Cimarron County
OK · Pop. 2,247 · Rural County
Cimarron County sits in Oklahoma across 1,835 square miles, home to 2,247 people at 1.2 per square mile, so rural land and genuine privacy are available. The agricultural economy is rated strong, built on wheat, sorghum, hay. The median home price is $95,000, with an effective property tax rate of 0.41%. The climate sits in USDA hardiness zone 6b with a 172-day growing season, average summer highs of 90.7°F and average winter lows of 20.7°F. Annual rainfall averages 18.8 inches, and with drought risk rated very high, water storage and irrigation planning matter. Cimarron Memorial Hospital is 1.4 miles away and includes an emergency room. Broadband reaches 89.5% of homes. On the hazard side, wildfire risk is very high, drought risk is very high, so plan infrastructure and insurance accordingly.
Pros
- A low effective property tax rate of 0.41% holds annual carrying costs down.
- A median home price of $95,000 makes land and property relatively affordable.
- Cimarron Memorial Hospital, with an emergency room, is just 1.4 miles away — strong local healthcare access.
- A strong agricultural economy built on wheat, sorghum, hay means local markets, equipment, and know-how are in place.
- At 1.2 people per square mile, land is available with genuine space and privacy.
Cons
- Wildfire risk is very high, requiring defensible space, fire-resistant construction, and an evacuation plan.
- Drought risk is very high, making water storage and irrigation infrastructure essential rather than optional.
- Annual rainfall of just 18.8 inches means irrigation and water storage are core requirements.
At a glance
Cimarron County, OK is a strong overall fit for homesteading.
- Homestead score
- 79/100
- Median home price
- $95k
- Property tax
- 0.41%
- Growing season
- 172 days (zone 6b)
- Annual rainfall
- 18.8"
- Broadband
- 89.5%
- Nearest hospital
- Cimarron Memorial Hospital, 1.4 mi
Taxes & Cost of Living
Land & Building
Climate & Growing
Natural Disaster Risk
Healthcare
Infrastructure & Community
Business & Employment
Homesteading in Cimarron County: FAQ
- What is the growing season like in Cimarron County?
- Cimarron County is in USDA hardiness zone 6b with a 172-day growing season, average summer highs of 90.7°F, and average winter lows of 20.7°F. The established crops are wheat, sorghum, hay.
- How affordable is land and property here?
- The median home price is $95,000 and the effective property tax rate is 0.41%. There's no published county per-acre figure, so use recent comparable sales to gauge raw-land value.
- Is broadband internet available?
- Broadband reaches 89.5% of homes, so verify service at a specific parcel before purchasing.
- How close is healthcare?
- Cimarron Memorial Hospital is 1.4 miles away and includes an emergency room; there is 1 hospital in the county.
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More counties in Oklahoma
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The closest counties to Cimarron County by distance, including across state lines.
Data sources
Verified
Figures are sourced from public datasets: U.S. Census Bureau — ACS 5-year & Gazetteer, USDA NASS Census of Agriculture, USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map, NOAA NCEI U.S. Climate Normals (1991–2020), FEMA National Risk Index, FCC Broadband Data Collection, BLS Local Area Unemployment Statistics, HIFLD Hospitals. Always confirm specifics locally before relying on them. See our methodology for how the homestead score is calculated.