When you subdivide, each new lot needs legal, usable access.
If a lot is landlocked (or access is unclear), you don’t have a retail product — you have a problem. That’s why access + frontage rules must be verified before you close.
What “access” actually means (simple):
- Legal access: Recorded right to use a road, easement, or private drive (not a handshake).
- Physical access: A vehicle can realistically reach the lot (topography, wetlands, drainage).
- Marketable access: Title, buyers, and lenders are comfortable — no closing drama.
3 fast deal-killer checks (before you fall in love with the numbers):
1️⃣ Does every future lot touch a public road, or are easements / flag lots allowed? (Rules vary by county.)
2️⃣ Frontage math: If the county requires X feet per lot, don’t assume frontage can be “shared.” Verify it.
3️⃣ Private road reality: If creating one, confirm construction standards, turnarounds, and maintenance agreements.
Practical checklist (save this):
- Confirm legal access for every future lot (frontage, approved easement, or permitted flag lot).
- Ask the county planner before closing about rules (lot size, deed split vs plat, timelines).
- Budget for survey + recording fees — and legal help if easements/private roads are involved.
- Underwrite time as a real cost. Profit requires patience in slow counties.
- Rule of thumb: If access is “we think it’s fine,” assume it’s not fine until proven.
👇 What’s still unclear about access rules when subdividing? Ask it below.