The land opens wide and rolls easy, framed by mountains on the horizon and the slow, particular light Montana is known for. Privacy here is rare, the views are wide, and the conveniences of Big Sky remain a short drive away.
What sets this homesite apart is readiness. The well is drilled and the septic is installed, offering an unusually approachable path to beginning your life in Montana on a timeline shaped by you rather than by permitting and infrastructure schedules.
For all its seclusion, the location is uncommonly connected. Big Sky Town Center is under ten minutes away, placing daily errands, restaurants, and gathering places easily within reach. The Gallatin River, home to some of the most storied fly water in the West, sits five minutes from the property. Big Sky Resort is twenty minutes up the mountain, with world-class skiing, hiking, and a full mountain calendar at the ready. Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport is roughly an hour out, and Yellowstone National Park forty-five minutes from your future door. Few parcels in the region sit so naturally between mountain, river, town, and beyond.
The acreage allows for thoughtful planning: a primary residence positioned for the views, generous setbacks, room for a barn or guest quarters, and the kind of buffer that protects what drew you here in the first place. The terrain works with the structure rather than against it, and the surrounding topography reinforces the sense of arrival rather than interrupting it.
Michener Meadows itself carries a particular character within the Big Sky landscape. It is open country, settled but not crowded, with a rhythm shaped by the seasons and the wildlife that move through it. Owners here value land for what it is rather than what can be built on top of it, and the result is a neighborhood defined by space and natural beauty.
Few homesites in the area combine ready infrastructure, twenty acres of remarkable land, and a setting this composed. The systems are in. The setting is established. The acreage offers a latitude that has become increasingly difficult to find this close to town.