Land & Development Real Estate Pennsylvania Statewide
2/21/2026
What Is My Pocono Land Really Worth?
A Seller’s Guide to Valuing Vacant Land in the Pocono Mountains of Pennsylvania
Introduction: The Pocono Land Market Is Unique — And So Is Its Value
If you own land in the Pocono Mountains, you already know it is not the same as land in Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, or the Philadelphia suburbs.
The Pocono region — including Monroe, Pike, Wayne, and Carbon Counties — is a hybrid market.
It is:
Because of this, land value in the Poconos is not determined by one simple factor like acreage or tax assessment.
Two identical-sized parcels can vary dramatically in value depending on:
If you are considering selling your Pocono land, the first step is not listing it. The first step is understanding what truly drives value in this unique region.
This guide will walk you through how buyers, developers, and investors evaluate Pocono land — and how you can determine what your property is really worth.
Step 1: Understand Highest & Best Use — Not Just Current Use
Many Pocono landowners assume their property’s value is based on how it has historically been used. That is rarely the case.
The first question to ask is: What is the highest and best use of the property today?
In the Poconos, highest and best use might be:
If your land is being taxed as raw vacant land, that tells you nothing about its potential value. A 10-acre wooded tract near Camelback with STR-friendly zoning may be worth dramatically more than a similar tract in a township with restrictive rental policies.
Highest and best use analysis is the foundation of real valuation.
Step 2: Location Within the Poconos Matters — A Lot
The Pocono Mountains are not one homogeneous market. Value differs significantly by county and even by township.
Monroe County
This is the most active development and short-term rental market in the region.
Key drivers:
Land near Route 80 or tourism corridors typically commands stronger pricing than remote mountain tracts.
Pike County
More rural and heavily recreational.
Key drivers:
HOA community lots are common here, and pricing varies dramatically depending on association rules and amenities.
Wayne County
Less dense, more legacy farmland and lakefront.
Key drivers:
Lake proximity drives premium pricing.
Carbon County
Often more affordable but growing.
Key drivers:
Large acreage and transitional development land can have upside here.
Step 3: Lake Proximity Changes Everything
Land near water carries unique value multipliers.
If your land is:
Its value may be dramatically higher than comparable inland acreage.
Lake Wallenpaupack, for example, is its own micro-market.
Key valuation considerations include:
Water is emotional. Emotional demand drives price premiums.
Step 4: Short-Term Rental Regulations Can Increase or Decrease Value
One of the biggest value drivers in the Poconos today is short-term rental (STR) regulation.
Some townships are:
Others have:
If your land lies in a township where short-term rentals are permitted by right, it may attract investor buyers. If your township restricts STRs, buyer demand may shift toward traditional residential users.
This alone can create significant pricing differences between adjacent municipalities.
Step 5: Buildability Determines True Market Value
Many Pocono parcels look buildable — but aren’t fully viable without testing.
Key factors include:
Perc Testing
If your property requires on-site septic:
Land with documented septic approval often sells faster and stronger.
Wetlands
The Pocono region contains significant wetland areas.
If a large portion of your property is wetlands:
Wetland delineation studies clarify value.
Topography
Steep mountain slopes increase:
Flat, buildable land commands stronger pricing than steep, heavily sloped tracts.
Step 6: HOA vs. Non-HOA Land
Many Pocono lots are within planned communities.
Examples include:
HOA lots are valued differently than standalone acreage.
Consider:
Some HOA lots sell quickly due to amenity appeal. Others struggle due to restrictive rules.
Understanding community-specific demand is critical.
Step 7: Large Acreage Has a Different Buyer Pool
If you own:
Your buyer is likely not a typical retail homebuilder.
Potential buyers include:
Large tracts may carry subdivision potential. But subdivision feasibility depends on:
Sometimes selling the entire tract to a developer yields more than subdividing yourself.
Step 8: Infrastructure & Access Influence Value
Key infrastructure considerations include:
Land within 5–10 minutes of I-80 generally commands stronger pricing than remote mountain tracts 30–40 minutes from major corridors.
Accessibility equals demand.
Step 9: Assemblage Can Increase Value
If your property sits adjacent to:
Assemblage may increase value.
Developers often require scale. A 5-acre parcel next to another 10 acres may be worth significantly more combined than separately.
Step 10: Tax Assessment Is Not Market Value
Many sellers look at tax assessments to determine value. This is a mistake.
Tax assessments in the Poconos are often:
Market value is determined by:
Not by what the county lists.
Common Seller Mistakes in the Pocono Market
Proper positioning determines final sale price.
Who Buys Pocono Land?
Buyer pools include:
Marketing must align with buyer type.
A 1-acre HOA lot is marketed differently than a 40-acre timber tract.
How to Determine What Your Land Is Really Worth
The valuation process should include:
Only after these factors are evaluated can pricing be strategic rather than emotional.
The Bottom Line: Pocono Land Value Is Nuanced — Not Generic
The Pocono Mountains are one of Pennsylvania’s most dynamic land markets. But they are also one of the most misunderstood.
Land value here is driven by:
Two parcels across the road from one another may have dramatically different values.
If you own land in Monroe, Pike, Wayne, or Carbon County and are considering selling, the most important step is not guessing the price. It is understanding the property’s highest and best use in today’s regulatory and tourism-driven environment.
Because in the Poconos: Location matters. Regulation matters. Water matters. Access matters. Buildability matters. And informed sellers achieve stronger outcomes than reactive sellers.
If you’re wondering what your Pocono land is really worth, the answer isn’t found in tax records. It’s found in strategic analysis.