
Carolina Horse and Home
14045 Ballantyne Corporate Pl #500, Charlotte, NC 28277
Carolina Horse and Home is a real estate brokerage operated by Meghan Kara through Keller Williams Ballantyne in Charlotte, North Carolina, serving the Carol...
Charlotte is North Carolina's largest city and one of the fastest-growing metros in the southeastern United States, a financial center known for its corporate headquarters, professional sports teams, and rapidly expanding suburban footprint. While Charlotte itself is primarily an urban environment, the surrounding region — Union County to the south, Cabarrus and Iredell counties to the north and east — has an active horse community that has historically occupied the rural fringe around the city.
For horse owners in Charlotte, the equestrian options are primarily found in the surrounding counties rather than within the urban core, where land prices and density make horse properties rare. The metropolitan area's size and wealth support a robust show circuit, multiple training programs across English and western disciplines, and good access to equine veterinary services. The 7-acre property scale of current Charlotte listings reflects the constrained land situation within city limits. When searching for boarding in the greater Charlotte area, expand your radius to Union, Cabarrus, Iredell, and Gaston counties, where larger acreage facilities are available at more practical prices.
Check out the boarding options available throughout the Charlotte region below.
Charlotte is North Carolina's largest city and one of the fastest-growing metros in the southeastern United States, a financial center known for its corporate headquarters, professional sports teams, and rapidly expanding suburban footprint. While Charlotte itself is primarily an urban environment, the surrounding region — Union County to the south, Cabarrus and Iredell counties to the north and east — has an active horse community that has historically occupied the rural fringe around the city.
For horse owners in Charlotte, the equestrian options are primarily found in the surrounding counties rather than within the urban core, where land prices and density make horse properties rare. The metropolitan area's size and wealth support a robust show circuit, multiple training programs across English and western disciplines, and good access to equine veterinary services. The 7-acre property scale of current Charlotte listings reflects the constrained land situation within city limits. When searching for boarding in the greater Charlotte area, expand your radius to Union, Cabarrus, Iredell, and Gaston counties, where larger acreage facilities are available at more practical prices.
Check out the boarding options available throughout the Charlotte region below.

14045 Ballantyne Corporate Pl #500, Charlotte, NC 28277
Carolina Horse and Home is a real estate brokerage operated by Meghan Kara through Keller Williams Ballantyne in Charlotte, North Carolina, serving the Carol...

10915 Beatties Ford Road, Huntersville, NC 28078
This is a real estate brokerage (Lake Norman Realty) specializing in residential, commercial, and waterfront properties in the Lake Norman and Charlotte, Nor...
Most Charlotte-area horse owners board in the surrounding counties — Union County to the south toward Waxhaw, Cabarrus to the northeast, Iredell to the north near Mooresville, and Gaston to the west. These rural counties offer larger properties at lower prices than within Charlotte city limits. Daily commute times from most Charlotte neighborhoods to these facilities are typically 30–50 minutes.
The Charlotte metro area's size and affluence support a diverse equestrian community — active Hunter/Jumper and Dressage show circuits, western performance programs, trail riding clubs, and equine rescue organizations. The area's proximity to the Tryon International Equestrian Center (about 50 miles south) also connects serious competitors to world-class competition infrastructure.
Charlotte-area riders benefit from proximity to the Tryon International Equestrian Center in Mill Spring, NC — one of the premier equestrian venues in the eastern US. Regional shows are also accessible throughout the Piedmont. Ask facilities about which shows their boarders attend most frequently and how far the typical show travel distance is from their barn.