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How Much Is Pennsylvania Farmland Worth Per Acre in 2026?

County-by-county per-acre price ranges for Pennsylvania farmland in 2026 — from $22,000 Lancaster limestone down to $1,500 northern-tier mountain timber, and what makes the difference.

The single most common question I get as a Pennsylvania farm and land REALTOR® is some version of "what is my farm worth per acre?" The honest answer is always the same: it depends on the county, the soils, the buildings, the road frontage, and the buyer pool. But sellers want a real number to start from, so here it is — the 2026 per-acre price ranges for Pennsylvania farmland, region by region, based on actual closed sales I'm seeing across the state.

Pennsylvania farmland values by region in 2026

RegionGeneral FarmlandPremium TillableMountain / Timber
Lancaster, Chester, Berks (limestone belt)$12,000–$18,000/acre$18,000–$22,000+/acre$5,000–$9,000/acre
York, Lebanon, Cumberland, Adams$8,000–$13,000/acre$13,000–$17,000/acre$3,500–$6,500/acre
Franklin, Dauphin, Lehigh, Northampton$7,000–$12,000/acre$12,000–$16,000/acre$3,000–$5,500/acre
Bucks, Montgomery (estate market)$20,000–$35,000/acre$30,000–$50,000+/acre$10,000–$20,000/acre
Central PA (Centre, Mifflin, Juniata, Snyder, Union)$5,000–$8,500/acre$8,000–$12,000/acre$2,500–$4,500/acre
Western PA (Washington, Greene, Fayette, Allegheny)$3,500–$7,500/acre$6,000–$10,000/acre$2,000–$4,500/acre
Northwest PA (Erie, Crawford, Mercer, Lawrence)$2,500–$5,500/acre$4,500–$7,500/acre$1,500–$3,500/acre
Northern Tier (Bradford, Tioga, Susquehanna, Wyoming)$2,500–$5,500/acre$4,500–$7,000/acre$1,200–$3,500/acre
North Central (Lycoming, Potter, McKean, Cameron, Elk)$2,000–$4,500/acre$3,500–$6,000/acre$1,000–$3,000/acre
Pocono region (Monroe, Wayne, Pike, Carbon)$3,500–$8,500/acre$6,000–$12,000/acre$3,500–$10,000+/acre (lakefront premium)

These are real ranges from actual sales across Pennsylvania in late 2025 through mid-2026. They are not Zillow estimates and they are not USDA averages — they are what farms and land are actually closing for in each region.

Why Lancaster County tops the list (and Bucks tops Lancaster)

Lancaster County's limestone-belt tillable acreage is the most expensive farmland in Pennsylvania — not because of state averages but because of the deepest buyer pool of any farming county in the Northeast. The Plain community (Amish and Mennonite farmers) drives consistent expansion demand, conservation organizations like Lancaster Farmland Trust are active and well-funded, and neighboring producers compete aggressively for any quality ground that comes up.

Bucks County goes higher still because the market there is not really an agricultural market — it is a luxury estate and preservation market in the dress of farmland. Per-acre prices reflect lifestyle buyers, equestrian estate buyers, and active farmland preservation programs that pay premiums for easements. A 50-acre Bucks farm can clear $50,000 per acre because the buyer is not pricing it on corn yields.

The price-per-acre number that matters is the one a real buyer will pay in your specific township in your specific market window — not an average across Pennsylvania, and not what your neighbor got five years ago.

What moves your per-acre value up

What moves your per-acre value down

Why an online "per acre" number isn't enough

Online valuation tools, county assessment records, and even USDA average statistics all give you a number that is technically real but not actually useful for your sale. The reason is that per-acre averages flatten exactly the things that determine your sale price — your specific soils, your specific buildings, your specific buyer pool.

A 50-acre property in Lancaster County could legitimately be worth $400,000 (if it is steep, wooded, and inaccessible) or $1,200,000 (if it is bottomland tillable with a sound bank barn and creek frontage). The per-acre average for Lancaster County would say something like "$15,000/acre" but neither of those farms is worth $750,000. The average is the wrong number for your actual farm.

The right number for your farm requires walking the ground, pulling comparable PA farm sales from the last 12–24 months in your specific township, and matching the property to the right buyer pool. I do this free and confidentially. No obligation to list, ever.

Free Farm Valuation

How to get the real number for your Pennsylvania farm

Start with the regional range above for orientation. Then look at the four things that move your number the most: tillable percentage, building condition, road frontage, and any Clean & Green or easement situation. Those four factors usually account for 70–80% of the per-acre variance within any given county.

For the exact number, get a real opinion from someone who sells farms and land for a living — not a generic residential agent who sells "two or three farms a year" and doesn't know what your tillable ground actually rents for. I cover all 67 Pennsylvania counties, walk every property myself, and tell sellers the truth even when it is not what they want to hear.

For the deeper dive on how Pennsylvania farms are valued, read the full farm valuation guide. If you have specific Clean & Green questions, see the Clean & Green Act 319 rollback guide. And if you inherited a Pennsylvania farm and are not sure where to start, the inherited farm guide covers the first five steps every heir should take.

Aaron Glick — Pennsylvania Farm and Land REALTOR®

Aaron Glick

Pennsylvania Farm & Land REALTOR® with Lime House Realty. Real Producers Top 500 Agent for South Central Pennsylvania in 2025. Serving all 67 PA counties from York, PA. About Aaron · Contact

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