Friday, September 6, 2013

Different Ways To Lease Farmland

How Involved Do You Want To Be?


There are four ways you as an investor can be involved with the farmland operation.  You can do direct farming which means you are the farmer and you handle everything involved.  You can do custom farming which you don't farm but you take in all the profits.  You can share crop which you share the profits with the farmer.  Or you could just do traditional rent where you would just be a landlord.

What Is Custom Farming?


In custom farming you do everything but farm the land.  You provide the land and management.  You provide the inputs which includes seeds and chemicals.  The farmer would provide the equipment and labor.  You would pay the farmer a lump sum and optionally a percentage of the profits.  You will get all the profits here.  You get all the tax benefits of being a farm operator.  You can take advantage of any government programs available.  You don't have to worry about any expensive equipment cost.  However, you do shoulder all the risk.  For example, if the crop is bad you're the one who suffers.  Remember, the farmer gets paid a lump sum.

What Is Share Cropping?

In share cropping you provide the land.  You may pay part of the expenses.  For example, we will assume you agreed to a 1/3 2/3 crop share.  So you would pay 1/3 of the chemicals.  You would then get 1/3 of the crop income.

The farmer would provide the equipment and the labor.  He would pay 2/3 of the chemical costs.  They would pay all the seed costs and all of the fuel costs.  The farmer would end up getting 2/3 of the crop income.

What Is Cash Rent?

Here the farmer agrees to pay a specified rate per acre regardless of the crop yield.  The advantage of a cash lease is it's predictable and easy to manage.  The disadvantage is that when the prices are high you may be getting less than the value of the land warrants.  

What About A Hybrid Cash Lease?

Here cash rent would be set at a base rate regardless of the crop yield.  A bonus is paid to you if prices hit a certain agreed upon level.  For example, base rent is $125 per acre but corn hit $7.50 at a given date an additional $25 per acre is due.  Or you are given a base cash rent plus a share crop bonus if production is high.  The advantage is it protects your investment if the prices go up.  Disadvantage is it may discourage some farmers from competing for your land.  It may also cause some farmers from paying a high base rent.

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