When it comes to selling farmland, the auction method has become the go-to choice across much of the U.S. and into the Canadian prairies. And for good reasons.
I may be a third-generation auctioneer, so my bias is no secret, but the results speak for themselves. Most farms that come up for sale to the public are sold at auction because it is the most effective way to establish fair market value and close a deal.
In fact, most counties’ high land prices are set at auction.
Here are six reasons farmers choose auctions:
1. Auctions let the market do the talking. Farmland is never uniform. One quarter might sell for $5,000 per acre because it has a wet slough in the middle and a restrictive easement, while the nicer quarter across the road could easily be worth much more.
How do you price that better tract when the only comparable sale is a problem piece and the most recent sale in the township was three years ago? That is where auctions shine. They take the guesswork out.
Farmers, neighbors and investors show up, and the market itself tells you what the land is worth. Sellers do not have to wonder what to ask, and buyers do not have to guess what to offer.
Price a piece too high, and the neighborhood might laugh at you, with months or years passing before anyone comes to the table. By then, the market may have dropped, making your price look even higher.
Price it too low, and it might sell tomorrow, leaving you to wonder what you could have gotten. Worse yet, you may face the questions afterward: “I didn’t know about it. I would have paid more!”
2. Auctions don’t rely on one person’s view like appraisals. Appraisers do important work, but at the end of the day, they are offering an opinion, not a crystal ball. In my career, I have seen farms sell for far less than their “appraised value,” and I have seen them soar well above it, too.
The point is not that appraisers are wrong, it is that buyers see things differently. An auction does not rely on one person’s view. It puts the decision in the hands of the market, which is where it belongs. Sellers also have the option of a seller-confirmation auction, giving them the final say if they like the market’s answer.
3. Auctions save time and headaches. Time is a valuable commodity. With a traditional listing, you might wait months for the right offer. Buyers often hesitate to throw a number on the table out of fear of insulting the family, especially if the asking price is much higher than what they would like to pay.
An auction cuts through all of that. You set a date, you set the terms, and everyone knows when they need to show their hand if they are interested in purchasing. Families can plan around it and move forward with certainty.
4. Auctions put the seller in control. In private sales, the buyer usually calls the shots. At auction, the seller sets the terms. That makes a big difference when there are multiple heirs or complicated estate issues. Everyone knows the rules going in, and everyone plays by the same set.
5. Auctions give equal footing to family members. One of the most overlooked benefits of an auction is the way it can help keep peace in the family. In many cases, heirs are not sure how to divide land fairly. If one sibling quietly sells to another, resentment often follows.
An auction eliminates that. Everyone, whether family or not, has the chance to bid. When the gavel falls, the family knows the land sold fairly at a price the market supported.
6. Auctions spark competition. At the end of the day, an auction creates urgency and energy that a listing or sealed-bid sale never can. Buyers know the property sells on a certain date, and they know their competition is sitting in the room or online. That atmosphere drives people to put their best foot forward, and it often leads to results that surprise everyone.
The auction method of marketing farmland has proven itself repeatedly. It finds true market value, respects time, provides transparency and keeps families on equal footing. Most importantly, when conducted properly, it gives sellers the confidence of knowing that everyone who was interested in the land had the chance to bid.