How to Start Homesteading
The Corporate Dropout's 5-Step Guide to Alaska Living
Look, I'm not going to tell you that leaving your corporate job to start homesteading in Alaska is
easy. It's not. But it's also not impossible, and it's definitely more achievable than the glossy Instagram
accounts make it seem (or the doomsday preppers want you to believe).
This is the guide I wish someone had handed me before I traded my desk for 10 acres of oceanfront
property in Wasilla, The Shire, as we call it now. This isn't about romantic notions of off grid living
alaska. This is about the actual transition from cubicle to cabin, complete with budget breakdowns,
frozen water lines, and the permits no one warns you about.
Step 1: Get Real About Money (and Land)
Here's what they don't tell you, traditional homesteading in Alaska doesn't exist anymore.
The Alternative bu real routes:
• State Sealed-Bid Auctions for parcels that didn't sell
• Over-the-Counter sales (first come, first served)
• Private land purchases (this is what we did)
The actual numbers: Alaska farmland averaged $718 per acre in 2017 versus the national average of
$3,080. That gap has widened. Our 10 acres cost significantly less than a down payment on a Seattle
condo, and we own it outright.
Budget reality check: Plan for $50,000-$75,000 minimum to get started with land, basic cabin, and
essential infrastructure. Not including your emergency fund, which you absolutely need because
when your water line freezes at -30°F, you can't just call a plumber for $150. You're the plumber. And
the electrician. And the problem-solver at 2 AM.
Step 2: Understand What Alaska Actually Demands (It's Not What You Think)
The Alaska homestead dream crashes hardest against these realities:
The growing season is 105 days. That's it. But you get 20+ hours of daylight during those months,
which means vegetables grow at an unreal pace. Cabbage the size of your torso. Carrots that look genetically
modified (they're not, just Alaska magic).
Winter is -10°F to -30°F for months. Not days. Months. And then it gets colder. You'll spend summers
gathering and storing firewood because heating oil costs will bankrupt you faster than your
mortgage ever did.
Darkness is real. I don't mean "gets dark at 5 PM" winter. I mean months of minimal daylight that
rewire your entire circadian rhythm and mental health. Plan for this. It's not optional.
Permits and regulations exist (yes, even here). Alaska isn't a lawless frontier. Livestock must be
fenced, this is not a free-range state, and you're liable for damage caused by wandering animals. The
Department of Fish and Game doesn't mess around with protecting native species.
Here's what worked for us: we started planning in winter, executed in summer, and spent the second
winter troubleshooting everything that broke. Because everything breaks. And then you learn.
Step 3: Build Your Off Grid Infrastructure (Start with Power and Water)
Off grid living alaska means you need to solve for electricity, water, heat, and waste, in that order.
Your corporate problem-solving skills actually translate here. It's just project management with higher
stakes and frozen components.
Power: Solar is viable but requires serious planning. You need battery storage for winter months
when you get 4-6 hours of weak daylight. We supplemented with a generator (Honda EU2200i, quiet,
reliable, doesn't wake the neighbors we don't have). Budget $8,000-$15,000 for a functional solar setup
depending on your power needs.
Water: This is where beginners fail hardest. You need:
• A well or water source (drilling costs $15-$50 per foot in Alaska)
• Insulated lines buried below frost line (4-6 feet minimum)
• Heat tape for backup when temperatures drop
• A contingency plan for when it freezes anyway
We lost water three times our first winter. Not because we did it wrong, because Alaska doesn't care
about your engineering degree. Now we keep 100 gallons stored inside and know how to thaw lines
without melting pipes.
Heat: Wood stove plus propane backup. Forced-air furnaces exist but you'll spend $500+ monthly on
heating oil. We will need to cut, split, and stack 6-8 cords of firewood annually. It's unglamorous, back-breaking
work that keeps you alive and warm.
Step 4: Start Small with Food Production (Then Scale)
This is where how to start homesteading gets practical fast. You're not feeding your family from your
garden in year one. You're learning what actually grows in your specific microclimate while supplementing
from Costco.
Cool-season vegetables thrive here: cauliflower, cabbage, turnips, broccoli, kohlrabi, Brussels
sprouts. Start indoors in April/May, transplant in June. Carrots, radishes, beets, and lettuce go directly
in the ground in June.
Livestock requires infrastructure first. Fencing. Shelter. Water systems that don't freeze. Predator
protection (bears, wolves, moose, they're all curious about your chickens). We're building toward this,
but we started with the garden because we could fail smaller and learn faster.
Food sales pathways exist if you want to move toward agritourism (our end goal at The Shire):
• Non-processed fruits and vegetables can be sold from your property, farmers markets, or roadside
stands without permits
• Processed foods (shucked peas, sliced tomatoes, peeled carrots) require a Food Processing Permit
from the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation
The agritourism play is real, people pay to experience this life without committing to it. Farm stays,
workshops, U-pick operations. But you need the foundation first.
Step 5: Plan Your Exit Strategy from Corporate (Before You Burn Bridges)
Here's the unglamorous truth, most people should transition gradually, not dramatically.
What worked for us:
• Saved 18 months of expenses before making the move
• Kept remote income sources during the transition
• Built the basic infrastructure before quitting entirely
• Documented everything for content creation (which became an income stream)
You need multiple income sources because homesteading alaska isn't free. Property taxes. Supplies.
Fuel. Internet (yes, you need it). Equipment repairs. Vet bills. The list compounds.
Revenue streams we're building:
• Content creation (blog, social, eventual courses)
• Agritourism experiences at The Shire
• Product sales (future: soaps, preserves, crafts)
• Consulting for other corporate dropouts making this transition
The homestead itself won't pay your bills in year one. Or two. Maybe not year three. Plan accordingly.
Skills to develop before you quit:
• Basic carpentry and electrical work
• Small engine repair
• Food preservation (canning, fermenting, freezing)
• Cold weather survival and first aid
• Conflict resolution (you'll argue with your partner about frozen pipes at 3 AM)
The Real Talk No One Wants to Hear
Starting a homestead in Alaska as a corporate dropout is entirely possible: but it's not an escape from
hard work. You're trading one set of challenges (soul-crushing meetings, office politics, fluorescent
lights) for another set (frozen water lines, equipment failures, physical exhaustion).
The difference is autonomy. You own your problems now. And your solutions. And your successes.
We're one years into planning The Shire and still figuring things out in real-time. Solar panels that underperforming
winter solutions. Water systems that need constant attention at our current semi-remote home and it has a greenhouse that's teaching us humility. But we're also building something tangible: a homestead that will eventually support agritourism,
create income, and prove that the corporate-to-alaska-homestead pipeline is real. If you're reading this and thinking "I could do this": you probably can. Start with research. Join Alaska homesteading groups. Visit properties. Talk to people who've made the transition (including the ones who failed and moved back). Save more money than you think you need. Then save more.
And when you're ready: when you've done the math and made the plans and accepted that you'll fail at things you thought would be easy: you'll know it's time.The land is here. The opportunity is real. And the community of people building this life is larger and
more supportive than you expect. Welcome to the unfiltered truth about homesteading in Alaska. Now get to work.
