/10/2025
$4,950,000
32.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - Corner of 8th Street SE & 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
32.50 acres (1,415,700 sf) inside city limits, zoned R-3 High-Density Residential. R-3 uses a site-area formula: for townhomes/multifamily up to 4 units, 7,000 sf for the first unit + 3,000 sf each thereafter; beyond 4 units, 7,000 + 3,000 (next 3) + 1,000 per additional unit. Max building coverage 70%; typical front/side/rear yards apply. This framework supports efficient, phased multifamily development.
Dickinsons 2024 population est. 25,695 and Aug 2025 unemployment 2.5% indicate tight labor markets and steady household formation. Market-rate asks average ~$992/mo overall and ~$1,185 for 2BR; HUD FY2025 2-BR FMR = ~$1,020, a clear workforce price band that broadens demand.
North Dakota crude output has hovered near ~1.15 MMbpd (mid-2025), sustaining contractor, logistics, and services employment. Dickinson also sits ~86 miles from Watford City (core Bakken activity), letting workers live in town while accessing the fields.
A diversified basehealthcare (CHI St. Alexius, 2500 Fairway St), education (Dickinson State University), retail (Walmart), public schools, and manufacturingsupports demand even when drilling cycles soften. Recent employer lists and local profiles highlight this mix.
The corner is embedded in an established residential corridor with nearby multifamily (e.g., Dacotah Ridge, 560 8th St SE), close to Roosevelt Elementary (230 3rd Ave E), minutes to DSU and city services. The address grid and existing rooftops support absorption and everyday convenience.
DIK is ~6 miles from town and offers United nonstop to Denver (multiple weekly frequencies), facilitating crew change, corporate travel, and leasing velocity. Proximity to I-94 further links the site to regional employers.
A 2012 feasibility study for this 32.50-acre R-3 site concluded it can support ~525 apartments. While R-3s site-area rules could allow a higher theoretical count, real-world yield is driven by setbacks, parking ratios, utilities, stormwater, and open-space programming. Use ~525 units as the planning ceiling and size infrastructure accordingly. Recommend phased delivery (e.g.,150200 units per tranche) with amenities sequenced to absorption, preserving acreage for circulation, greenspace, and potential future add-ons.
MR. LANDMAN, LLC is a licensed real estate firm in the State of North Dakota under Lic#3369. Jonathan Fisher is a licensed broker in the State of North Dakota under Lic#10982.
Dickinson is a city in and the county seat of Stark County, North Dakota. The population was 25,679 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in North Dakota. Dickinson, founded in 1881, is also home to Dickinson State University.
Since the North Dakota oil boom the city has become one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. According to the 2020 census, the city is estimated to have a population of 25,679, however, other sources have estimates of the population at 33,646 or possibly exceeding 35,000. Dickinson is home to the Ukrainian Cultural Institute, which has a museum and holds events year round for the local Ukrainian community.
Dickinson is the principal city of the Dickinson Micropolitan Statistical Area, a micropolitan area that covers Billings and Stark counties and had a combined population of 34,591 at the 2020 census.
The median home cost in Dickinson is $254,900. Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 51.1%. Home Appreciation in Dickinson is up 10.5%.
Renters make up 30.5% of the Dickinson population.
4.2% of houses and apartments in Dickinson, are available to rent.
The average 1-bedroom unit rents for $890/month.
The average 2-bedroom unit rents for $1,010/month.
The average 3-bedroom unit rents for $1,430/month.
The average 4-bedroom unit rents for $1,710/month.
Dickinson has seen the job market decrease by -7.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 3.5%, which is lower than the US average of 33.5%.
The Median household income of a Dickinson resident is $64,806 a year. The US average is $69,021 a year.
Dickinson violent crime is 14.9. (The US average is 22.7)
Dickinson property crime is 37.3. (The US average is 35.4)
10/10/2025
$4,950,000
32.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - Corner of 8th Street SE & 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
32.50 acres (1,415,700 sf) inside city limits, zoned R-3 High-Density Residential. R-3 uses a site-area formula: for townhomes/multifamily up to 4 units, 7,000 sf for the first unit + 3,000 sf each thereafter; beyond 4 units, 7,000 + 3,000 (next 3) + 1,000 per additional unit. Max building coverage 70%; typical front/side/rear yards apply. This framework supports efficient, phased multifamily development.
