Washakie County
Ten Sleep, Wyoming.
As of June 12, 2026, Ten Sleep, Wyoming, in Washakie County, has no residential properties actively listed for sale, based on verified NWBOR MLS data. During the previous 24 months, 7 homes sold at a median sale price of $310,000.
Richard Realty · 11 homes sold in Ten Sleep
Richard Realty
Recently sold in Ten Sleep
SOLD
Ten Sleep, WY
3 Beds · 2 Baths · 3,240 Sq Ft
SOLD
Ten Sleep, WY
3 Beds · 3 Baths · 2,458 Sq Ft
SOLD
Ten Sleep, WY
3 Beds · 3 Baths · 3,335 Sq Ft · 4.49 Acres
SOLD
Ten Sleep, WY
3 Beds · 3 Baths · 3,156 Sq Ft · 1.99 Acres
SOLD
Ten Sleep, WY
3 Beds · 2 Baths · 1,706 Sq Ft · 1.41 Acres
SOLD
Ten Sleep, WY
3 Beds · 2 Baths · 1,288 Sq Ft
Washakie County
About Ten Sleep
Ten Sleep is a small town in Washakie County, Wyoming, positioned where U.S. Highway 16 flattens at the western foot of the Bighorn Mountains and Ten Sleep Creek meets the Nowood River. Step outside on any given morning and the canyon mouth is already lit before the valley floor catches the sun. That visual fact orients daily life here in a way longtime residents stop noticing and newcomers never quite get used to. The real estate market takes the shape of in-town residential, working ranch and acreage corridors across the basin floor, and recreational property tied directly to canyon and mountain access. Buyers who find their way to Ten Sleep are usually asking a version of the same question: what does it actually mean to own property at the edge of a place like this?
Living in Ten Sleep, Wyoming
Daily life in Ten Sleep is organized around a small, walkable core and a surrounding landscape that changes character with every season. In summer, the canyon mouth on the east end of town draws sport climbers heading into Bighorn National Forest along U.S. Highway 16, and residents who have been here long enough barely register the out-of-state plates that appear each spring. The Ten Sleep Brewing Company, located at 2549 US-16, functions as something close to a community anchor, a room where climbers, ranchers, and longtime locals occupy the same space without much ceremony. That kind of overlap is part of what makes a town this size work.
Winter changes the math. When the canyon road over Powder River Pass closes or becomes uncertain, the town's self-sufficiency stops being a lifestyle preference and becomes a practical condition. Residents plan differently here than they do in larger towns, and most will say that adjustment comes faster than newcomers expect. The Nowood River corridor and Ten Sleep Creek mark the edges of town in a way people feel more than they think about. The sound of moving water is a constant in spring. The cottonwoods along the creek turn the valley gold in October, and then the basin goes quiet.
Lifestyle and Amenities in Ten Sleep, Wyoming
Ten Sleep offers a specific and honest set of local amenities: a K-12 school operated by Washakie County School District Number 2 under the name Ten Sleep School, the Ten Sleep Brewing Company, and the services a small agricultural town sustains. For a grocery run beyond basics, a pharmacy, a hospital, or most specialty retail, residents make the 26-mile drive west on U.S. Highway 16 to Worland, the Washakie County seat, which carries the regional service infrastructure. That drive is a practical feature of life here, not an occasional inconvenience. Buyers who are accustomed to proximity to medical facilities or large-format retail should weigh it honestly before they commit.
Recreation is where Ten Sleep is genuinely well-resourced. Ten Sleep Canyon holds more than 1,000 bolted sport-climbing routes on Bighorn Dolomite limestone cliffs, making it one of the most concentrated climbing destinations in the northern Rockies. The canyon enters Bighorn National Forest as it climbs east along U.S. Highway 16, opening access to hiking, hunting, and high-country terrain. The Nowood River and Ten Sleep Creek provide fishing and riparian access close to town. For buyers whose priorities run toward climbing, fishing, hunting, or mountain access, the town's position at the canyon mouth is a structural advantage, not a geographic coincidence.
