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Few acres change hands this fall

Western FarmPress

Despite the drop in land transactions at present, the real estate industry expects sales to pick up by year-end.

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A More Resilient Future for Texas Agriculture

American Farmland

million acres projected to be converted to real estate development by 2040. In 2022, AFT’s Farms Under Threat research indicated that Texas has the highest concentration of threatened agricultural land in America – with 2.2

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Five Factors Driving Farmland Prices in 2023 

Trimble Agriculture

Farm real estate will likely become a nearly $3.5 farm sector, real estate accounts for $4 of every $5 in assets. In 2023, farm real estate increased across the board, with higher average percentage increases for U.S. In 2023, farm real estate value rose $280 per acre to an average of $4,080.

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Supporting an International Network with Agritecture's Business Development Consultant

Agritecture Blog

David shares that one of the highlights of his career was leading an international consulting team in Beijing, China where his team created a 1,500 acre wholesale produce market and village masterplan.

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Will We See an Increase in Section 2032A

Agribusiness Blog

Here is an example of how this may work: Bill and Mary own 2,000 acres of land in Iowa. The current value is $10,000 per acre for a total value of $20 million. The five-year average cash rent for comparable ground after subtracting real estate taxes is $250 per acre.

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Holding onto Farmland, One Land Trust at a Time

Modern Farmer

The ATF predicts that more than 300 million acres of farmland and ranch land could change ownership within the next two decades, with some of it transitioning out of agriculture use permanently. But real estate developers can afford it. million acres of farmland and ranchland through conservation easements.

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These Nebraska Tribes Are Buying Back Farmland and Attempting to Reverse History

Modern Farmer

The tribe only owns roughly 27,000 acres of its 120,000-acre reservation, after U.S. In the past five years, three Nebraska tribes—the Winnebago, the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska and the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska—have bought a combined 3,000-odd acres of farmland that was once theirs. But that reality is starting to change.

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