Landmark Homes

Landmark Homes Real Estate office servicing residential, vacant land, and commercial sales in north eastern Arizona

https://landmarkhomesaz.com/f/2025-trees-in-2025
05/20/2025

https://landmarkhomesaz.com/f/2025-trees-in-2025

St. Johns is launching a community-wide initiative to plant 2,025 trees by the end of 2025—and you can be a part of it! Whether you're a homeowner, a business owner, or just someone who loves this land, planting a tree i...

This is the new Community Calendar, created by Lisa at the Chamber of Commerce—and we’re happy to share it here on our L...
04/25/2025

This is the new Community Calendar, created by Lisa at the Chamber of Commerce—and we’re happy to share it here on our Landmark Homes page!

It’s a great way to stay in the loop on local events, community gatherings, and more. Whether you’re new to the area or a longtime resident, there’s something for everyone.

The mission of the St. Johns Regional Chamber (SJRCC) is to help businesses servicing the Apache County Region build a solid economic foundation for the future.

**Another Long Post**Why you should be pulling permits. When it comes to rural AZ, a lot of folks think they can skip th...
04/21/2025

**Another Long Post**

Why you should be pulling permits.

When it comes to rural AZ, a lot of folks think they can skip the permitting process to save time or money. But here’s the truth: pulling your building and septic permits is not only inexpensive and straightforward, but it can also add serious value to your property and protect you legally and financially in the long run. I cannot tell you how difficult it is to sell a property when most of the work was not permitted. And I know the story… you never plan on selling your property… well folks, life changes, and I’m here to tell you the stats are against you, and most likely you will end up needing or having to sell at some point. It may be soon, it may not, but if you are reading this and thinking to yourself “We’re never going to sell…”, just wait for a health crisis or a family crisis and see how quickly life throws you a curveball. My advice: ALWAYS HAVE AN EXIT STRATEGY.

The Permitting Process—Simplified

In Apache County, the building inspection process and planning permit approval is about as easy as it gets compared to other places in Arizona. The county offices are super approachable, and many of the forms are available online or at the local annex building in St. Johns.

Septic Permits: The Health Department handles septic permits. You’ll need a percolation test (which, in Apache County, means taking a soil sample to a certified engineer — not just filling holes with water), and a basic design layout. One of our local favorite contractors that can perform “perc” tests for you is Brandon Crosby, and he charges about $950 for that test.
Building Permits: For a single-family dwelling, the permitting fee is usually based on square footage and starts surprisingly low. Many off-grid builds, including cabins and manufactured homes, qualify for a simplified process, and the county does have processes in place to convert those popular cabin/sheds into permitted structures, although from experience, my advice is that you’ll be better off just building a site built home.

You don't need to hire a big-city architect to get your plans approved. Basic floor plans, some elevations, and a site plan are often enough. The county inspectors are experienced, helpful, and used to dealing with owner-builders and do-it-yourselfers.

Why Permits Matter for Resale

Even if you don’t ever plan on selling your land or home, your descendants, or friends, or whoever comes after you may have to, and if you care about them at all, having permits in place can significantly boost your property’s value and make their lives easier. If you don’t have a transition plan in place for after you die, then the permitting can also help you get insurance coverage (not always possible if you’re off grid), especially if you’re adding onto a site-built home or a manufactured home. Buyers (and their lenders) like to see that septic systems, out buildings, and building additions were legally installed. It gives them confidence in what they’re buying, and it prevents delays or red flags during escrow.

Unpermitted work can scare off buyers— just put yourselves in their shoes… would you want to spend your hard-earned money on just the word of the seller that everything they said they did on the property is safe and working properly? The sad fact is that Sellers, especially when not represented by a Realtor, are historically bad at disclosing important things like their septic system backs up every year, or that you shock yourself a little bit every time you touch the yard hydrant (actual problems that actual sellers thought were not a big enough deal to disclose).

