Is a Conservation Easement Right for Your Farm?
A conservation easement is a permanent agreement that limits how your land can be developed, often in exchange for payment or tax benefits. It can protect your farm for generations, but it is not a quick fix and it is not for everyone. Work through these five questions before you contact a land trust.
DISCLAIMER: The easement process typically takes six months to two years from first conversation to closing, prompting an important question: how do you currently approach planning for the long-term stability of your farm? If you need cash this season, an easement will not provide immediate relief. Farmers in financial crisis often pursue easements for fast relief, only to realize it doesn’t provide the relief they expected. A conservation easement can protect a farm for generations, but it is not a quick fix and it is not for everyone. Plan early, while there is still time to carefully consider whether it fits your long-term goals.
How to use this page: Below is the first of 5 questions to see if a conservation easement might be right for you and your land. Read the question and select yes or no. If the answer is no, then a conservation easement might not be a good fit for you right now. If the answer is yes, then select “Click Here for Next Question”. You can select either option and go back and forth as much as you would like. If you answer yes to all 5 questions, then a form will be available at the end where you can provide your contact information so that we can reach out to you and discuss further.
Question 1: Are you comfortable with your current on-farm financial situation? (ie. don't need cash in the next 6–12 months)
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You have the right financial conditions to continue this conversation
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A conservation easement is likely not right for you now.
An easement is usually not a realistic short-term solution.