Boarding Facilities
25182 listings · Full, partial, self-care, pasture, and stall board.
Compare horse boarding stables and barns near you — full board, partial board, pasture and self-care options. Check stall counts, turnout, arenas, and real reviews from horse owners before you visit.
Pleasant Pines Stables & AirBnB, LLC
Columbia, York Co.
Warstler Farm
Oxford, Lapeer Co.
Braveheart Farm, Inc.
Loxahatchee, Palm Beach Co.
Horselife farm
Bartonville, Denton Co.
Lindsay Yinger Show Stables
Pataskala, Licking Co.
Levantino Ranch, LP
Montgomery, Brazos Co.
Hattie’s Happy Tails
Sharpsville, Tipton Co.
Gold Coast Adventure Company
Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara Co.
Mar Val Stables
Lodi, Amador Co.
Badger Creek Ranch
Cañon City, Fremont Co.
Raemelton Therapeutic Equestrian Center, llc
Mansfield, Morrow Co.
Cardinal Ranch
Lakeland, Polk Co.
Alliance Equestrian Center
Yorktown, Crawford Co.
Catalyst Coaching Equine & Rider
Menomonee Falls, Ozaukee Co.
Turning Point Therapeutic Horsemanship
Stillwater, Ellis Co.
Singleton's Country Kennel playcare and SleepRovers
Fort Branch, Gibson Co.
Cowboy Clinics
Burnet, Burnet Co.
Heartland Eq Stables
Sedalia, Pettis Co.
Rounton Farm
Orange, Louisa Co.
Ralston Training Stables
Depew, Alfalfa Co.
Rosalind Equestrian
Virginia Beach, Currituck Co.
Lucky Red Stables
Allons, Claiborne Co.
Hay Barn Rose
Royse City, Rockwall Co.
Leards L3 Ranch
Oakdale, Calaveras Co.
Frequently asked questions
How much does horse boarding cost?
Boarding rates vary widely by region and services: pasture board often runs $150–$400/month, while full-care stall board at facilities with arenas and daily turnout commonly runs $400–$1,200+/month. Listings that publish pricing show a starting rate on their profile.
What's the difference between full board, partial board, and self-care?
Full board covers stall or pasture, feed, hay, and daily care. Partial board splits chores or feed costs between you and the barn. Self-care means the barn provides the space and you handle feeding, mucking, and turnout yourself.
What should I look for when visiting a boarding barn?
Look at hay quality and water buckets, turnout space and herd sizes, stall condition, arena footing, tack room security, and how calm the horses seem. Ask about feeding schedules, vet/farrier policies, and contract terms.
Do barns have waiting lists?
Good barns often do. Listings with a “Spots available” badge have told us they currently have openings — filter for availability on the map to save calls.