Open US land value data, sourced from USDA and free to cite under CC BY 4.0.
FrontierAcre research

The State of US Land Values

2026 report · updated June 2026 · built on USDA Census data

What an acre of American land is actually worth, county by county. Built on the full USDA 2022 Census of Agriculture across 3,072 counties, summarized into the figures below. Free to read, free to cite.

Key findings

Each figure is computed from USDA data and free to quote with attribution.

$4,382
The median US county values farm real estate at $4,382 an acre (USDA 2022 Census), with most counties between $1,785 and $10,136.
2%
Only 2% of US counties, 61 of 3,072, average under $1,000 an acre. All 12 states that hold one sit in the West or Great Plains.
2.3x
The rural West is the most affordable region at a $2,880 median. The Northeast is the priciest at $6,536, more than double.
31x
New Mexico is the cheapest state to buy land by county median ($796 an acre); Rhode Island the most expensive ($24,586), a 31x gap.
64x
Land value varies as much inside a state as between states. California counties run from $961 to $61,295 an acre, a 64x spread.
63%
Nearly two thirds of US counties fall between $3,000 and $10,000 an acre. The cheap tail and the expensive tail are both thin.

How much of America is cheap land

Sorted into bands, most US counties cluster in the middle. The truly cheap land, under $1,000 an acre, is rare and almost entirely in the dry West and northern Plains. The expensive tail is farmland near cities. Share of all 3,072 counties:

under $1,000
61 · 2%
$1,000 to $2,000
322 · 10%
$2,000 to $3,000
429 · 14%
$3,000 to $5,000
962 · 31%
$5,000 to $10,000
980 · 32%
$10,000 and up
318 · 10%

The country splits four ways by region

Pool every county in each Census region and the order is consistent: land gets cheaper as you move west and rural, more expensive toward the dense Northeast. Median value per acre by region:

$2,880West median
$3,951South median
$5,612Midwest median
$6,536Northeast median

Cheapest states to buy land

New Mexico$796
Montana$1,283
Wyoming$1,330
North Dakota$1,885
Arizona$2,148
Kansas$2,281

By median across the state's counties.

Most expensive states

Rhode Island$24,586
New Jersey$21,660
Massachusetts$14,912
Connecticut$13,766
Hawaii$12,660
California$11,471

Small, dense states top the list.

Within a state, land varies as much as between states

The averages hide enormous local range. California counties span $961 to $61,295 an acre, a 64x gap inside one state. New Mexico runs $379 to $24,134. The lesson for a seller: a state or even regional average tells you very little about a specific parcel. The county figure gets closer, and the exact number needs the parcel itself. Widest within-state spreads:

New York1096x
Alaska464x
Nevada206x
Colorado136x
California64x
New Mexico64x

New York and Alaska show the largest ratios, driven by a single urban or extreme county; the figures above are kept honest by noting that. The cleaner story is states like California and New Mexico, where ordinary rural and near-town land differ many times over.

Cheapest counties in America

Aleutian Islands, AK$189
Navajo, AZ$325
Apache, AZ$329
Coconino, AZ$344
Gila, AZ$356
Mineral, NV$374
Guadalupe, NM$379
De Baca, NM$385

Highest value counties

Bristol, RI$49,530
San Francisco, CA$48,425
San Bernardino, CA$47,339
Ramsey, MN$46,973
Orleans, LA$44,661
Passaic, NJ$43,712
King, WA$38,716
Santa Cruz, CA$38,401

A handful of dense urban counties show six and seven figure per acre values because only token farmland remains there; those are held out as outliers. See the full searchable data in the Price Per Acre by County index.

Use this report

Free to cite and reuse under CC BY 4.0, with credit to FrontierAcre and USDA NASS. A line you can quote as is:

The median US county values farm real estate at $4,382 an acre, only 2% average under $1,000, and the rural West (median $2,880) is less than half the Northeast (median $6,536). (FrontierAcre, The State of US Land Values 2026, USDA NASS data.)

Drop the headline on your own page. Click to select, then copy:

Suggested citation: FrontierAcre (2026). The State of US Land Values. frontieracre.com/us-land-value-report.html. Built on the USDA 2022 Census of Agriculture.

Methodology and sources

Every figure is computed from the United States Department of Agriculture's 2022 Census of Agriculture, the full five year count taken by USDA NASS, using the average value of farm real estate (land and buildings) per acre for each county. We use 3,072 of roughly 3,143 US counties; the rest are withheld by USDA to protect the privacy of counties with very few farms. Medians and bands are computed across those counties. The figure includes buildings and reflects whatever land sells for locally, so it tracks both farm productivity in rural counties and development pressure near cities, which is why urban edge counties read high. It is a county average, not a parcel appraisal.

Explore the live data in the Price Per Acre by County index, see state baselines and year on year movement in the Price Per Acre Index, or price a specific parcel with the Land Value Estimator.