Teardown & redevelopment opportunities in Pinal County
Teardown lots and scrape-and-rebuild parcels in Pinal County — land worth far more than the tired structure sitting on it. These are the infill redevelopment plays the MLS never tags. We screen and rank 250 candidates in Pinal County from public county records — owner, zoning, and comps already pulled, so hours of per-deal research collapse into seconds.
Also searched as: teardown lots Pinal County, scrape lots Pinal County, infill development opportunities Pinal County, demolish and rebuild parcels Pinal County, land value redevelopment Pinal County.
Top candidates (preview)
| City | Built | Structure value | Deal score |
|---|---|---|---|
| — | 1972 | 6% | 81 |
| — | 1939 | 18% | 81 |
| — | 1978 | 5% | 79 |
| — | 1927 | 7% | 79 |
| — | 1974 | 13% | 79 |
| — | 1979 | 9% | 79 |
| — | 1964 | 9% | 78 |
| — | 1956 | 15% | 77 |
A sample of the top-ranked candidates. Create a free account to see addresses, owners, zoning, the deal math, and the full ranked list — plus a ready-to-mail owner letter for each.
See the full ranked list — freeLand vs. structure — how we find these
Every candidate is ranked on the land-to-improvement value split from public assessor records. In Pinal County, the land carries about 91% of total assessed value here, with the structure worth roughly 9% — the wide gap is exactly the teardown signal: you're effectively buying dirt with a free demolition liability on top.
How these are scored
Teardown & redevelopment candidates are screened from public assessor and recorder data: structure age, the land-to-improvement value split, lot size, zoning, nearby development momentum, and owner signals. Scores are screening-grade — a starting point to validate on the ground, not investment advice. See the full methodology →