Start with buildability, not price
Land is a major layer in Codigoro; the current city snapshot shows 0 lot records, about n/a of active inventory. That makes vacant land a real search path, not a small side category.
The first question is not whether the lot is cheap. It is whether the site can support the intended plan with legal access, realistic utilities, workable drainage, zoning fit, and a timeline that matches the buyer's capital.
Utilities, septic, and road access
A lot can be listed in the same city and still have very different utility realities. Sewer, septic, well, electric distance, road paving, drainage, and maintenance expectations should be checked before a buyer compares two lots by acreage or price.
If the buyer intends to build, the cost of getting the site ready can matter as much as the purchase price. That includes survey, clearing, fill, engineering, permits, impact fees, builder mobilization, and holding costs.
Zoning, wetlands, flood, and title
Land due diligence needs an official-record mindset. Zoning and future land use should support the intended use; wetlands, flood exposure, setbacks, easements, and title exceptions should be checked before closing.
When the intended use is investment or future resale, the buyer should also compare nearby supply, road access, new construction, and whether the lot is competing with many similar parcels.
How ListyPRO should route land users
The city hub should let a user move from a land card to a map cluster, then into a due-diligence checklist, then into an AI report that names the unresolved checks.
That workflow is stronger than a generic land search because it gives the user and search engines a clear explanation of what land buyers actually need to know in this city.