Insurance Won’t Cover Unpermitted Work

This is a big one most people don’t realize: insurance companies have the right to deny coverage if the damage occurred to a structure or system that wasn’t permitted.

Say you installed your own septic system or added on a back room without a permit, and something goes wrong—a fire, a flood, a plumbing disaster. Your insurance provider may refuse to pay for repairs because, technically, the improvements weren’t legally authorized. Even scarier… let’s say the fire in a home started IN the addition that wasn’t permitted and then spreads to the rest of the home… you may not qualify for your insurance for the rest of the home because it was your un-permitted work that caused the fire. Big time problems folks.

Permits are a safeguard for you, not just red tape for the county.

The Bottom Line

Permits are cheap in Apache County. The process is simple. And the benefits—increased property value, smoother resale, and better insurance protection—make it a no-brainer.

If you are thinking of an addition, garage, or a new build in Apache County, don’t skip the permits. A little effort now can save you a lot of trouble later.

Permits in Apache County: Approachable, Affordable, and Worth It

Being the "Source of the source" is kind of like teaching a man to fish...
04/18/2025

Being the "Source of the source" is kind of like teaching a man to fish...

Why Your Realtor Shouldn't Be the “Source”—But the Source of the Source

COUNTY Roads... Take me Home...One of my biggest pet peeves in the local real estate scene is when someone calls a count...
04/14/2025

COUNTY Roads... Take me Home...

One of my biggest pet peeves in the local real estate scene is when someone calls a county road a “country road.”

You’ll see addresses like “ #5 CR 7245,” and people assume that “CR” stands for country road. That’s totally understandable—but mildly annoying if you’ve spent any time explaining off-grid directions to someone. Let’s clear up the confusion and take a quick dive into what county road definitions actually mean, based on some helpful info from the Apache County Engineering Department, with whom I asked for guidance on this topic.

What Does “CR” Really Mean?

CR = County Road. These are officially adopted roads—meaning the Apache County Board of Supervisors has legally designated them as public roads. But here’s the twist: some of these roads were adopted decades ago and were never actually built or maintained. In areas like the old Show Low Pines subdivisions from the 1960s, a road may exist on the map and be officially recognized, but there might be nothing but open land or two-track trail in real life.

If someone pulls a permit and brings power to their property, then the county may begin maintaining the route to that parcel. But until then, just because it’s on the map doesn’t mean there’s a road on the ground.

As a reminder, I am not an attorney, and I cannot give legal advice, (See The Source of the Source) so I’m going to just say this as I understand it, not as if this is the law… but if there is an easement recorded at the county to the property, then it should have “legal access”. If there is a road to the property, then it obviously has “physical access”. But those two things don’t always exist at the same time. There are properties that have legal access but not physical access, meaning, someone designed on paper how to legally get to the property, but a road was never actually put in. And also, there are properties that have physical tracks or roads getting to the property, but that track/trail/path/road may not be a legally designated easement.

Work with your Realtor to help research and discover whether or not a property you are looking at has legal access. What I often do when I help my clients, is I first try to find if the property is part of a platted subdivision. Then I try to search for any recorded surveys or easements on the county public document search. (Public Record = free to everyone - Learn how to do this here).

What About Roads That Start With “N”?

N = Non-Maintained Road. These are also official public roads, but the county doesn’t maintain them. The “N” doesn’t stand for north or number (common misconceptions)—it means Not Maintained.

In the early days of building the road map, county staff drove a lot of existing paths—some of which weren’t legal roads—and just tried to get everything documented. That approach has changed. Now, the county only adds an “N” road if they verify it follows a legal easement and qualifies as legal public access. They follow the same rule when assigning addresses.

How Are Roads Numbered?

This is where it gets interesting. I'm not sure where I heard this, but I used to think road numbers like “CR7245” mean it’s in Township 7, Range 24, based on the Public Land Survey System (PLSS). That would one way of doing it —but it’s not how it works.

