PARKER COUNTYLAND CLEARING
Land clearing in Aledo, Texas

Aledo, Texas

Land Clearing in Aledo, TX

Aledo is one of the fastest-growing areas in Parker County, and growth means land that needs clearing. The Walsh Ranch development alone covers 7,267 acres at the I-20/I-30 split and is bringing an estimated 50,000+ new residents to the area. Fort Worth annexed 402 acres here in 2025. UTA is building an $800M West Campus. This place is changing fast.

Whether you're a homeowner building on your own lot, a custom builder prepping an estate site, or a developer clearing subdivision phases, the work starts the same way: somebody has to cut the brush and clear the land. That's us. Aledo properties tend toward higher-end homes on larger lots, which means the clearing work needs to be precise — property lines respected, specimen trees protected, and the finished product clean enough for a builder to start grading the next week.

The terrain south of I-20 gets noticeably hillier with more limestone outcrops and dense cedar. North of I-20 is flatter with a mix of mesquite and scrub oak. We handle both, and we're about 20 minutes from our Azle shop — close enough that mobilization doesn't eat into your budget.

Why Aledo Keeps Us Busy

Walsh Ranch and the Growth Corridor

Walsh is one of the largest master-planned communities in Texas, and the ripple effect reaches well beyond its borders. Adjacent landowners are subdividing and selling parcels. Commercial development is following rooftops along I-20. Every new neighborhood and every new commercial pad site starts with clearing. The pace hasn't slowed down, and the raw land supply in this corridor is still deep.

New Construction Site Prep

Aledo custom homes aren't cookie-cutter. Builders here are working with 1-5 acre lots that have existing vegetation, grade changes, and sometimes rock near the surface. The clearing scope is more involved than a flat subdivision lot in Fort Worth. We coordinate with builders on what stays and what goes, flag specimen trees, and clear to a level where grading equipment can move in without delays. We've done this enough times to know what builders expect.

Cedar Country South of I-20

The terrain south of I-20 in the Aledo area is where Parker County starts feeling like hill country. Limestone sits close to the surface, the hills roll steeper, and Ashe juniper (cedar) dominates. These cedar stands are dense — 8-12 inch trunks packed tight enough that you can't walk through them. Standard brush hogging won't touch it. You need a forestry mulcher with the horsepower to grind standing timber. That's our setup.

Fort Worth ETJ Complications

Fort Worth's extraterritorial jurisdiction reaches into the Aledo area, and the 2025 annexation added another 402 acres. If your property falls in the ETJ or the newly annexed zone, development rules are different than unincorporated Parker County. We see this regularly and can tell you whether your parcel needs a pre-development review before clearing. It takes one call to find out.

Aledo Land Clearing FAQ

Building in Aledo? Start Here.

Construction-ready clearing for Aledo lots and acreage. Fixed pricing, free estimates, and a crew that knows the terrain.