Dickinsons 2024 population est. 25,695 and Aug 2025 unemployment 2.5% indicate tight labor markets and steady household formation. Market-rate asks average ~$992/mo overall and ~$1,185 for 2BR; HUD FY2025 2-BR FMR = ~$1,020, a clear workforce price band that broadens demand.
North Dakota crude output has hovered near ~1.15 MMbpd (mid-2025), sustaining contractor, logistics, and services employment. Dickinson also sits ~86 miles from Watford City (core Bakken activity), letting workers live in town while accessing the fields.
A diversified basehealthcare (CHI St. Alexius, 2500 Fairway St), education (Dickinson State University), retail (Walmart), public schools, and manufacturingsupports demand even when drilling cycles soften. Recent employer lists and local profiles highlight this mix.
The corner is embedded in an established residential corridor with nearby multifamily (e.g., Dacotah Ridge, 560 8th St SE), close to Roosevelt Elementary (230 3rd Ave E), minutes to DSU and city services. The address grid and existing rooftops support absorption and everyday convenience.
DIK is ~6 miles from town and offers United nonstop to Denver (multiple weekly frequencies), facilitating crew change, corporate travel, and leasing velocity. Proximity to I-94 further links the site to regional employers.
A 2012 feasibility study for this 32.50-acre R-3 site concluded it can support ~525 apartments. While R-3s site-area rules could allow a higher theoretical count, real-world yield is driven by setbacks, parking ratios, utilities, stormwater, and open-space programming. Use ~525 units as the planning ceiling and size infrastructure accordingly. Recommend phased delivery (e.g.,150200 units per tranche) with amenities sequenced to absorption, preserving acreage for circulation, greenspace, and potential future add-ons.
MR. LANDMAN, LLC is a licensed real estate firm in the State of North Dakota under Lic#3369. Jonathan Fisher is a licensed broker in the State of North Dakota under Lic#10982.
Dickinson is a city in and the county seat of Stark County, North Dakota. The population was 25,679 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in North Dakota. Dickinson, founded in 1881, is also home to Dickinson State University.
Since the North Dakota oil boom the city has become one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. According to the 2020 census, the city is estimated to have a population of 25,679, however, other sources have estimates of the population at 33,646 or possibly exceeding 35,000. Dickinson is home to the Ukrainian Cultural Institute, which has a museum and holds events year round for the local Ukrainian community.
Dickinson is the principal city of the Dickinson Micropolitan Statistical Area, a micropolitan area that covers Billings and Stark counties and had a combined population of 34,591 at the 2020 census.
The median home cost in Dickinson is $254,900. Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 51.1%. Home Appreciation in Dickinson is up 10.5%.
Renters make up 30.5% of the Dickinson population.
4.2% of houses and apartments in Dickinson, are available to rent.
The average 1-bedroom unit rents for $890/month.
The average 2-bedroom unit rents for $1,010/month.
The average 3-bedroom unit rents for $1,430/month.
The average 4-bedroom unit rents for $1,710/month.
Dickinson has seen the job market decrease by -7.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 3.5%, which is lower than the US average of 33.5%.
The Median household income of a Dickinson resident is $64,806 a year. The US average is $69,021 a year.
Dickinson violent crime is 14.9. (The US average is 22.7)
Dickinson property crime is 37.3. (The US average is 35.4)
10/10/2025
$4,950,000
32.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - Corner of 8th Street SE & 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
32.50 acres (1,415,700 sf) inside city limits, zoned R-3 High-Density Residential. R-3 uses a site-area formula: for townhomes/multifamily up to 4 units, 7,000 sf for the first unit + 3,000 sf each thereafter; beyond 4 units, 7,000 + 3,000 (next 3) + 1,000 per additional unit. Max building coverage 70%; typical front/side/rear yards apply. This framework supports efficient, phased multifamily development.
Dickinsons 2024 population est. 25,695 and Aug 2025 unemployment 2.5% indicate tight labor markets and steady household formation. Market-rate asks average ~$992/mo overall and ~$1,185 for 2BR; HUD FY2025 2-BR FMR = ~$1,020, a clear workforce price band that broadens demand.
North Dakota crude output has hovered near ~1.15 MMbpd (mid-2025), sustaining contractor, logistics, and services employment. Dickinson also sits ~86 miles from Watford City (core Bakken activity), letting workers live in town while accessing the fields.
