Neighborhood Guide — Caballo Ranchos
By Anne Sostman | The Scottsdale Agent | License SA718853000
Caballo Ranchos
Neighborhood Guide.
South Scottsdale · Horse Property · Equestrian Zoning
Caballo Ranchos is one of the last remaining equestrian-zoned communities within the Scottsdale city limits. Horse keeping is permitted by right — not by variance, not by special exception, but by the underlying zoning designation that protects equestrian use as a permanent land right. In a metro where horse properties are increasingly pushed to the far suburban edges, Caballo Ranchos maintains its equestrian character within minutes of Old Town Scottsdale. That combination of horse zoning and urban proximity is genuinely irreplaceable.
— Anne Sostman, The Scottsdale Agent
South Scottsdale Specialist
Horse Property · Equestrian Zoning
Off-Market Access
Private Client Network
Published by Anne Sostman
The Honest Picture
Horse Property Inside the Scottsdale Address.
Most horse property buyers in the Phoenix metro accept a tradeoff: equestrian zoning in exchange for a 30-to-45-minute drive to urban amenities. Caballo Ranchos eliminates that tradeoff. The community sits in South Scottsdale, where Old Town dining, Fashion Square, the Greenbelt, and the cultural corridor are minutes away — and the zoning permits horses by right.
The scarcity thesis is straightforward: equestrian-zoned land inside the Scottsdale city limits is not being created. As surrounding areas densify and rezone for conventional residential use, the fixed supply of horse-permitted parcels becomes more valuable with each passing year. Buyers are not just purchasing a property — they are purchasing a land use right that the market is permanently contracting.
The buyer considering Caballo Ranchos needs to understand the zoning specifics, the equestrian infrastructure requirements, the lot size implications, and the pricing dynamics that reflect both the residential improvements and the land use premium. This guide covers each.
The Guide
Caballo Ranchos from Every Angle.
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Equestrian Infrastructure
What Horse Property Requires
Equestrian zoning permits horse keeping, but the quality of the equestrian facilities varies significantly by property. The infrastructure that matters: stalls (covered or open), tack room, feed storage, manure management, water access for the equestrian area, fencing (type and condition), and riding or exercise area. Some properties have fully improved facilities ready for immediate use. Others have the zoning right but minimal infrastructure, requiring investment to bring the equestrian facilities to a usable standard. The cost difference between a property with turnkey equestrian facilities and one requiring full buildout can exceed $100K. Evaluate the equestrian infrastructure with the same rigor you apply to the home’s residential systems.
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Who Buys Here
The Caballo Ranchos Buyer Profiles
The active equestrian. Keeps horses on-site and rides regularly. Evaluates the property primarily on equestrian facility quality, lot size, trail access, and neighbor compatibility. The residential home is secondary to the equestrian infrastructure. The lifestyle equestrian. Values the horse property setting — the large lots, the rural character, the open space — without necessarily keeping horses full-time. May board elsewhere or keep horses seasonally. Drawn to the land, the privacy, and the absence of HOA restrictions. The large-lot buyer. Not an equestrian at all. Purchasing for the lot size, the privacy, the no-HOA freedom, and the scarcity of half-acre-plus parcels in the Scottsdale address. The equestrian zoning is a bonus that protects against future densification of the surrounding area. The investor. Recognizing the permanent scarcity of equestrian-zoned land inside Scottsdale and purchasing for long-term appreciation. The land use right is the investment thesis.
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Zoning & Land Use
Understanding What the Zoning Protects
Equestrian zoning in Scottsdale is a land use designation that permits horse keeping as a right of property ownership. This is fundamentally different from a variance or a conditional use permit, which can be revoked. The zoning runs with the land and transfers with the sale. It protects the equestrian buyer’s right to keep horses against future objections from neighbors or municipal rule changes. The number of horses permitted typically depends on lot size — verify the specific parcel’s allowance with Scottsdale’s zoning department. Manure management, fly control, and facility maintenance standards are governed by city code. Understanding the specific requirements before you purchase prevents conflicts and ensures compliance from day one.
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Pricing
Two Value Components in Every Property
Caballo Ranchos pricing reflects two distinct components: the residential improvements (the home itself — condition, size, renovation quality) and the land use premium (the equestrian zoning, the lot size, and the location). The land use premium is the more durable value component. A dated home can be renovated or rebuilt. The equestrian zoning is permanent and its scarcity increases over time. Properties at $800K to $1.2M typically feature older homes with basic or minimal equestrian facilities. The value is primarily in the land and the zoning. Properties at $1.2M to $2M+ feature renovated or newer homes with improved equestrian infrastructure on premium lots. The buyer is paying for both a quality residence and a turnkey equestrian operation.
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Location
The Rarity of Urban-Adjacent Horse Property
The typical horse property buyer in the Phoenix metro accepts a geographic compromise. Equestrian communities in Queen Creek, Gilbert, Cave Creek, and the far north Valley offer horse zoning but require 30 to 45 minutes of drive time for dining, shopping, and entertainment. Caballo Ranchos sits in South Scottsdale. Old Town is minutes away. Fashion Square is a short drive. The Greenbelt provides recreational access. Medical facilities, grocery, and the Scottsdale Airpark are all within the immediate area. This proximity to urban amenities while maintaining equestrian zoning is the rarity that defines Caballo Ranchos’ market position and long-term value.
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Off-Market Activity
A Small Community with Private Turnover
Caballo Ranchos is a small community with a specific buyer pool. When properties become available, the community network and equestrian connections often surface the opportunity before a public listing. Equestrian property owners tend to know other equestrian property owners, and the sale of a horse property often begins with a conversation at the barn or the trail rather than on the MLS. For buyers searching specifically for equestrian-zoned property in the Scottsdale address, the off-market channel is essential. The Private Client Network provides access to these opportunities for qualified buyers who understand the equestrian market.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Caballo Ranchos FAQ.
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What is Caballo Ranchos?
An equestrian-zoned community in South Scottsdale where horse keeping is permitted by right. Larger lots, no HOA, and Old Town proximity. One of the last remaining horse communities in the Scottsdale address.
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What are home prices?
$800K for older properties with basic equestrian facilities to $2M+ for renovated homes with fully improved horse infrastructure on premium lots. Pricing reflects both residential value and equestrian land use premium.
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Can you keep horses in Scottsdale?
Only in equestrian-zoned areas. Caballo Ranchos is one of the few remaining communities within Scottsdale city limits where horse keeping is permitted by zoning. Most South Scottsdale neighborhoods prohibit livestock.
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How big are the lots?
Typically half-acre or larger to accommodate equestrian use. Lot size determines how many horses can be kept and the quality of on-site equestrian facilities possible.
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Is there an HOA?
No mandatory HOA in most sections. Property customization and equestrian facility improvements are governed by Scottsdale city code rather than HOA restrictions.
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Is it close to Old Town?
Yes. Minutes from Old Town dining, Fashion Square, and the Greenbelt. Most horse properties in the metro are 30 to 45 minutes from comparable urban access.
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Work With Anne
Searching for Horse Property in Scottsdale?
Equestrian-zoned properties in the Scottsdale address are rare and inventory is limited. A conversation about what is currently available — including off-market parcels and properties not yet listed — is the right starting point.
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