In the 1960s, a group of developers out of Hollywood split Golden Valley into 2+ acre parcels and sold them for $695 each. Ten dollars down. Ten dollars a month. People thought it was crazy. Those people were wrong.
You are looking at one of those parcels right now. 2066 South Canelo Road. 2.35 acres in the Sacramento Valley of northwestern Arizona, framed by the jagged Black Mountains and the Cerbat Mountains. The kind of view that makes you forget to check your phone.
Power lines are already at the front of the property. That single fact puts this parcel ahead of dozens of other listings in Mohave County. You're not paying thousands to run electricity across the desert. It's already there, waiting at the property line.
The lot is nearly a perfect square. 330 feet across the front and back. 310 feet on each side. That's usable space. No weird angles. No slivers. Just a clean rectangle of desert floor with low desert brush and mountains in every direction.
Zoning is agricultural residential. There is no HOA. Zero. No fees, no board, no rules committee. Property taxes are $121.06 a year as of 2025. You probably spend more than that on coffee in two months.
Access is via dirt road. Existing homes are nearby, so you're not the first person to figure out this area. Where available, water options include municipal service or drilling a private well. Hauling and storing water is also common in Golden Valley. Sewer would need to be handled with an on-site septic system, which is typical for this type of property.
Now here is the part that matters most. We finance this ourselves. There is no bank involved. There is no credit check. There is no application process. If you can make the down payment, you are in. It's that simple. Review the paperwork on the next page and you're on your way.
Full price is $27,495. Down payment is $275. Monthly payment is $275.
Back in the 1960s, regular people became Arizona landowners for ten bucks a month. The opportunity looked too simple. Too easy. Too good. The people who acted anyway are the ones who ended up owning something real. This is the same kind of moment. Same valley. Same easy terms. Different decade. Click the orange button below and make this one yours.