A diversified basehealthcare (CHI St. Alexius, 2500 Fairway St), education (Dickinson State University), retail (Walmart), public schools, and manufacturingsupports demand even when drilling cycles soften. Recent employer lists and local profiles highlight this mix.
The corner is embedded in an established residential corridor with nearby multifamily (e.g., Dacotah Ridge, 560 8th St SE), close to Roosevelt Elementary (230 3rd Ave E), minutes to DSU and city services. The address grid and existing rooftops support absorption and everyday convenience.
DIK is ~6 miles from town and offers United nonstop to Denver (multiple weekly frequencies), facilitating crew change, corporate travel, and leasing velocity. Proximity to I-94 further links the site to regional employers.
A 2012 feasibility study for this 32.50-acre R-3 site concluded it can support ~525 apartments. While R-3s site-area rules could allow a higher theoretical count, real-world yield is driven by setbacks, parking ratios, utilities, stormwater, and open-space programming. Use ~525 units as the planning ceiling and size infrastructure accordingly. Recommend phased delivery (e.g.,150200 units per tranche) with amenities sequenced to absorption, preserving acreage for circulation, greenspace, and potential future add-ons.
MR. LANDMAN, LLC is a licensed real estate firm in the State of North Dakota under Lic#3369. Jonathan Fisher is a licensed broker in the State of North Dakota under Lic#10982.
Dickinson is a city in and the county seat of Stark County, North Dakota. The population was 25,679 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in North Dakota. Dickinson, founded in 1881, is also home to Dickinson State University.
Since the North Dakota oil boom the city has become one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. According to the 2020 census, the city is estimated to have a population of 25,679, however, other sources have estimates of the population at 33,646 or possibly exceeding 35,000. Dickinson is home to the Ukrainian Cultural Institute, which has a museum and holds events year round for the local Ukrainian community.
Dickinson is the principal city of the Dickinson Micropolitan Statistical Area, a micropolitan area that covers Billings and Stark counties and had a combined population of 34,591 at the 2020 census.
The median home cost in Dickinson is $254,900. Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 51.1%. Home Appreciation in Dickinson is up 10.5%.
Renters make up 30.5% of the Dickinson population.
4.2% of houses and apartments in Dickinson, are available to rent.
The average 1-bedroom unit rents for $890/month.
The average 2-bedroom unit rents for $1,010/month.
The average 3-bedroom unit rents for $1,430/month.
The average 4-bedroom unit rents for $1,710/month.
Dickinson has seen the job market decrease by -7.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 3.5%, which is lower than the US average of 33.5%.
The Median household income of a Dickinson resident is $64,806 a year. The US average is $69,021 a year.
Dickinson violent crime is 14.9. (The US average is 22.7)
Dickinson property crime is 37.3. (The US average is 35.4)
10/10/2025
$4,950,000
32.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - Corner of 8th Street SE & 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
32.50 acres (1,415,700 sf) inside city limits, zoned R-3 High-Density Residential. R-3 uses a site-area formula: for townhomes/multifamily up to 4 units, 7,000 sf for the first unit + 3,000 sf each thereafter; beyond 4 units, 7,000 + 3,000 (next 3) + 1,000 per additional unit. Max building coverage 70%; typical front/side/rear yards apply. This framework supports efficient, phased multifamily development.
Dickinsons 2024 population est. 25,695 and Aug 2025 unemployment 2.5% indicate tight labor markets and steady household formation. Market-rate asks average ~$992/mo overall and ~$1,185 for 2BR; HUD FY2025 2-BR FMR = ~$1,020, a clear workforce price band that broadens demand.
North Dakota crude output has hovered near ~1.15 MMbpd (mid-2025), sustaining contractor, logistics, and services employment. Dickinson also sits ~86 miles from Watford City (core Bakken activity), letting workers live in town while accessing the fields.
A diversified basehealthcare (CHI St. Alexius, 2500 Fairway St), education (Dickinson State University), retail (Walmart), public schools, and manufacturingsupports demand even when drilling cycles soften. Recent employer lists and local profiles highlight this mix.
The corner is embedded in an established residential corridor with nearby multifamily (e.g., Dacotah Ridge, 560 8th St SE), close to Roosevelt Elementary (230 3rd Ave E), minutes to DSU and city services. The address grid and existing rooftops support absorption and everyday convenience.
