Land here tends to be more rural than the suburban Clark/Floyd corridor. Once you're west of the I-64 corridor near Lanesville, you're in forested hill country. Timber, hunting tracts, and agricultural acreage are what we see most. River bottom land in the south along the Ohio can come with flood plain complications.
Corydon, the county seat, was Indiana's first state capital — there's some commercial activity there, but the county overall is quiet. We actively buy Harrison County land and can close without contingencies. No listings, no showings, no deals that fall apart on financing.
Deeds are recorded at the Harrison County Recorder in Corydon. Indiana Sales Disclosure Form required at closing. We handle the paperwork — you can close in person or by mail if you're out of state.
Adjacent counties: If your parcel is in Floyd County (New Albany area) or Crawford County, see those pages — we buy in both. Harrison County borders Floyd to the north and Crawford to the west.