Ultra-rural. Ultra-private. Population under 2,000, stone walls older than the Republic, and the kind of solitude that no amount of money can buy in the suburbs. For buyers who want land and nothing else.
Lyndeborough is the Souhegan Valley's wild card — a town so rural and so private that most New Hampshire residents have never been there, yet close enough to the commuter corridor that it remains a viable option for remote workers and hybrid professionals.
With a population under 2,000, Lyndeborough is the kind of place where you can drive for miles without seeing another house. The roads are lined with stone walls built by farmers who cleared this land two centuries ago, and the forests have grown back around farmsteads that dot the landscape like ghosts of a different era.
The Center Road historic district preserves the town's original village center — a cluster of 18th and 19th century homes around a meeting house, set on a ridge with views that extend across the valley. It's one of the most intact pre-Revolutionary settlement patterns in southern New Hampshire.
Rose Mountain anchors the town's conservation land, providing hiking and hunting access to hundreds of acres of forest. The town's trail network connects informally to New Boston's and Mont Vernon's conservation corridors, creating a backcountry experience minutes from Route 101.
Lyndeborough's real estate is characterized by large parcels — 10, 20, even 50+ acres are common. Properties here tend to be old farmsteads with character, not developments. The median price reflects the quality of the structures and the sheer volume of land included. For the right buyer, this is the ultimate privacy play in the Souhegan Valley.
We track 2 properties in Lyndeborough. Many will never be listed. Tell us what you're looking for and we'll find it.
Start the Hunt