DIK is ~6 miles from town and offers United nonstop to Denver (multiple weekly frequencies), facilitating crew change, corporate travel, and leasing velocity. Proximity to I-94 further links the site to regional employers.
A 2012 feasibility study for this 32.50-acre R-3 site concluded it can support ~525 apartments. While R-3s site-area rules could allow a higher theoretical count, real-world yield is driven by setbacks, parking ratios, utilities, stormwater, and open-space programming. Use ~525 units as the planning ceiling and size infrastructure accordingly. Recommend phased delivery (e.g.,150200 units per tranche) with amenities sequenced to absorption, preserving acreage for circulation, greenspace, and potential future add-ons.
MR. LANDMAN, LLC is a licensed real estate firm in the State of North Dakota under Lic#3369. Jonathan Fisher is a licensed broker in the State of North Dakota under Lic#10982.
Dickinson is a city in and the county seat of Stark County, North Dakota. The population was 25,679 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in North Dakota. Dickinson, founded in 1881, is also home to Dickinson State University.
Since the North Dakota oil boom the city has become one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. According to the 2020 census, the city is estimated to have a population of 25,679, however, other sources have estimates of the population at 33,646 or possibly exceeding 35,000. Dickinson is home to the Ukrainian Cultural Institute, which has a museum and holds events year round for the local Ukrainian community.
Dickinson is the principal city of the Dickinson Micropolitan Statistical Area, a micropolitan area that covers Billings and Stark counties and had a combined population of 34,591 at the 2020 census.
The median home cost in Dickinson is $254,900. Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 51.1%. Home Appreciation in Dickinson is up 10.5%.
Renters make up 30.5% of the Dickinson population.
4.2% of houses and apartments in Dickinson, are available to rent.
The average 1-bedroom unit rents for $890/month.
The average 2-bedroom unit rents for $1,010/month.
The average 3-bedroom unit rents for $1,430/month.
The average 4-bedroom unit rents for $1,710/month.
Dickinson has seen the job market decrease by -7.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 3.5%, which is lower than the US average of 33.5%.
The Median household income of a Dickinson resident is $64,806 a year. The US average is $69,021 a year.
Dickinson violent crime is 14.9. (The US average is 22.7)
Dickinson property crime is 37.3. (The US average is 35.4)
10/10/2025
$4,950,000
32.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - Corner of 8th Street SE & 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
32.50 acres (1,415,700 sf) inside city limits, zoned R-3 High-Density Residential. R-3 uses a site-area formula: for townhomes/multifamily up to 4 units, 7,000 sf for the first unit + 3,000 sf each thereafter; beyond 4 units, 7,000 + 3,000 (next 3) + 1,000 per additional unit. Max building coverage 70%; typical front/side/rear yards apply. This framework supports efficient, phased multifamily development.
Dickinsons 2024 population est. 25,695 and Aug 2025 unemployment 2.5% indicate tight labor markets and steady household formation. Market-rate asks average ~$992/mo overall and ~$1,185 for 2BR; HUD FY2025 2-BR FMR = ~$1,020, a clear workforce price band that broadens demand.
North Dakota crude output has hovered near ~1.15 MMbpd (mid-2025), sustaining contractor, logistics, and services employment. Dickinson also sits ~86 miles from Watford City (core Bakken activity), letting workers live in town while accessing the fields.
A diversified basehealthcare (CHI St. Alexius, 2500 Fairway St), education (Dickinson State University), retail (Walmart), public schools, and manufacturingsupports demand even when drilling cycles soften. Recent employer lists and local profiles highlight this mix.
The corner is embedded in an established residential corridor with nearby multifamily (e.g., Dacotah Ridge, 560 8th St SE), close to Roosevelt Elementary (230 3rd Ave E), minutes to DSU and city services. The address grid and existing rooftops support absorption and everyday convenience.
DIK is ~6 miles from town and offers United nonstop to Denver (multiple weekly frequencies), facilitating crew change, corporate travel, and leasing velocity. Proximity to I-94 further links the site to regional employers.
A 2012 feasibility study for this 32.50-acre R-3 site concluded it can support ~525 apartments. While R-3s site-area rules could allow a higher theoretical count, real-world yield is driven by setbacks, parking ratios, utilities, stormwater, and open-space programming. Use ~525 units as the planning ceiling and size infrastructure accordingly. Recommend phased delivery (e.g.,150200 units per tranche) with amenities sequenced to absorption, preserving acreage for circulation, greenspace, and potential future add-ons.
