Hunt & Live

Roberts County, TX

803 residents · 924 sq mi · 0.9/sq mi · 100% rural

Climate
58.8°F
21.9" rain/yr
Water
dry sub-humid
Aridity index 0.75
Hardiness
Zone 8a
Winter low ~14.1°F

About Roberts County

Roberts County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas. As of the 2020 census, its population was 827, making it the eighth-least populous county in Texas. Its county seat is Miami, which is also the county's only incorporated community. The county was created in 1876 and organized in 1889. It is named for Oran Milo Roberts, a governor of Texas. Roberts County is one of three prohibition counties in the state of Texas.

82
Prepper Suitability
worsebetter
National rank: #149 of 3,109
Locator map
Location within the continental US

Prepper Assessment

Living in this area offers a predominantly rural lifestyle with a low population density of 0.9 people per square mile, providing ample space for self-sufficient living. The climate features an annual mean temperature of 58.8°F, with summer highs reaching 93.9°F and winter lows around 24.1°F. The growing season is supported by USDA zone 8a, allowing for a variety of crops, while the average annual rainfall of 21.9 inches indicates a dry sub-humid environment that may limit certain agricultural practices without irrigation.

This area faces notable risks, particularly from drought, which is ranked 91st on the FEMA hazard scale, indicating a significant concern for water availability. Wildfire risk is also present, with a FEMA rank of 75. While the violence percentile stands at 51, suggesting average safety in terms of crime, the low density may lead to isolation. The median home price of $164,200 is relatively affordable, but the effective property tax rate of 1.00% should be considered when budgeting for long-term living expenses.

Roberts County may appeal to those seeking a quiet, rural lifestyle with the potential for self-sufficiency, especially individuals comfortable with the challenges of limited water resources and potential isolation. However, those who rely heavily on broadband connectivity might find the 48% subscription rate lacking. Ultimately, homesteaders looking for a peaceful retreat with the ability to grow crops and raise livestock may thrive here, while those needing robust infrastructure or urban amenities may find it unsuitable.

AI-generated analysis based on county data (climate, hazards, density, housing, economy). For general orientation only.

Key Facts

Top 95 nationally
Ranks #95 of 3,109 CONUS counties for prepper suitability — top 3%.
#9 of 254 in TX
Ranked #9 of 254 counties statewide for prepper suitability.
Dominant hazard: drought
FEMA ranks drought risk at 91/100 here — the leading natural threat.
Extremely rural
Only 0.9 people per square mile — fewer than 5/sqmi places you in the bottom 5% nationally for density.
Climate profile
Classified as dry sub-humid with a 58.8°F annual mean and 21.9" of annual precipitation. USDA hardiness zone 8a.
Housing & taxes
Median home value $164,200.

Score Breakdown

Violence
49
percentile (lower = safer)
Disasters
3
percentile (lower = safer)
Density
1
percentile (lower = emptier)
Overall FEMA Risk
3.1
NRI composite (0-100)

Natural Hazard Profile (FEMA NRI)

Cold Wave 13
Drought 91
Earthquake 5
Hail 14
Hurricane 7
Heat Wave 3
Riverine Flood 0
Ice Storm 18
Landslide 7
Lightning 3
Strong Wind 5
Tornado 13
Wildfire 75
Winter Weather 13

Monthly Climate (1991–2020 normals)

Average temperature
JFMAMJ JASOND
Monthly precipitation (inches)
JFMAMJ JASOND
Summer high
93.9°F
Winter low
24.1°F
Heating degree days
3,923
Cooling degree days
1,699

Housing & Economy

Median home value
$164,200
Median HH income
$62,667
Price to income
2.6×
Property tax rate
1%
~$1,650/yr median

Community Profile

Median age
42.5
Homeownership
86.6%
Poverty rate
14.7%
Unemployment
0.5%

Connectivity

Broadband households
47.5%
No internet access
27.2%

Explore Roberts County Further

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Data sources. Prepper scores are national percentile ranks of firearm fatalities (County Health Rankings 2024 / CDC WONDER), FEMA National Risk Index 2023 composite disaster score, and population density (ACS 2022 + TIGER 2022 land area). Climate from NOAA nClimDiv 1991–2020 normals. Hardiness zone is estimated from climate data and may differ from the official USDA PHZM. Demographics and housing from Census ACS 5-year 2022. All scores are for comparison purposes only and do not constitute advice about where to live.