Apache County assigns road numbers based on zones and available nearby numbers. It’s more of a localized, request-based system. When someone requests a 911 address on a legal easement that doesn’t yet have a named road, the Engineering Department uses GIS software to create a line segment and assign a number. That number might represent a visible road—or just a designated easement created solely for address purposes.

Who Maintains What?

Not every road you see is the county’s responsibility. Some are state highways, some are private driveways, and others might be old ranch roads or utility easements.

To tell which roads are maintained, you can check out the Apache County GIS map:

Brown lines = maintained county roads (eligible for grading, snow plowing, etc.)
Light blue lines = officially recognized but not maintained

Generally, if a road is numbered (even with an “N”), the county has found evidence of a legal easement that benefits the public. But that doesn’t mean you’ll find it in good condition—or even passable.

What if it is named instead of numbered?

Private Subdivision Road - Maintained privately by POA/HOA

Chances are, that if you live on a named street, you also live in a subdivision. This is not always the case, but if you live in an off-grid subdivision it is highly likely that your roads are labeled as "N" roads on the county map and are usually maintained by the local subdivision Property Owner's Association if you have one. (Check out our other blog post about "POA's" to learn more about those and how they relate to HOA's.)

Where Can You See All This?

You can view the interactive road map anytime through the Apache County GIS portal here:

👉 Apache County GIS Map

So next time you're giving directions, buying land, or listing a property, remember: it's county road, not country road. That little detail might save you from confusion—and help you look like a local expert, instead of a new arrival.

Subscribe to the Landmark Homes blog for more information about the rural AZ real estate scene:

County Roads – Not Country Roads

I think the actual average cost of a home in AZ is closer to $471K... but they're not far off.
03/26/2025

I think the actual average cost of a home in AZ is closer to $471K... but they're not far off.

What it costs to buy a house in the 15 fastest-growing states in America

The median cost of a new house in the U.S. is $250,000

Top three reasons people give up living off-grid: #1 - ...? #2 - Expensive #3 - UncomfortableGuess in the comments what ...
03/26/2025

Top three reasons people give up living off-grid:

#1 - ...?
#2 - Expensive
#3 - Uncomfortable

Guess in the comments what #1 is BEFORE you read the blog post. Let's see if you guess right...

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly... and the Future – Part Three Another long post warning…

A home is an investment. Protect your investment by adding gutters and downspouts. Keep that water away from the foundat...
03/20/2025

A home is an investment. Protect your investment by adding gutters and downspouts. Keep that water away from the foundation and the walls 👍

03/19/2025

Number one question I get asked:

Is it a good time to buy? Short answer:

I don't know. Ha, but here are some interesting facts...

1. The average interest rate since the invention of 30 year mortgages is about 7.75%. Currently, according to Freddie Mac, the average 30 year is at 6.75%. So we are currently a full point BELOW average.

2. Let me say this again - INTEREST RATES ARE BELOW AVERAGE. That means that in about 5 years, the chances that the interest rates are going to be higher are really good, and so waiting around for interest rates to go back down to the 2-3% range would be foolish.

3. Home prices are high - yes. Are they too high? I don't know. Are they going to come down soon? It doesn't appear so - this is due to the extremely low supply of housing across the board, especially affordable housing. Simply put, we need more entry-level and retirement level homes. There are not enough builders, nor framers, drywallers, painters, plumbers, electricians etc...

Do you raise animals off-grid?
03/14/2025

Do you raise animals off-grid?

If you've spent any time in Apache County, you’ve probably noticed the landscape is dominated most of the year by one color—what I like to call "soft yellow". Growing up, I thought the yellow grass meant it was dead. I l...

Interested to know if anyone has heard from their insurance carriers this past year about their rates going up or if the...
03/12/2025

Interested to know if anyone has heard from their insurance carriers this past year about their rates going up or if they've lost coverage altogether... Please comment if you've experienced something like that.

Shingle vs. Metal Roofing – How Your Choice Could Save Your Insurance Coverage

Address

395 West Cleveland Street
Saint Johns, AZ
85936

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

+19283374815

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