MR. LANDMAN, LLC is a licensed real estate firm in the State of North Dakota under Lic#3369. Jonathan Fisher is a licensed broker in the State of North Dakota under Lic#10982.
Dickinson is a city in and the county seat of Stark County, North Dakota. The population was 25,679 at the 2020 census, making it the seventh most populous city in North Dakota. Dickinson, founded in 1881, is also home to Dickinson State University.
Since the North Dakota oil boom the city has become one of the fastest-growing cities in the United States. According to the 2020 census, the city is estimated to have a population of 25,679, however, other sources have estimates of the population at 33,646 or possibly exceeding 35,000. Dickinson is home to the Ukrainian Cultural Institute, which has a museum and holds events year round for the local Ukrainian community.
Dickinson is the principal city of the Dickinson Micropolitan Statistical Area, a micropolitan area that covers Billings and Stark counties and had a combined population of 34,591 at the 2020 census.
The median home cost in Dickinson is $254,900. Home appreciation the last 10 years has been 51.1%. Home Appreciation in Dickinson is up 10.5%.
Renters make up 30.5% of the Dickinson population.
4.2% of houses and apartments in Dickinson, are available to rent.
The average 1-bedroom unit rents for $890/month.
The average 2-bedroom unit rents for $1,010/month.
The average 3-bedroom unit rents for $1,430/month.
The average 4-bedroom unit rents for $1,710/month.
Dickinson has seen the job market decrease by -7.6% over the last year. Future job growth over the next ten years is predicted to be 3.5%, which is lower than the US average of 33.5%.
The Median household income of a Dickinson resident is $64,806 a year. The US average is $69,021 a year.
Dickinson violent crime is 14.9. (The US average is 22.7)
Dickinson property crime is 37.3. (The US average is 35.4)
07/26/2025
$819,999
5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 3251 104t Avenue SW, Dickinson, ND
Immaculate 5 Acre Property with Shop & All the Classy Comforts in a Exquisite one-of-a-kind Home! Discover this beautifully updated & well-maintained rural property offering @3,744 sq. ft. of thoughtfully designed living space! Property is fully fenced & located just minutes NE of Dickinson. Four bedrooms (one non-conforming) & 3.5 baths, with a luxurious primary suite showcasing a tray ceiling, garden tub, & an abundance of windows. The formal dining room is grand & elegant perfect for entertaining. The unique lay-out includes a two family/living rooms, a theater room & bar area. The heart of the home is the gourmet kitchen with a massive island, a coffee nook with a 2nd sink, quartz countertop, soft-close custom cabinetry & pantry. Step out onto a roomy private deck & enjoy the sunsets! This home is super-efficient with an average Roughrider Electric bill of just $160/month and supported by Southwest Water. The exterior is seamless steel siding, class 4 shingles just a few years old, and newer Anderson windows for worry-free living. Two split units and an Central Air Unit, forced air with heat pump and a gas fireplace ensure year-round comfort, while heated tile floors add a cozy touch. Sale includes all appliances, including the washer and dryer nestled into the dedicated laundry room. The three-stall garage includes a double deep stall to suite 4 vehicles comfortably. The 24x44 heated shop (tubing installed, heat ready to be hooked up) features a steel roof, 200-amp panel, septic line to outbuildings, and is roughed in for a 3 4 bath. A Shed, 500-gallon propane tank, basketball hoop, camper power station, and two bright LED yard lights complete this versatile acreage. Set among mature evergreens and bushes, this property blends efficiency, elegance, and room to live and work! This one is truly a must-see!
10/14/2025
$460,000
1.5 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 9996 36e Street SW, Gladstone, ND
Enjoy country living with modern comfort in this 2012 split-level home situated on a fully fenced small acreage; perfect for pets, hobbies, or a little extra elbow room! This spacious 4-bedroom, 3-bathroom home offers a thoughtful layout, including a primary suite on the main floor complete with a walk-in closet. The open-concept living area provides great natural light and a welcoming flow, ideal for gatherings or quiet nights in. Recent updates include new flooring throughout and fresh exterior paint, giving this home a crisp, move-in-ready feel. Outside, you'll find plenty of room to spread out with a large 3-stall garage, fenced yard, and space for outdoor enjoyment or future projects. Whether you're seeking peaceful surroundings or room to grow, this property blends rural charm with modern convenience.
