
We often talk about the aging American farmer. We worry about who will drive the tractors, combine the corn, and manage the herd when the average age of the U.S. operator hovers near 60.
But a quiet, parallel demographic shift is happening off the farm—and it may have a far greater impact on the future of the American farm economy. It is the aging of the non-operating landlord.
According to the USDA’s 2024 Tenure, Ownership, and Transition of Agricultural Land (TOTAL) survey, nearly 39% of all U.S. agricultural land is rented. In highly productive regions like the I-state Corn Belt, that percentage is often much higher.
The kicker? Nearly four out of every five of those rented acres (79%) are owned by non-operating landlords—investors, retired farmers, and surviving spouses who do not actively farm the land.
Now, a major generational handoff is looming. More than one-third (34%) of these non-operating landlords are 75 or older, controlling over 40% of rented acres. Over the next decade, millions of these acres will change hands. But if you expect a flood of land to hit the auction block, think again. The transition is going “invisible.”
The “Paper” Transition: Trusts and Wills Over Sales
For young or expanding operators hoping to buy their way into security, the USDA data delivers a stark reality check. Less than 5% of owned farmland is expected to be sold or gifted on the open market in the next five years.
Instead, the vast majority of this land is locked up in estate planning:
- 15% of owned farmland is tied up in wills.
- 10% is designated to transition into trusts.
- The remainder is held in family legal entities or complex multi-heir arrangements.
This means the physical dirt isn’t going anywhere, but the decision-making power is moving behind closed doors. Instead of negotiating with the retired neighbor down the road over a cup of coffee, the next generation of farmers will increasingly negotiate with trust officers, estate attorneys, and out-of-state heirs who have never seen the farm.
Why “Invisible” Ownership Matters for Your Operation
For a tenant farmer, the transition from a single elderly landlord to a trust or a group of distant heirs changes everything.
1. The Death of the Handshake Lease
When land transitions to a trust or a group of siblings scattered across the country, emotional ties to the local community often disappear. Handshake agreements are replaced by formal, cash-rent bidding wars. Non-operating landlords collected $34.1 billion in rent in 2024 while incurring only $12 billion in total ownership expenses. As heirs seek to maximize their return on inheritance, rental rates are facing upward pressure, squeezing already tight operator margins.
2. The Multi-Heir Headache
When a landlord passes, ownership is frequently split among multiple children. One sibling may want to keep renting to you; another may want to cash out and sell to a developer or a utility-scale solar project; a third might want to transition the land to a trust. Navigating these fractured family dynamics is becoming a core business skill for modern operators.
3. Conservation Capital Chokeholds
Who pays for tile drainage, cover crops, or waterway maintenance? Active operators are hesitant to invest thousands of dollars of their own capital into land they don’t own without a guaranteed, multi-year lease. Yet, trusts and passive heirs are historically less likely to reinvest their rental income back into physical land improvements.
The Bottom Line: Get to the Table Now
If you are renting a significant portion of your operating acreage from a landlord over the age of 70, the USDA data suggests you cannot afford to wait.
Farmers who want to secure their acreage must transition from being “just the tenant” to active participants in their landlord’s succession planning. This means initiating professional, respectful conversations about the future of the lease, offering to meet with estate executors or family members, and demonstrating how your stewardship preserves the land’s value for the next generation.
The land isn’t disappearing, but the landlords we know are. Survival in the next decade of farming won’t just depend on what happens in the field—it will depend on who has a seat at the estate planning table.







