81-Acre Parcel Near Bouse Listed for Luxury RV Resort Development
An 81-acre parcel near Bouse has been listed as a turnkey RV resort development site, with a listing updated January 3, 2026, highlighting existing well access, power at Highway 72, and zoning in place. The offering could accelerate local tourism investment and raise questions about water, infrastructure, and county planning that matter for La Paz County residents.

A large vacant land parcel just off Highway 72 in the Bouse area entered the market as a development-ready site for an upscale RV resort. The property, listed under MLS# 22518854 on Coldwell Banker Realty, is shown as ±81 acres and is promoted as positioned between the Granite Wash, Harcuvar, and Plomosa Mountains. The listing was last updated January 3, 2026; prospective buyers are asked to contact listing agent Jim Vincent of Jvincent Company LLC through the Coldwell Banker Realty portal for current pricing and showings.
The listing emphasizes infrastructure advantages that can materially reduce initial development costs and timing. It notes an existing well on the property, power available along Highway 72, and zoning already in place for resort use. Those features, if verified, lower barriers for a developer seeking to move quickly from acquisition to construction and revenue generation. The site lies about 13 minutes from the town of Bouse and roughly 30 minutes from Quartzsite, a regional hub for winter RV gatherings and related seasonal commerce.
For local residents and policymakers, the economic implications are concrete. A developed RV resort would likely increase short-term construction employment and generate ongoing service-sector jobs in hospitality, maintenance, and retail. It could broaden the tax base through property and lodging-related revenues and increase customer traffic for businesses in Bouse and along Highway 72. Conversely, development would increase demand for water, waste management, road maintenance, and emergency services, bringing fiscal and environmental tradeoffs for county officials to weigh.
Key points for county review include verification of the well’s capacity and water rights, confirmation of the zoning status and any conditions attached, and an assessment of transportation impacts on Highway 72. Because the listing promotes turnkey potential, officials should expect a compressed timeline from purchase to build-out that could limit windows for public review unless addressed early in the permitting process.

Longer term, the listing echoes broader trends in southwestern rural land markets where packaged parcels with infrastructure attract private capital, particularly in niche hospitality segments like luxury RV resorts. For La Paz County, success will hinge on balancing growth opportunities against infrastructure capacity and natural resource stewardship.
Residents and interested buyers should contact Jim Vincent via the Coldwell Banker Realty portal for current price details, property photos, and to arrange showings. County planning staff can provide official records on zoning and well permits for anyone seeking to evaluate local impacts.
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