Agricultural & Timber Tax Exemption in Hudspeth County, Texas

Track your agricultural and timber activities and prepare your compliance documentation for the Hudspeth County Appraisal District. LandComply helps Hudspeth County property owners maintain their special appraisal and avoid rollback taxes.

Trans-Pecos Ecoregion

Agricultural Exemption Requirements in Hudspeth County

Hudspeth County is located in the Trans-Pecos ecoregion of Texas. The Trans-Pecos region of far West Texas supports large-scale, low-intensity cattle ranching on desert rangeland. Properties are typically very large (thousands of acres) with low stocking rates. Supplemental water management is critical in this arid environment.

To maintain an agricultural tax valuation (1-D-1 special appraisal) in Hudspeth County, property owners must:

Qualifying Agricultural Uses in Hudspeth County

The following agricultural uses typically qualify for 1-D-1 special appraisal in Hudspeth County:

Each use type has specific intensity requirements set by the Hudspeth County Appraisal District. Contact them directly for current stocking rates, minimum acreage, and production requirements in Hudspeth County.

Hudspeth County Appraisal District Contact Information

Hudspeth County Appraisal District

(915) 369-2321

Contact information maintained by the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. Contact the Hudspeth County Appraisal District directly for county-specific filing requirements and intensity standards.

Intensity Standards in Hudspeth County

Each county appraisal district sets its own intensity standards — the minimum level of agricultural activity required to qualify for special appraisal. Desert rangeland may require 1 AU per 50-100+ acres. Large acreage minimums are common. Water infrastructure documentation is important for compliance.

Contact the Hudspeth County Appraisal District at (915) 369-2321 for the exact intensity standards applicable to your property in Hudspeth County.

Learn more about intensity standards → · Animal unit equivalents →

What Happens If You Don't Comply in Hudspeth County?

Rollback Tax Warning

If the Hudspeth County Appraisal District determines that your property no longer qualifies for agricultural or timber special appraisal, you may face rollback taxes — the difference between taxes paid at productivity value and taxes that would have been paid at full market value, for up to 3 years (under HB 3833), plus 7% interest if delinquent.

Common triggers for rollback taxes include:

Learn more about rollback taxes →

Track Your Hudspeth County Activities with LandComply

Log agricultural and timber activities year-round, track compliance against Hudspeth County intensity standards, and prepare filing documentation for the Hudspeth County Appraisal District — all from your phone.

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Hudspeth County Appraisal District — Partner with LandComply

Are you with the Hudspeth County Appraisal District? LandComply can help your office receive and process agricultural and timber compliance documentation more efficiently — standardized digital submissions with complete records, GPS-verified photos, and organized activity logs.

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Other Counties in the Trans-Pecos Ecoregion