Fantasy Farm Friday: Turnkey Professional Equestrian Property in Ohio
For a little over $2.2M, this WEC-accessible farm in Ohio might be just the thing to get your operation going.

All photos are from HorseProperties.net
If your dream farm includes zero compromises and maximum ride time, today’s Fantasy Farm Friday delivers in a big way. I mean, there may not be a house, per se, but the equestrian features are 👩‍🍳💋.
Set on 69 gated acres in Batavia, Ohio, this property isn’t just horse-ready, it’s competition-ready. Designed for serious riders, trainers, and barn owners, this is the kind of place where programs grow, horses thrive, and your “someday” operation becomes very real.
Let’s start with the centerpiece:
An 80’ x 200’ indoor arena with GGT footing, mirrors, and an overhead watering system. Translation? Year-round riding without sacrificing footing quality or visibility. Outside, a 70’ x 210’ arena gives you plenty of space to school, condition, or host clinics when the weather cooperates.



The main barn checks every box: 22 matted stalls, climate-controlled tack and viewing rooms, office space, and all the functionality you need to run a professional program without constantly wishing you had “just one more thing.”


And then there’s the infrastructure that separates a nice farm from a serious one:
- 9 pastures + 9 dry lots
- Approximately 35 tillable acres
- Oversized turnaround for trailers
- A dedicated layover barn for traveling horses
- Caretaker/manager farmhouse
- A stocked pond with a dock (because yes, you deserve a moment of quiet too)




Located about 30 miles from the World Equestrian Center, this farm sits in that sweet spot — accessible to major competition hubs, but still grounded in usable, workable land.
This isn’t a fixer-upper fantasy. It’s a plug-and-play equestrian business, training facility, or elite private farm, all rolled into one.
Let’s get real. The hardest part wouldn’t be moving in. It would be deciding which horses get the first stalls.

Ready to daydream a little harder? The full listing is available at HorseProperties.net.Â



