Working farms, growing suburban-rural edge, and Laurel Highlands recreational appeal.
Western Westmoreland (Murrysville, Hempfield, Penn Township) faces suburban growth pressure. Eastern townships (Ligonier, Donegal, Cook) remain solidly rural with strong recreational appeal.
The eastern half of the county sits at the edge of the Laurel Highlands resort and recreation region — Idlewild, Ligonier, Seven Springs, Hidden Valley. Properties there carry recreational premiums.
Beef, dairy, hay, and forage in the central and southern valleys support real farm activity around Mt. Pleasant, Scottdale, and the rural townships.
The eastern half of the county sits at the edge of the Laurel Highlands resort and recreation region.
Beef, dairy, hay, and forage in the central and southern valleys support real farm activity.
Westmoreland County splits into two markets — growth-pressure suburbs in the west around Murrysville and Hempfield, rural and Laurel Highlands recreation in the east around Ligonier, Donegal, and Cook Township. Real working farms exist in the central and southern valleys around Mt. Pleasant, Scottdale, and the rural townships.
Per-acre pricing varies widely by submarket. Western suburban-edge parcels can exceed $15,000–$25,000 per acre on smaller properties near the Pittsburgh commuter corridor. Central and eastern working farms typically run $4,000–$8,000 per acre. Laurel Highlands recreational properties around Ligonier and Donegal trade on different metrics entirely — resort-adjacent parcels can clear $20,000+ per acre.
Ligonier is one of the most desirable small towns in western PA, with a strong second-home and lifestyle buyer pool from Pittsburgh. Properties within 15 minutes of the Ligonier diamond, near Idlewild & SoakZone, or in the Laurel Mountain corridor sell at meaningful premiums beyond comparable inland Westmoreland acreage.
I sell Westmoreland County properties with attention to which submarket they fit and which buyer pool to reach. A Murrysville suburban-edge parcel, a Ligonier lifestyle estate, and a Mt. Pleasant working farm are three completely different sales.
Westmoreland County farmland prices range widely — from $4,000 per acre in remote rural areas to $25,000+ per acre in growth-corridor townships. Submarket and buyer pool drive most of the variance.
Local expanding producers, Pittsburgh-edge lifestyle buyers, Laurel Highlands recreational and second-home buyers, equestrian owners, and occasional developers on growth-corridor parcels.
Well-priced Westmoreland County properties typically sell in 60 to 120 days. Submarket and buyer-pool match matter more than time-on-market.
I list and sell farms across all 67 PA counties — here are the nearest markets to Westmoreland.
Free valuation. Local Westmoreland County comparable sales. No obligation.
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