jflournoy
Active Member
I don’t necessarily agree with this as there are a lot of less desirable rec farms on the market these days for the same high prices as what good farms in good areas command that would sell quickly if they hit the market. What used to cost a premium to be in good managed areas with good neighbor, income, and harvest history years ago became now anything with a couple trees and buck pics people want big money for.
"Want big money for" is not the same thing as "Get big money for". Not right now anyway. It's easy to think that because a property got listed for $6,500/acre that it must have sold at close to that price. In some rare cases that may be true, but for the majority...no. There's a number of high-priced hunting/rec properties (of varying quality) sitting on the market right now in southern Iowa doing nothing, including some with good harvest history on nice bucks. How to explain? Interest rates are part of it because the number of buyers is smaller right now, but just as big a part of it is "they're priced too high." List prices in southern Iowa for hunting land by and large are not in equilibrium with the current market.