07/19/2025
$499,900
12 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 9287 Highway 10, Taylor, ND
Here lies a rare opportunity to live sustainably with space, comfort, and thoughtful design! This self-sufficient rural gem on @12 acres is perfectly set up as a hobby farm and/or ranch! Built in 2017, the 1,920 sq ft Modular home features 3 bedrooms & 2 baths, highlighted by stunning hickory cabinetry, granite countertops, pot filler, glass cook top, built-in oven & microwave, a spacious island, & a pantry with rustic barn doors. The open layout includes a luxurious master suite with dual sinks, large tiled shower, & a soaking tub! The property is ready for homesteading with a dedicated greenhouse, 4-stall garage, barn, shop, bale storage, & chicken coop. It includes three fenced pastures, a Richie waterer, a natural spring pond, & a SW H20 tap. A reverse osmosis system serves the home! Modular Home sits above a 5-ft heated crawlspace.
10/06/2025
$799,900
25.14 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 3814 100m Avenue SW, Gladstone, ND
Just south of Gladstone, this 25+ acre riverfront paradise offers a beautifully updated three-level home with 6 bedrooms and 4 baths. Features include maple & oak floors, custom woodwork, enclosed sunroom, canning room, handicap accessibility, and newer roof, siding, and windows. Heating options include hot water, forced air, wood burner, plus central air for cooling. Outbuildings abound: 4-stall heated garage with water & fireplace, barn with root cellar, chicken barn, tractor shed, corrals, smokehouse, and more. River-fed sprinkler system, four pastures, three with water, established garden areas, and abundant wildlife make this property truly unique. Complete with Generac generator a rare North Dakota gem!
04/24/2025
$135,000
15.51 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 3287 82w Avenue SW, Richardton, ND
Nice rural location with many tree rows just north of Interstate 94 Exit 90. 15.51 acre tract of land. Zoning is Agricultural Residential. The purpose of this district is to protect farmland and related farming activities while providing for the development of large lot residential housing. Call agent for listing of permitted uses. The current property owner is in process of making an application to SW Water Authority for a water tap.
04/24/2025
$1,467,235
38.11 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - TBD 21st Street W, Dickinson, ND
LOCATION IS THE KEY WORD! 38.11 Acres of prime development land located on 21st Street West. Property is annexed to the city of Dickinson. Close to the new Middle School, Public Safety Center as well as a retail center. Would make an excellent residential development.
08/28/2025
$373,056
0 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 0 6th Avenue SE, Dickinson, ND
10 Acres of Prime Residential Land ready for development!
08/28/2025
$225,000
1.12 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 0 6th Avenue W 25-375, Dickinson, ND
Build your business in a high traffic area! Located in a great commercial area, this lot is situated on a corner and has great visibility and easy access!
04/24/2025
$16,000
0.16 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 0 SW 1st Avenue 25-58, Dickinson, ND
Nice affordable lot ready to build on.
05/31/2025
$100,000
2.48 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 0 5th Avenue SE, Belfield, ND
2.47 Acre tract of land located in the SE part of Belfield. This tract is currently undeveloped. Platted as ten individual lots with a future road as Hill Top Drive. Lot 1, Block 5 is currently zoned as agricultural. The lots within Block 4 are zoned as recreational. Buyer would need to have any proposed use approved by the city of Belfield zoning board.
07/18/2025
$857,840
107.23 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 0 41st Street SW, Dickinson, ND
Rolling hills country! Beautiful tract of land with great development potential. South of Dickinson to 41St SW. Just West of Eldorado Acres and North of the Pines Subdivision.
06/03/2025
$290,000
1.06 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 532 E Broadway Street, Dickinson, ND
COMMERCIAL CORNER 1+ ACRE LOT~ READY FOR YOUR NEW BUILD!! Looking for high visibility? Easy to Find! Located on two well traveled streets; Broadway & 6th Ave SE!! BONUS is a grand view to the south over Heart River! Here you can bring your business building to reality on just over an acre of flat land! City water, sewer and electricity to property. Curb and Gutter in place. Zoned Commercial!
04/24/2025
$45,000
0.52 ac.
ACTIVE
Stark County - 0 Cliff Street, Gladstone, ND
Three lots on the west side of Gladstone. Large mature trees. Great location to build your new home. City water and city sewer in the area. Buyers responsibility to pull utilities into the site.
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