Location and Regional Access
Ten Sleep sits in north-central Wyoming along U.S. Highway 16, which functions as both the town's main corridor and its primary connection in either direction. Heading west, the highway reaches Worland in 26 miles. Heading east, it climbs through Ten Sleep Canyon into Bighorn National Forest, crosses Powder River Pass at 9,666 feet, and descends to Buffalo, Wyoming, the entire route designated as the Cloud Peak Skyway Scenic Byway. That eastern passage is a genuine mountain road, and its seasonal conditions shape ownership in a direct way. The pass can close or require caution in winter, which affects how reliably residents can move between the basin and the communities east of the Bighorns.
There is no commercial air service in Ten Sleep, and Worland no longer carries scheduled passenger flights. Owners who travel frequently by air drive to a regional hub, Cody, Riverton, or Billings, Montana, for scheduled connections. Buyers who travel often should factor that drive into their planning. The highway position that makes Ten Sleep accessible for recreation also places it at a genuine distance from urban infrastructure, and that distance is the defining condition of ownership here.
Why Homebuyers Look at Ten Sleep, Wyoming Real Estate
Ten Sleep real estate draws buyers who are making a deliberate tradeoff: distance from urban services in exchange for direct access to a specific landscape and a low-density way of life. The property spectrum here is worth understanding by type, because each sub-market represents a different version of that tradeoff.
In-town residential sits along and near U.S. Highway 16 and the streets that run toward Ten Sleep Creek and the Nowood River confluence. These are the town's most accessible homes, closest to Ten Sleep School, the brewery, and whatever local services the town carries. Inventory in this sub-market tends to be modest in scale and price relative to resort-adjacent Wyoming markets, and it turns over slowly in a town of this size.
Ranch and acreage property along the basin floor, stretching west toward Worland and south along the Nowood River corridor, represents the working agricultural character of the surrounding county. These parcels come with water rights, outbuildings, and the operational infrastructure of ranching country. Buyers here are typically acquiring land with a productive history, not just a rural setting.
Recreational and canyon-adjacent property, positioned east of town along U.S. Highway 16 as it enters the canyon, carries a premium tied to climbing and mountain access. Proximity to the Bighorn National Forest boundary and the canyon's climbing routes is the primary driver of value in this corridor.
The structural choice in Ten Sleep homes for sale comes down to the convenience of the town core, the working scale of basin acreage, or the recreational positioning of canyon-edge property. The current medians, months of supply, and days on market are in the live summary at the top of the page. What the landscape and the market structure tell buyers, more plainly than any statistic, is that the land itself is the asset here. The town is the access point.
Ten Sleep FAQ
Questions buyers ask about Ten Sleep
Where is Ten Sleep, Wyoming?
Ten Sleep is in southeast Washakie County at the western mouth of Ten Sleep Canyon, where the No Wood River drains the Bighorn Mountains. US Highway 16 passes through town. Worland — the county seat — is 27 miles west.Where does the name "Ten Sleep" come from?
The name comes from a measure of distance used by the Sioux: ten nights' travel between two reference points along their seasonal routes through the region.Why is Ten Sleep famous for climbing?
The limestone walls of Ten Sleep Canyon hold thousands of bolted sport-climbing routes and are considered among the premier climbing destinations in North America. Climbing season runs from late spring through early fall and draws visitors from around the world.What kind of property is typical in Ten Sleep?
A mix of small-lot residential within town, mountain cabins and recreational acreage in the surrounding hills, and ranches in the wider No Wood River valley. Buyers in Ten Sleep are typically looking for recreational property, mountain cabins, or ranching land.
Local team
The REALTORS® serving Ten Sleep
4 Richard Realty REALTORS® serve Washakie County and Northwest Wyoming, combining local market knowledge with real-world experience across residential, luxury, land, ranch, and commercial properties. Explore the team to view direct contact information, bios, and active listings.
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