
North Texas horse country has a new set of deep-pocketed players. A Houston couple has purchased the TR9 ranch complex outside Weatherford after Teton Ridge put its properties on the market. The two TR9 parcels together total roughly 860 acres and were marketed with a combined asking price near $43.5 million. The sale was recorded on Jan. 8, formally handing the high‑end equestrian facilities to new ownership.
According to the Dallas Business Journal, Teton Ridge was listed as the seller and the buyers were identified only as a Houston couple. That report is the first local account of the deed transfer and does not name the purchasers.
What the property includes
The marketing materials describe a professionally outfitted equestrian campus with multiple barns, insulated mare facilities, indoor and outdoor arenas, walkers and extensive cross‑fenced pastures. The public listing from ICON Global breaks the offering into TR9 (about $33 million) and nearby TR9 West (about $10.5 million), together roughly $43.5 million, and notes the combined acreage sits about 18 miles northwest of Weatherford. The listing also highlights water resources along Rock Creek and infrastructure sized to support large training or breeding operations.
How the sale follows a major dispersal
TR9’s transfer follows Teton Ridge’s absolute dispersal of its performance bloodstock in late September 2025. The auction catalog and results published by Western Bloodstock show marquee lots and multi‑million dollar hammers. That dispersal drew national attention and industry buyers, underscoring why the facilities at TR9 attracted high interest from both horsemen and investors.
What may change under new ownership
The listing materials flag multiple possible futures for the land, including continued use as a performance‑horse campus, commercial hospitality or selective subdivision. They emphasize the property’s flexibility for different equine and ag‑focused enterprises, according to the ICON Global marketing package. Neither the seller nor the buyers have issued a public statement detailing plans for operations or redevelopment.
Local real‑estate observers say large, purpose‑built ranches like TR9 often evolve slowly under new stewardship, but changes can ripple through North Texas’s performance‑horse community. As the Dallas Business Journal notes, the new owners have not publicly outlined next steps and the ranch’s future use remains to be seen.









