Land Clearing in Greenwood, Arkansas
Home sites on acreage, pasture, and hunting ground cleared clean — about thirteen miles south of Fort Smith on US-71.
- About 13 miles south of Fort Smith on US-71
- Site prep, pasture & hunting-land clearing
- Free on-site estimates, quotes in 24 hours
Tell us about the property. We'll follow up within 24 hours to schedule a free on-site look.
Land clearing in Greenwood — growing acreage country
Greenwood sits about thirteen miles south of Fort Smith on US-71, and though it shares the title of Sebastian County seat, it lives a different life — a growing bedroom community where families are building on acreage. Fort Chaffee borders it to the north, and the Ouachita foothills climb to the south, so the ground runs from open pasture to wooded hillside.
That's a mix that keeps the clearing work varied. New homes going up on wooded and pasture acreage need site prep — timber down, stumps out, ground graded. Grown-up pasture and fence rows need reclaiming. And with the wooded foothills close by, hunting-land work — lanes, food plots, trails — is common on family and leased ground around town.
Greenwood is a short run south from the Fort Smith metro, so a free on-site walk is easy to set up. Tell us what you're dealing with — a build site, overgrown pasture, a deer property — and you'll get an honest recommendation and a quote within 24 hours.
Clearing services around Greenwood
The jobs Greenwood-area landowners call about most:
Lot Clearing & Site Prep
Home and shop sites on acreage cleared, grubbed, and graded build-ready.
Site prep →Hunting & Recreational Land
Shooting lanes, food plots, and trails cut before the season.
Hunting prep →Greenwood land clearing questions
Do you serve Greenwood and the surrounding acreage?
Yes. Greenwood is about thirteen miles south of Fort Smith on US-71, well within range for a free on-site estimate — in town, on the acreage around it, or out toward the Ouachita foothills.
Can you get my hunting property ready before deer season?
Yes, and timing matters. Arkansas archery opens in late September, so the best window to cut lanes, food plots, and trails is summer through early September, so the ground settles before opening day. Book early — the pre-season weeks fill up fast.