Stitzer Housing Update: Farm Listings and Limited Inventory Shape Early Spring
Stitzer, WI – March 24, 2026 – Inventory remains limited in this Grant County community, with buyers focused on land and farm properties this spring.
Home shoppers in Stitzer, an unincorporated community in the town of Liberty in Grant County, are heading into spring with few listings to choose from. The market remains characteristically tight, and most activity centers on rural homes, acreage and farm properties rather than traditional in-town inventory.
Top takeaways
- Very limited in-town inventory; most activity centers on rural homes and farmland.
- Median home value estimates around $114,000, below national benchmarks.
- High ownership rates keep resale supply constrained.
Market snapshot
Regional brokerage data places the median home value near $114,000, positioning Stitzer well below many state and national price points. At the same time, roughly three-quarters of homes are owner-occupied, a factor that tends to limit turnover and keep the number of active listings low.
Major real estate portals currently show few, if any, active listings directly within the community’s boundaries. As a result, buyers frequently expand their search to nearby areas in Grant County to find additional options. Selection can be sporadic, and new listings may draw attention quickly simply due to limited alternatives.
What’s for sale nearby
- Land parcels, including tillable acreage and pasture suitable for hobby farming.
- Farm properties with older farmhouses, machine sheds and multi-acre lots.
- Single-family homes in nearby towns such as Fennimore and Boscobel.
Recent offerings underscore the area’s rural appeal. Multi-acre properties with agricultural potential, pond frontage and outbuildings are common themes. For buyers seeking space, hunting land or small-scale farm operations, the Stitzer area continues to present opportunities that are harder to replicate in more urban settings.
With limited turnover, sellers who price realistically may encounter less direct competition. Buyers, meanwhile, should be prepared to act when suitable acreage or a well-maintained farmhouse becomes available, as options can be few at any given time.