So I have been looking for a "Summer / Winter Retreat" if you will for some time. I think we have settled on Wyoming. We've been visiting Yellowstone and the area up there for a few years and while Jackson Hole is far too rich for my blood other places in the state are not. My kids are young but I see use spending 2 months a year at the property for now and increasing as time goes on. Maintaining our primary house in Texas. I can work remotely so I am flexible in this.
Previously I investigated NoCal and other places nearer to my origins in Oregon. But Wyoming seems more ideal as I do not see myself being totally free from Texas and Wyoming is within the realm of reason in terms of driving out there (1 long day of driving vs 2 or 3 days).
My criteria:
- Low property tax/upkeep.
- Small town vibes. Preferably able to walk or bike from the property to most places in town.
- 4 seasons.
- Mountains
- Outdoor activities galore.
- Mostly interested in hiking, fishing, camping, driving around a snowmobile or some Xcountry skiiing.
- Reasonable distance from larger city (4 hours or so if we need stuff).
- <=$400k
- 3/2 or something typical. Don't need anything fancy here.
This will likely be the first time paying cash for a house for me. Haven't really decided here as I am free and clear on my other houses in Austin area and the rental income more than covers whatever the mortgage I am looking at may be.
I've been doing something similar to this since 2021. Spend 8-9 months out of the year in Ohio, then 3-4 months in Wyoming (Casper for me). I did end up renting my place out for a year this time though, but should be going back late October.
Casper itself is probably too "big" for what you're looking for, but it is less than 4 hours from Grand Teton National Park, less than 5hrs from Yellowstone, and less than 4 hours from Denver if you wanted a major metro for whatever reason. Plenty of places available within your target price range as well. Once you get outside of the city area, there's really nothing in any direction for about 2 hours. Casper Mountain is there with plenty of hiking and skiing. The North Platte River runs through town if kayaking is your thing. Decent fishing (from what I hear) too.
Buffalo has a population of less than 5k, but it may take some time to find a decent 3/2 for <400k. It's about 2hrs from Bighorn National Forest which is a very underrated place (in my opinion) with activities for all 4 seasons.
Sheridan is about 40 minutes from Buffalo and has a population of about 20k. Home prices seem kind of all over the place in my brief research there.
Laramie is home to the University of Wyoming with a population a little over 32k. It's about an hour from Medicine Bow National Forest which is one of my favorite places in the state. The "city" itself I guess could be considered on the larger side for Wyoming, but there's definitely some affordable homes. I've only stayed a few nights at a time there and while the college is there, it never felt like a "college" town to me.
Hope at least a little of this info is helpful. I love the state and when I was looking for a place in late 2021, I thought for sure I would pick a place in Montana, but by then, the locusts from California and the PNW were already flooding a lot of the areas I was looking at. Wyoming seems like one of the last bastions of safety from that mind rot. Jackson Hole (Teton County) is the only one in the state that votes blue. If you have stable remote employment, I really can't recommend it enough.