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Shifting interest rates and commodity prices are fuellinga swift rise in values for southwestern Ontario farmland, especially in Huron County,where land values rose 24 per cent in 2023, according to a new report.
Farmland value rose highest in Huron County, at 24%, in 2023, report says
Alessio Donnini · CBC News
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Shifting interest rates and commodity prices are fuellinga swift rise in values for southwestern Ontario's farmland, especially in Huron County,where land values increased24 per cent in 2023, according to a new report from a group that appraises real estate.
The rise in Huron County is just the most striking exampleof a larger trend.The cost of farmlandrose10 per centacross southwestern Ontario, bringing it to new heights, with the cost per acre nearing $40,000 in some counties.
"We're talking about major jumps in land values," RyanParker, who wrote the report on behalf of Valco Consultants Inc., said on CBC's Afternoon Drive.
"In 2021 and 2022, we saw [overall] rises of 25 per cent, and last year 10 per cent."
Across southwestern Ontario's 11 counties, the median cost of an acre of land rose from approximately $15,000 per acre in 2020to over$25,000 in 2023, with the most significant increase between 2021 and 2022, according to the report.
The counties with the highest cost of land are Perth and Oxford, which both saw median values of over $35,000 per acre.
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"Higher interest rates definitely havehad an impact. Depending on the exact time frame you take, these ratespretty much tripled during the pandemic," said Parker.
On the other side of the coin, Parker said, commodity prices increasing over the course of the pandemic werea large driver of increasing values, allowing farmers excess cashto buy more land.
Over 2023, however, the prices of commodities like cornlevelled off, cooling down the rate of increase, but not entirely halting it.
"Ten per cent in one year is still up," Parker said.
In Huron County, where the median cost per acre of farmland jumped from just below $25,000 to roughly $30,000 in 2023, real estate brokers are noticing demographic trendsdriving increasing land value as well.
"Farms are being transitioned to the younger generation, and to keep things viable, they need to grow. Because of increasing costs, they need to diversifytoo. Maybe a dairy farm is now doing cash crops," said Dave Boonstoppel, a broker who deals in residential and agricultural land in Huron County.
The county's land values quickly caught up with thatof more sought-after counties in 2023, with a 24 per cent increase— oneBoonstoppel called shocking.
With low supply and high demand driven by the desire for expansion, farmers are being forced to act quickly for the land they need, he added.
"If the neighbour's farmis for sale, you usually get onechance to buy it and that's usually the one you're going to buy."
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What's driving interest in Huron County specifically is a harder question to answer, he said, but he believes the quality of the land and the high concentration of livestock farms there top the list of potential reasons.
Looking to 2024, Boonstoppel expects to see the swift rise in values to level off.
"If we see some interest rate movement in the downward direction, which is what everybody is anticipating, I see that it's going to continue to be strong and and increase—but not these leaps and bounds that it did in the last number of years."
From Parker's perspective, variability is likely to be the word of the year for 2024.
"I think we're gonna have a big spread in a lot of areas," he said.
While he expects new highs in 2024, he said there will likely be more opportunity for smaller and mid-range buyers to engage with the market.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alessio Donnini
Reporter/Editor
Alessio is a multimedia journalist, and a London, Ont., native. Since graduating from Fanshawe College's Broadcast Journalism program, he's worked in markets from Toronto to Windsor covering breaking news and telling stories for his community and beyond. Alessio can be heard on weekday afternoons reading the news for Afternoon Drive.
With files from Colin Butler
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